On 04/11/06, Adam Kennedy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I always thought the problem with keys and passwordless login was that
you end up with cascading exploits.
If I login from box A --> box B with keys, and someone hacks box A, then
they automatically have access to box B, and C, and D and anyt
On 06/11/06, Rev Simon Rumble <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
There is another option. I have a Nokia 6630, though any Symbian
phone should do. It syncs using SyncML to an online calendar service
called Mobical[1]. The synchronisation goes over GPRS, so can be done
anywhere. That way, no need to
On 07/11/06, Michael Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
How do I get the linux box to send files to the windows one? I need to
back
What do the ssh server logs have to say about this attempt?
Also I don't see in your rsync command line that you tell it to use ssh to
connect - it probably tries
On 23/11/06, Sonia Hamilton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On my laptop (Ubuntu Edgy), I want to change various settings when I'm
on different networks. A couple of questions:
* how would I change the proxy used by Firefox 2.0 thru scripts?
A few possibilities to explore:
1. use "-remote" (http:/
Hi,
I've got a sample file with permission to share, here is the link to
it on sendit.com:
http://download.yousendit.com/F415DBA71C703EA7
The PostScript error I get from the printer is "typecheck" on command "filter".
Thanks for any help.
--P
--
SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List -
On 03/01/07, Penedo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
readlink -fe link | xargs -0r rm -rf
Correction to the above - apparently xargs waits for "\0" in order to
terminate its input, so maybe the following is more appropriate:
$ (readlink -fen link ; echo -e \\0) | xargs -0r rm -rf
--Amos
--
SLUG
On 03/01/07, Zhasper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Only because you're using the -0 flag.
...
(This is also going to destroy the ability to handle whitespace in
filenames though, so you probably don't want to do this.)
Correct on both accounts, but this is why I insist on using -0 whenever
On 03/01/07, Norman Gaywood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
But why are we we trying to pipe output to xargs. We are only dealing
with one name.
Or zero. I used the "xargs -r" trick to avoid running anything if there is
no output from readlink.
Whats wrong with just:
rm -rf "$(readlink link)
On 03/01/07, Adam Kennedy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
During my days at Cisco in 2000 they did the huge "we're all going VOIP
internally" rollout, to eat their own dogfood.
Even with the entire company relying on it, even with executives
badgering them, even with all the experience and talent
Hello,
Can anyone point me to the script used to generate the iCal file of SLUG
events at http://slug.org.au/event/ical ?
I've suggested providing the same service by another event-organizing group
(outside Australia) and they asked for code.
Thanks,
--Amos
--
SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group
On 05/01/07, Howard Lowndes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
The ACMA fine for doing a network installation by an unlicenced person.
Sounds very strange.
What would differentiate the "ALDI" network (for the sake of this thread)
from the D-Link+Desktop+Laptop+ATA wire 100mbit ethernet network I hav
On 04/01/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I wen't to linux.org/lessons and skipped straight to the ADSL section and
did exactly what it said including the modification of resolv.conf
And everything worked as expected
Then when my intenet connection didn't work I checked all the s
On 05/01/07, T Murray <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
So my question is: How to you remove packages and mark them never to
return?
You'll have to give more details to complete the picture:
1. What tools/methods do you use to install/remove/update the packages?
2. What are the exact package nam
On 09/01/07, tuxta2 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Im not whinging (dont use fedora anymore, just Debian and Ubuntu so it
does not effect me), just agreeing that it is anaconda that has problems.
My oh my - how the world changed - Debian and its supporters used to be
beaten on the head as "the di
On 10/01/07, Howard Lowndes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Just out of curiosity, and because I am procrastinating about doing
something else, I ran a quick analysis across my mail log file to see
what the extent of the use of SPF is:
pass29517
neutral 30354
softfail31082
none4783
u
On 10/01/07, Adam Kennedy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
That was entirely not the point of SPF though.
(rest deleted for brevity).
All true, but the bottom line was that at some stage you could highly
correlate between finding an SPF/senderId record and figuring that you are
dealing with a spam
On 10/01/07, David Kempe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
FWIW, I have setup an HA version of this recently and recent with some
hardware was giving me excellent throughput on Gigabit networks (haven't
By "HA" you mean that multiple hosts are connected to the same disk-chain?
