Re: Problems with Duron Procesor

2001-12-16 Thread Matt Ryan

Try this - hash out (or remove) the statements CONFIG_X86_USE_3DNOW from
PATH_TO_KERNEL_SRC/arch/i386/config.in then run make oldconfig and
rebuild the kernel as usual.


Matt.

- Original Message -
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, December 15, 2001 11:37 PM
Subject: Problems with Duron Procesor


 Hello!

 We bought a Clone with a 950k, AMD-Duron Processor, Motherboard by
 Biostar to build an Intranet Server out of it.

 When installing a new Kernel (2.4.7), compiled for this processortype
 the machine stopped to work, because of severe Memory fault problems,
 reducing the access speed from 133 Mhz to 100 Mhz reduces the
 problem significatively

 Using a plain Pentium kernel we got no memory faults anymore.

 Is this a Motherboard/Memory problem, or is there any known problem
 with the AMD-Duron optimization?

 gcc-version: 2.95.4 20010902 (Debian prerelease)

 Thanks,

 Jorge-León


 --
 To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact
[EMAIL PROTECTED]





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Re: [pslave] compiling on Debian/potato

2001-12-16 Thread Russell Coker

On Sat, 15 Dec 2001 22:52, Milan P. Stanic wrote:
  libpsr.c: In function `plugin_init':
  libpsr.c:69: `cbcp_init_hook' undeclared (first use in this
  function)
  libpsr.c:69: (Each undeclared identifier is reported only once
  libpsr.c:69: for each function it appears in.)
 
  Yes, callback currently doesn't compile.  I'll have to fix that.

 Bad news. :(
 Call back is why I'm trying port slave.12.11

 Just for fun, I declared cbcp_init_hook (in libpsr.c) as static int and
 after that it compiles. But I don't expect it will work.

  I've put a Potato package on http://www.coker.com.au/portslave/ .

 Downloaded. Thanks again!

I've uploaded a new version which compiled with callback support (haven't 
tested it though).  It's uploaded to woody (but not with CB).

I've put it on http://www.coker.com.au/portslave/ as well as a diff file for 
making a potato package.  Let me know how it goes.

-- 
http://www.coker.com.au/bonnie++/ Bonnie++ hard drive benchmark
http://www.coker.com.au/postal/   Postal SMTP/POP benchmark
http://www.coker.com.au/projects.html Projects I am working on
http://www.coker.com.au/~russell/ My home page


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Email filtering

2001-12-16 Thread Dave Smith

I am planing on using fetchmail to get my emails from a single email account
at my ISP and to split those emails up depending on who it is addressed to.
With that, I have no problem. What I also wish to do is deliver the emails
to a cyrus IMAP server, sorting the emails into folders on the IMAP server.
What sort of setup would I need to do this?

I currently have procmail, fetchmail and cyrus IMAP.

For example, if an email comes addressed to user dave, it would be checked
against a table, and then would be filtered to a folder in the dave account.
I am presuming this is possible?

Dave


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[]

2001-12-16 Thread
Title: ::: Áö¿ªº° Ãßõ °øÀÎÁß°³»ç ¸ðÁý :::





  

  
  

  
  
 
  
  

  


  


  
  
  
  
  
  


  





Re: procmail

2001-12-16 Thread Craig Sanders

On Sat, Dec 15, 2001 at 12:16:27PM +0100, KOZMAN Balint wrote:
 I use procmail to sort incoming mails downloaded via fetchmail among
 my internal users. The procmail rules refer to the To, cc, bcc
 headers, but if someone subscribes to a mailing list, his/her address
 won't be among these.

 Any ideas?

you've just discovered why POP is completely inadequate as a mail
transport protocol - it loses the envelope recipient information.

