Re: [CentOS] Mailman - searchable archive

2010-09-28 Thread M. Milanuk
On 9/28/2010 11:30 AM, Jussi Hirvi wrote:

> Opinions? Maybe there are better software solutions for this - I hope.

markmail.org works pretty well for searching, as does gmane.org... with
gmane having the added benefit of providing a bi-directional mail2news
gateway so you can read & post mailing lists as newsgroups, plus you can
browse and post from their web interface.

HTH,

Monte

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Re: [CentOS] Home LAN server - dnsmasq

2009-12-14 Thread M. Milanuk
A minor update for anyone still watching ;)

>> You can do it by adding "send host-name" to the
>> dhclient.conf.
>
> I'll dig around a bit on the clients and see if I can figure it out; if
> not I can always ask on the respective lists for specifics on each.
>

That worked fairly painlessly on the Debian client... but F12 is still a 
thorn in my side.

>> Alternatively, you can just assign the static IP using the client MAC in the
>> dnsmasq.conf.  You will have the MAC from the dnsmasq logs so you can just
>> copy and paste.

For now thats what I'm having to do.  Apparently everyone on Fedora is 
busy using Network Manager (gui tool that invades/usurps the traditional 
networking config files), and no one knows where the dang config file 
went to.  In Ubuntu 9.10 Network Manager worked fine (there is a spot to 
enter the host name when requesting a dhcp lease), but in F12 its not. 
But nobody wants to hear *that*...



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Re: [CentOS] Home LAN server - dnsmasq

2009-12-13 Thread M. Milanuk
On 12/13/2009 2:51 PM, Ben wrote:

> You need to ensure that the clients are sending the hostname in the dhcp
> request.  Your dnsmasq logs will show it, usually in /var/log/messages, and
> if you want you can enable extra logging for dnsmasq to show u exactly what
> options are being sent by the clients.

Excellent idea.  I've been looking @ /var/log/messages which has been 
very helpful, but perhaps some more detail would help.

> If i remember correctly Debian doesn't but i would have thought Fedora would
> have by default.
>
> You can do it by adding "send host-name" to the
> dhclient.conf.

I'll dig around a bit on the clients and see if I can figure it out; if 
not I can always ask on the respective lists for specifics on each.

> Alternatively, you can just assign the static IP using the client MAC in the
> dnsmasq.conf.  You will have the MAC from the dnsmasq logs so you can just
> copy and paste.

Yep, thats how I have normally in the past implemented fixed leases on 
things like a wifi router, etc. I got kind of excited at the notion of 
*not* having to find the MAC addresses for everything, and then a little 
disappointed when it didn't quite work out.  Being as its for a virtual 
LAN there isn't a whole lot of urgency if I don't get it working today 
or tomorrow (or else I'd have already entered the MAC addresses ;) ) so 
I'm going to try ironing out this way first.

Thanks,

Monte


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[CentOS] Home LAN server - dnsmasq

2009-12-12 Thread M. Milanuk
Hello all,

I'm testing a home LAN server inside Virtualbox - figured it'd be easier 
to build (and fix) things inside a virtual sandbox first, and then 
migrate over to a physical install once I have most of the kinks worked 
out.  The host OS is Windows Vista; the guest OS will be various Linux 
distributions for education/entertainment purposes.

First, a little explanation on the 'lay of the land':

The first virtual machine is a gateway/router box running CentOS 5.4. 
The 'outward' facing NIC is eth0, and it picks up an IP through the NAT 
interface provided by Virtualbox.  That part seems to be working fine at 
the moment.  The VM has CentOS 5.4 installed, downloaded and installed 
updates, and can browse the web, etc.  The 'internal' network adapter 
(eth1) is connected to a virtual LAN 'intnet' that is otherwise not 
accessible from the 'outside' world at this point.  It has a static IP 
assigned (10.0.0.1/255.255.255.0), and dnsmasq is running.

Here is the contents of /etc/dnsmasq.conf:

domain-needed
bogus-priv
filterwin2k
except-interface=eth0
dhcp-range=10.0.0.50,10.0.0.100,1h
dhcp-host=asmodean
dhcp-host=demandred
dhcp-host=lanfear
dhcp-authoritative
conf-dir=/etc/dnsmasq.d

and here is the contents of /etc/hosts:

127.0.0.1   localhost.localdomain   localhost
::1 localhost6.localdomain6 localhost6

10.0.0.1rahvin.localrahvin
10.0.0.2asmodean.local  asmodean
10.0.0.3demandred.local demandred
10.0.0.4lanfear.local   lanfear

What I *want* to happen is to be able to give a fixed dhcp lease to a 
client that sends a particular name from /etc/hosts - that way I just 
have to maintain /etc/hosts on the gateway/router box for local DNS, and 
I don't have to fiddle around finding and recording and entering the MAC 
addresses for each network card on each machine (actually easier on a 
'virtual' lan than in real life, but still a minor PITA).  I got the 
idea from this clause in the original dnsmasq.conf file:

# Enable the address given for "judge" in /etc/hosts
# to be given to a machine presenting the name "judge" when
# it asks for a DHCP lease.
#dhcp-host=judge

The specific problem I'm having is that of the virtual 'clients', only 
one of them is getting assigned an IP address from the list in 
/etc/hosts.  'asmodean', running Ubuntu 9.10 gets its IP address of 
10.0.0.2 as planned.  The other two, demandred (running F12+LXDE) and 
lanfear (running Debian 5.03 Lenny), get randomly assinged IP addresses 
from the pool defined in dnsmasq.conf (10.0.0.50-10.0.0.100) like one 
would normally expect for a *dynamically* assigned lease.  Except I 
wanted them to get fixed leases based on /etc/hosts.

I've looked at most everything I can think of on both hosts... it 
doesn't seem to much matter if I set the hostname to 'demandred.local' 
or just 'demandred'.  I'm not sure how to tell if the clients are 
sending that information in their requests?

Any other ideas or suggestions?  I realize the problem may not be 
strictly with the CentOS box, but any help would be greatly appreciated.

TIA,

Monte

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