Care you give more poi
On 11/01/07, Sonia Hamilton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I'd like to remove Evolution from a Ubuntu Edgy machine I admin (my
dad's) - how do I safely do this?
I get these dependencies in aptitude:
How about marking evolution with "M" in aptitude then work your way through
the "r" (reverse-depe
On 17/01/07, Howard Lowndes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Tks for that. That caused a reduction in disk occupancy of a factor of
about 10x. The ls -l still shows the same file sizes so they must be
sparse files.
Then run "ls -ls" to see the number of blocks the file actually occupies on
the di
On 19/01/07, Alex Samad <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I thought the file stamps where always recorded as UTC. And the system
would
change the time for the TZ
And you were right - "Timezone" has a meaning only in the context of the
user who wants to read the time.
If a file was changed when the
On 21/01/07, Ken Wilson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Thats often the hard bit, finding programes that do what you want.
I browsed the applications-->add/remove programes to find some which
wasnt too bad, but browsing Synaptic, while finding some useful looking
candidates for trying out does take t
On 20/01/07, Rick Welykochy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Amos Shapira wrote:
> And BTW - the command to set the default time zone on Debian is
"tzconfig".
And finally,
date
Sat Jan 20 12:48:39 EST 2007
Now why the system is not aware of daylight savings is beyond
On 23/01/07, Ken Wilson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
by browsing I meant looking for things that I did not know what I wanted
, having a list of things in my head, but if something sounded like it
might solve a problem that I had that wasn't on the list then I would
check it out too. Finding the t
On 24/01/07, Luke Vanderfluit <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi.
I'm having plenty of probs with flash under firefox.
When Adobe released the stable version of 9 in January, I thought my
woes would be over but no.
Having the flash plugin in my plugins directory for firefox 2.0 causes
the browser to
On 24/01/07, Howard Lowndes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Rumours I have heard is that FF2 is a "no go" and to wait for FF3.
What do you mean? Flash Player 9 beta 2 and FF 2.0 work great for me.
Cheers,
--Amos
--
SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/
Subscription
On 25/01/07, john gibbons <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
No luck, Tony. Just tells me there is no such file. I wonder if I may
You mean that "fsck" tells you this? If so then you gave it the wrong device
name.
What does "cd ; df ." show?
--Amos
have accidentally reformatted it when I was using
On 28/01/07, Alan L Tyree <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hmm. I can't do a simple X forwarding to the Xubuntu machine.
See sshd_config(5) about X11Forwarding. At least on Debian it says the
following:
X11Forwarding
Specifies whether X11 forwarding is permitted. The argument must be "yes"
or "n
On 29/01/07, Michael Fox <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I just saw that too, take anything that fool says with a grain of salt ;)
Just look what the say guy said about the Parallels on OSX sometime
ago, absolutely an idiot.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kMaCvfNbKJo
Whenever I see this couple I
On 30/01/07, Zhasper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On the machine that you're trying to connect to, try running (as root)
netstat -ntlp for me.
I think you'll find that X isn't listening on any TCP socket. It
certainly isn't on my ubuntu desktop.
The X server on the remote machine shouldn't hav
On 30/01/07, Alan L Tyree <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
The frustrating thing is that I can't find any significant difference
between the Xubuntu configuration files and the Ubuntu ones that behave
perfectly.
Let's try to look at the situation from a different angle - login to the
remote system
On 31/01/07, Alan L Tyree <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On the remote Xubuntu ("Misty"), logged in with ssh -X:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ sudo netstat -tlp
Active Internet connections (only servers)
Proto Recv-Q Send-Q Local Address Foreign Address
State PID/Program name
tcp0
On 31/01/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
you can also get around it with:
AllowTcpForwarding yes<-- I assume the default of this is no as well.
I forgot about that one but the manual says that the default is "yes". You
still need to enable the X11Forwarding which is a sep
On 31/01/07, Alan L Tyree <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Fooling around with that now. The man page says that output is sent to
the system log (which I presume is /var/log/syslog). It doesn't seem to
be doing that.
However, it runs through lots of ports (Not sure where it starts since
I can't scrol
On 31/01/07, Alan L Tyree <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
But I don't know what to make of it.
What about the rest of my message below? (copied again)
Googling about,
> http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=openssh-unix-dev&m=104336969724537&w=2
> looks closest to your situation - do you have the loop
On 31/01/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
And you can save me a 15min drive to test:
I've just setup a Dlink 604T for my sister.