POP was never designed to do the job you're trying to make it do. it was
designed to be a protocol that allowed remote access by a user to their
personal mailbox. it does that job reasonably well.  

it was not designed to transport the mail for an entire domain...at
best, it can be kludged to do a bad imitation of that particular job
(see choice 1 below).

the same goes for IMAP.

your two choices are:

1. convince your ISP to hack their MTA to add the envelope-recipient
   info (e.g. in an X-Envelope-Recipient header or by somehow munging
   the To: or Delivered-To: or whatever header) when delivering mail to
   a local mailbox...and do that without compromising privacy (i.e. BCC
   means Blind Carbon Copy - other recipients are not supposed to see
   who it was delivered to)

2. use a protocol designed for the job you're trying to do. uucp is
   ideal.



btw, it's not at all uncommon to get clueless NT consultants telling you
that POP works well for this. that's because they're clueless and have
no idea how mail works. i had an MS Exchange consultant whining at me
last week, demanding to pick up his client's mail by using finger which
is, according to him, the industry standard for mail. i still don't
know for sure what he was crapping on about - my guess is he had one ISP
set up some ugly kludge where finger would trigger a delivery via smtp
(which is a pretty stupid and insecure idea). i told him his choices
were to either use uucp or to put up with the limitations of POP.

of course, that scary word uucp terrified him, even though it's
actually pretty easy to set up and there are free uucp programs that
work as an add-on to Exchange (e.g. UUPC/Extended).

speaking of uucp, does anyone have any recommendations for uucp programs
that work with Exchange? i've never used either, but have been referring
people to either UUPC/Extended[1] (free) or mailcoach[2] (commercial).

[1] http://web.kew.com:8080/kendra/uupc/
[2] http://www.mailcoach.com/


craig

PS: there's no such thing as a BCC header in incoming mail. it is
stripped either by the user-agent when sending a message or, at the
latest, by the MTA when it receives the message. it can't be used to
sort mail because it doesn't exist.


-- 
craig sanders [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Fabricati Diem, PVNC.
 -- motto of the Ankh-Morpork City Watch


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Re: procmail

2001-12-16 Thread Glenn Hocking

Hi all

I've been down the single mailbox/fetchmail path many times. If you do this
expect regular support calls from irate customers whose email never made it to
them.

The only real solution (except running your own mail server) is a separate mail
box for all. I have found that many ISPs will now do this for free as apart from
the setup there are no extra resources used. And any good ISP has automated
'unique' mail box set up online, so you create and configure your own. Look for
'Unlimited pop accounts' in your ISP. This should not cost any more.

By no extra resources I mean that the mail server still has to process the same
amount of mail. And apply the same rules.

Kind regards
Glenn Hocking

Craig Sanders wrote:

 On Sat, Dec 15, 2001 at 12:16:27PM +0100, KOZMAN Balint wrote:
  I use procmail to sort incoming mails downloaded via fetchmail among
  my internal users. The procmail rules refer to the To, cc, bcc
  headers, but if someone subscribes to a mailing list, his/her address
  won't be among these.
 
  Any ideas?


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SSH Debian Woody

2001-12-16 Thread James Mclean



All,

I am building a debian woody machine as we speak, and i have installed the 
latest .deb of OpenSSH...

Installed fine, but it fails to authenticate a remote login, and if i try a 
login from the same machine's command line it also fails.

This is the message from the command line...
# ssh -l jamesmc xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
Neighbour Table Overflow
ssh: connect to address xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx port 22. No Buffer Space

I recieve no errors when attempting to login remotely, but fails to 
authenticate and continues to ask for the password...
I cannot see anything the messages or syslog logfiles.

# ssh -V
OpenSSH_3.0.1p1, SSH Protocols 1.5/2.0, OpenSSL 0x0090602f

I am tempted to install from source next. Any Ideas?

Regards,

James Mclean

Windows didn't get as bad as it is overnight -- it took over ten years of 
careful development.


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Re: SSH Debian Woody

2001-12-16 Thread tps

On Mon, Dec 17, 2001 at 11:58:26AM +1030, James Mclean wrote:
 
 
 All,
 
 I am building a debian woody machine as we speak, and i have installed the 
 latest .deb of OpenSSH...
 
 Installed fine, but it fails to authenticate a remote login, and if i try a 
 login from the same machine's command line it also fails.
 
 This is the message from the command line...
 # ssh -l jamesmc xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
 Neighbour Table Overflow
 ssh: connect to address xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx port 22. No Buffer Space
 
 I recieve no errors when attempting to login remotely, but fails to 
 authenticate and continues to ask for the password...
 I cannot see anything the messages or syslog logfiles.
 