Everything OUT is allowed in the filter setup.
is ESTABLISHED,RELATED permitted back or do I have to explicitly allow
WWW,
MAIL and SSH back?
(There ar
On 31/01/07, Alan L Tyree <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
That may be it:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ ifconfig
eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:11:24:92:E1:91
UP BROADCAST MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1
RX packets:0 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0
TX packets:294 e
On 05/02/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Monday 05 February 2007 10:00, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Heracles suggested a clean reinstall of all. How does one do that from
an
> already installed Debian? I'd do it from the current Debian as that has
> internet access via bigpond
Hi,
Ubuntu 6.06 live CD boots up fine on our Toshiba Satellite 4030CDT but is
very heavy on the machine.
Is Xubuntu really lighter than Ubuntu's GNOME?
The box is a Pentium II with 192 Mb RAM (Toshiba Satellite 4030CDT). I can't
install it on the machine's disk (wife still wants the assurance o
On 06/02/07, Dean Hamstead <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
you could try ebuntu (enlightenment w/ ubuntu), enlightenment is
much less bloated than gnome and friends
How does it compare to Xfce (xubuntu)?
As for Jeff's comments - I only need this while configuring that laptop,
once it's setup it w
On 06/02/07, Jeff Waugh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 06/02/07, Dean Hamstead <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > you could try ebuntu (enlightenment w/ ubuntu), enlightenment is
> > much less bloated than gnome and friends
>
> How does it compare to Xfce (xubuntu)?
>
> As for Jeff's comments - I
On 06/02/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tuesday 06 February 2007 10:00, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > you could try ebuntu (enlightenment w/ ubuntu), enlightenment is
> > much less bloated than gnome and friends
>
> How does it compare to Xfce (xubuntu)?
>
> As for Jeff's com
On 06/02/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tuesday 06 February 2007 10:00, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[snip]
> Well, maybe I wasn't clear about my intentions because I tried to avoid
> tiring you with details, so here is the deal:
>
> We have this Toshiba Satellite 4030CDT (
> ht
On 06/02/07, Peter Chubb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Also check out damn small linux -- it has a mode that'll boot from a
zip archive on a windows partition.
Now THAT's cool, and I wasn't aware of. Will check.
Thanks.
--Amos
--
SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.
On 07/02/07, david <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
dpkg-buildpackage
What is required? The man page seems to assume you know where/how to use
it and what files or directories are required.
For a start, maybe you should install apt-src and follow its documentation -
it's a convenient front-end to
On 07/02/07, Alan L Tyree <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I tried Freespire as part of the plan to get my friend set up. It
seemed like a good idea since he is into the music/video stuff.
Are you aware that there are quite a few distributions geared exactly
towards that niche? (can't remember any
On 07/02/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
LTSP is easy, but you need to do it right. I can get LTSP up-n-running in
30
min. The apt-get solution is experimental and mostly does not work.
What "apt-get solution"? The LTSP package?
Do not go for ltsp-5 (experimental, read about
On 08/02/07, Howard Lowndes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I thought that attack was over. The report from my error log indicated
Maybe what happens is that some large attack on the root servers, or other
resources on the way to your link, actually causes your site to be less
accessible to other
On 08/02/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
The last version of winders where loadlin works is 95 or 98. So you can
expect
it to not get much attention anymore.
Wots wrong with PXE? see http://www.rom-o-matic.net/
My lappie F12 = boot menu, option PXE. Loadlin may not even work any
On 09/02/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Sorry, the reason I pointed you at rom-o-matic was their wealth of options
eg
grub: boot windows
boot pxe
or CDROM pxe boot
or CDROM network boot (tagged image)
or HD versions of above
etc
Point of LTSP is that your stately lapp
On 10/02/07, Linley Caetan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
accidentally stuffed the permissions on all of /etc. Did not realise I
was in this directory and did a sudo chmod -R 777 ./
Is there a way of getting these back to a useful state?
Maybe an "aptitude reinstall", or otherwise wirte a script
On 12/02/07, Michael Lake <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Yeah I saw that when I read into it in more detail. It also looks like you
have to
have SSL setup too. I'll try it sometime this week but I don't think its a
5 minute
thing to setup. I certainly want my from: to be [EMAIL PROTECTED]
In GMai
On 13/02/07, Mike Lake <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Googling for 'memory profiler web applications' and things brings up
things that you use to find memory leaks in apps which I dont want.
Naturally top just gives me instantaneous values which don't mean much
when a web app is only getting a few h
On 14/02/07, Andrew Ruthven <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I save the signatures into a directory (easy with Evolution's "Save All"
button) and then in a shell run:
gpg --import 0x*
Easy.
Thanks to you and others who replied. I ended up using mutt's "^K" to
extract most of the keys, though qu
On 14/02/07, Hamish Moffatt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
caff deliberately does not upload other people's signatures directly,
though
I don't know if there is some etiquette-related reason for doing that.
Yes actually there is - people might not want their key to be available on
public servers
Hello,
I've mistakenly revoked an old uid then realized that what I should have
done is to add my new e-mail address to that key.
I've "unrevoked" the key by removing the revocation signature but now it
doesn's list all the signatures I had on this key before.
I haven't updated key servers with
On 16/02/07, Ben <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Some ISPs place restrictions on the total # of emails you can send,
not just the total number of recipients.
I got the following link in a Google Ad in GMail while reading Ben's reply.
It's more about accepting mail on port 25 when the ISP blocks it
On 17/02/07, James Purser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
That said if what you're hosting is a) Not mission critical and b) low
bandwidth, there is nothing to stop you doing it so long as you have a
static IP (dynamic just gets to be a major pain). Its a nice way to play
with different technologies
On 19/02/07, Howard Lowndes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
then get the standard nag box - hey, M$, this lappy only has one account
on it, and therefore its the administrator account.
Please - for the common health of the network community at large, as well as
for your own Windows machine, please
On 19/02/07, Michael Fox <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I think if you execute a command tool window (surely they still have
that in vista still), and execute "ipconfig /all" it will show all
Actually I remember a few years ago, back when Vista was "Longhorn" and they
still though they can make i
On 19/02/07, Howard Lowndes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Does anyone have a clue how to silence the outputs from the subject
commands?
I have tried the usual redirections of STDOUT and ERROUT to /dev/null
but to no avail.
That's very strange - strace'ing ldapsearch on RHEL4 shows that it writ
On 19/02/07, Howard Lowndes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
This is out of the script that I an calling from cron:
ldapdelete -x -D uid=admin,dc=$DB -w secret
cn=nospam$MONTH_NOW,ou=valias,dc=$DB &1>/dev/null &2>1
and this is the outout I get:
ldap_delete: No such object (32)
matched DN:
On 19/02/07, Christopher Vance <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 2/19/07, Howard Lowndes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> This is out of the script that I an calling from cron:
>
> ldapdelete -x -D uid=admin,dc=$DB -w secret
> cn=nospam$MONTH_NOW,ou=valias,dc=$DB &1>/dev/null &2>1
>
> and this is the ou
On 21/02/07, Howard Lowndes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
An even further alternative thinking might be to not NFS mount anything
anywhere, but to have Postfix on the mail server relay all inbounds to
the mailing lists on the mail server directly to the MTA on the web
server.
Does that all make se
Do you need Debian reps or was this spot filled out the quickest? :-)
I'm NOT a Debian Developer but I use it for many years so might be able to
fill in.
--Amos
On 22/02/07, Lindsay Holmwood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
G'day all!
We're running low on volunteers - anyone else want to represent t
On 23/02/07, Martin Visser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I think you'll find the formula dated to the time when most people
said "I really need my total memory address space to be n megabytes,
but I can only possibly afford n/3 megabytes of RAM, so I have to just
make do with 2n/3 being on a relati
On 23/02/07, Peter Hardy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> IBM do a good book on Linux Performance Tuning, which explains this
> well.
Oh, cool. I'll have to add it to my reading list. Thanks.
I was looking for a link to include in a "to read" list when I found the
following review:
http://www.li
Hi,
One of the questions during the latest distro comparision discussion was
about commercial support. My answer as the Debian supporter was that I know
there is but I can't give a name off the top of my head.
Today I learned a few things:
1. HP just repported that it made 25 millions US$ from
On 12/03/07, Del <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
How does that relate to home PCs? If you're looking at 64 bit then you
can expect your average Intel machine to be hotter and noisier than your
average AMD machine in the same price/performance range.
Is this correct with the new Core Duo II stuff?
On 25/03/07, david <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I contacted skype about this.. but of course they didn't properly read
what I said. Ah well.. at least they replied. See their reply and my
original message below.
Skype freezes ubuntu 6.10 completely, but for about one or two minutes,
after which th
On 26/03/07, Alan L Tyree <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I use Ekiga connected to a Gizmo account to talk to lots of people. The
Gizmo client for Windows is good - I haven't tried the Linux one for
ages since Ekiga is so good. Ekiga allows you to register to multiple
accounts.
I tried Ekiga a while
On 26/03/07, david <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
However, it doesn't seem right that an application can totally freeze
the entire system. No keyboard, no mouse, nothing. I can't even log in
remotely until it unfreezes.
That would suggest that it's more than just a skype bug, wouldn't it??
Yes, it
Hello,
I've just realized I might be able to make it to the meeting this week
but I'll be a bit late.
Is anyone here willing to give me their mobile number so I can call
them to open the doors downstairs for me?
Thanks,
--Amos
--
SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.
On 02/04/07, Dave Kempe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Simon Wong wrote:
> I just came across OCS Inventory in SF's top 30 list
> (http://ocsinventory.sourceforge.net/index.php?page=features) and was
> wondering if anyone had used it and hwat their thoughts were. It looks
> quite good on the surface
On 08/04/07, Erik de Castro Lopo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi all,
Does anyone know of a tool that can tag a PNG file with meta data?
I've found pngmeta which will dump it, but nothing that will add it.
A quick search of CPAN came up with Image::ExifTool::PNG at
http://search.cpan.org/~exif
Hello,
I'd like to let a friend of mine to upload a file to my home server. It's a
one-off need.
Does anyone know of a simple web application I can install to let him do
that through HTTP without too much hassle?
I'm using Debian Etch.
Thanks,
--Amos
--
SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailin
On 17/04/07, Sridhar Dhanapalan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tue, 17 Apr 2007, David Ward <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Any tips or points for catching the attention of mostly IT 'dumb' ales
> staff ? I am thinking Beryl/Compiz, the mention of no spyware and
> viruses and the backing of big nam
On 18/04/07, Sridhar Dhanapalan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tue, 17 Apr 2007, Shakthi Kannan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 3. Mention the important of open documentation
> standards (.odp or .pdf), and use of Openoffice for
> their day-to-day activites.
You should stress the importance of open
On 18/04/07, Howard Lowndes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I am thinking that I should recommend to my client that he maintains a
dedicated PC under engineering control for the purpose of these transfers.
What are your thoughts.
Sounds reasonable. Maybe it's worth checking on pilot forums on how
o
On 19/04/07, Adam Kennedy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
The biggest example is probably SQL placeholders, which pretty much
remove any chance of SQL injections attack in one fell swoop.
I know for DBI it's very difficult to do any non-trivial work without
using them.
I was just bitten (again) by
On 19/04/07, David Ward <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Thanks to all for your valuable feedback. I should of made myself a
little more clearer. The boss is looking to offer it as a OS with the
Desktops we sell. So its more a pitch to show its a viable option for
our customers. None the less, the
Hello,
Does anyone have a pointer for a sample of code which sends multiple files
as a single HTTP response using MIME multipart/related?
All the code or explanations I found so far are talking about either
creating MIME e-mail messages or parsing multipart responses (or even upload
of multiple
On 21/04/07, Robert Collins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Last I checked RC2616 does not defnied multipart/related semantics for
HTTP.
So here is a though I had after reading your response - how about sending
back one MIME content contain multi-parts inside it?
As far as I follow the following l
Just as this question was raised on SLUG someone on linux-il had the same
problem. Disabling SMP solved it.
--Amos
-- Forwarded message --
From: shimi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: 23-Apr-2007 08:03
Subject: Time Drifting Back & Forth on SMP [Was: Re: System Clock is crazy?
[was: Re:
On 25/04/07, elliott-brennan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
One of the other cool things this program does is
it allows you to quickly mount an ISO made of a
movie and run that in a program like Xine.
That's nice, but on the other hand I was very disappointed to learn that its
"split ISO" functio
On 26/04/07, elliott-brennan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi Amos,
I haven't tried that function.
I'm not quite sure what you mean by what it does
do though (??). What does 'split (1) mean?
It means that it calls the "split" standard unix command line utility. You
can read about this command
On 28/04/07, Sam Lawrance <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Yes, single file at a time would suck over a network. HTTP/1.1 is a
good suggestion, but you need to use pipelining. Demonstrated use
(at least in my mind :-) is FreeBSD's portsnap, which is becoming the
preferred method to transfer hundreds
On 29/04/07, Sam Lawrance <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 2. Depending on the server's side, this particular program could
> get into a
> deadlock since it relays on the server having large enough buffers
> to send
> files and receive requests before the client finishes sending all
> the file
> nam
On 07/05/07, John Ferlito <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Mon, May 07, 2007 at 11:15:51AM +1000, Alan L Tyree wrote:
> Is there some easy way to find all the symbolic links that point to a
> given target?
>
No real easy way since for symbolic links there is no reverse lookup
table in the filesyst
On 08/05/07, Matthew Hannigan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Mon, May 07, 2007 at 01:31:16PM +1000, Amos Shapira wrote:
>
> What about "find -L -samefile give-target"?
>
> e.g.
>
> $ touch target
> $ ln -s target link-to-target
> $ ls -l
> total 0
>
Hello,
Does anyone have recommendations on which SATA RAID PCI controller cards
should I look for a 4-disk mirror array?
I got a recommendation for LSI Logic MegaRAID SATA 150-4 64-bit PCI (
http://tinyurl.com/2zkljw) but need to find an explanation why that
controller and not something other (c
On 10/05/07, Ben Donohue <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi Amos,
I have an Adaptec SATA II raid model 2820SA which is an 8 port working
in centos (RH) 5.
I don't know offhand if it will do the raid you want but it's PCI-X and
works.
Hi Ben,
Thanks very much for the pointer.
We are planning to
On 10/05/07, Jeremy Portzer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
device. But software RAID 1 or 1+0 on a modern Linux system of any type
should be fine in my opinion. If you do go with HW RAID, keep in mind you
also want a card that interfaces well with Linux not just for the drive
contorller itself, bu
On 10/05/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
The recommendation of swap == 2x RAM is oldfashoned and may even be bad.
Googling will give you more than you ever wanted to know ...
IMHO you'd hardly ever want more than 512M of swap. If you did you'd know
and
understand why.
This is
On 11/05/07, Peter Chubb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> "Ben" == Ben Donohue <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Ben> Hi all, I have a new centos box with a boot partition and a large
Ben> raid array of over 3TB.
Ha. So you're using XFS? ext[23] on 32-bit systems have problems
with such a large sy
On 22/05/07, Howard Lowndes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
...or tell me where I am going wrong:
svn co http://svn.digium.com/view/asterisk/team/group/res_config_ldap
You are using the svn web viewer instead of the SVN URL. Just guessing the
right URL worked for me:
svn co http://svn.digium.com
Hi all,
We have a CD of Deiban Etch netinst and I've just configured
apt-cacher on another debian machine.
Now I'd like to force the network install to use apt-cacher but it
seems to force me to pick out of a pre-compiled list.
Is this possible somehow? (e.g. edit the file containing that list
On 27/05/07, Rick Welykochy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi all,
I have currently installed the Linux Vserver utils package
util-vserver_0.30.212-1_i386.deb
on Debian/Etch.
There is a bug fix I require and it is available on the net in
certain places, package util-vserver_0.30.213.
I can google
On 05/06/07, Phil Scarratt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Voytek Eymont wrote:
> my logs are littered with the usual failed login crap;
>
> is moving ssh to a different port 'good idea' ?
> preferabley some port that will still allow me access from various
places.
> what port ? port range ?
>
yes,
Here is where I go to watch the current weather:
http://tinyurl.com/2a86gz
Hope it gives you some ideas.
If you (or someone else) is looking for an idea for a meshup then the pages
at http://www.gfa.org.au/clubs/ contain list of Australian gliding clubs (I
think they maintain them as static HTML
On 14/06/07, Gav <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi all,
Could anyone recommend a low to midrange graphics card for box running
Ubuntu Feisty. Want to run applications like 3d Desktop, 3d chess,
virtualbox etc. Not really for high end games. Present 32mb matrox card
is really struggling.
In simil
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