 # ssh -V
 OpenSSH_3.0.1p1, SSH Protocols 1.5/2.0, OpenSSL 0x0090602f
 
 I am tempted to install from source next. Any Ideas?

Try running 'ssh -v -l jamesmc xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx' and see if that tells you
anything more...

Tim

-- 
   
Tim Sailer (at home)   Coastal Internet, Inc.  
Network and Systems Operations PO Box 671  
http://www.buoy.comRidge, NY 11961 
[EMAIL PROTECTED][EMAIL PROTECTED]   (631) 924-3728  
   


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Re: SSH Debian Woody

2001-12-16 Thread Jose Celestino

Is your loopback device (lo) up ?

/sbin/ifconfig lo

Thus spake James Mclean, on Mon, Dec 17, 2001 at 11:58:26AM +1030:
 
 
 All,
 
 I am building a debian woody machine as we speak, and i have installed the 
 latest .deb of OpenSSH...
 
 Installed fine, but it fails to authenticate a remote login, and if i try a 
 login from the same machine's command line it also fails.
 
 This is the message from the command line...
 # ssh -l jamesmc xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
 Neighbour Table Overflow
 ssh: connect to address xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx port 22. No Buffer Space
 
 I recieve no errors when attempting to login remotely, but fails to 
 authenticate and continues to ask for the password...
 I cannot see anything the messages or syslog logfiles.
 
 # ssh -V
 OpenSSH_3.0.1p1, SSH Protocols 1.5/2.0, OpenSSL 0x0090602f
 
 I am tempted to install from source next. Any Ideas?
 
 Regards,
 
 James Mclean
 
 Windows didn't get as bad as it is overnight -- it took over ten years of 
 careful development.
 
 
 -- 
 To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

-- 
Jose Celestino [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Systems Administration || Networks Eng. 
SAPO - PT Multimedia || http://www.sapo.pt


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Re: SSH Debian Woody

2001-12-16 Thread Chuck Peters


/etc/ssh/sshd_config has PasswordAuthenication no
set it to yes.

Chuck

On Mon, 17 Dec 2001, James Mclean wrote:



 All,

 I am building a debian woody machine as we speak, and i have installed the
 latest .deb of OpenSSH...

 Installed fine, but it fails to authenticate a remote login, and if i try a
 login from the same machine's command line it also fails.

 This is the message from the command line...
 # ssh -l jamesmc xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
 Neighbour Table Overflow
 ssh: connect to address xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx port 22. No Buffer Space

 I recieve no errors when attempting to login remotely, but fails to
 authenticate and continues to ask for the password...
 I cannot see anything the messages or syslog logfiles.

 # ssh -V
 OpenSSH_3.0.1p1, SSH Protocols 1.5/2.0, OpenSSL 0x0090602f

 I am tempted to install from source next. Any Ideas?

 Regards,

 James Mclean

 Windows didn't get as bad as it is overnight -- it took over ten years of
 careful development.


 --
 To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]




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Re: Problems with Duron Procesor

2001-12-16 Thread Jason Lim
Let me confirm to you that AMD Durons from 700-1.1G work perfectly with
Kernel 2.2.19 and 2.4.16.

We have over 10 such boxes running 2.4.16 and they are all rock solid.
Faster than the PIII and P4 boxes.

So whatever is going down, it is your motherboard, heatsink, something.
Just a reminder... Durons run EXTREMELY hot compared to PIII... we've
fried a few AMD CPUs due to the CPU fan either going too slow or stopping.
So use only high quality ball-bearing fans on them.

As for motherboards, we use only top quality ones from either ASUS or
Magic-Pro. Avoid using cheapo ones.

Try testing the RAM using memtest or something. that might help you.

Anyway, thats my 2 cents. Hope that helps you isolate the problem.

Sincerely,
Jason

- Original Message -
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: debian-isp@lists.debian.org
Sent: Sunday, December 16, 2001 10:37 AM
Subject: Problems with Duron Procesor


 Hello!

 We bought a Clone with a 950k, AMD-Duron Processor, Motherboard by
 Biostar to build an Intranet Server out of it.

 When installing a new Kernel (2.4.7), compiled for this processortype
 the machine stopped to work, because of severe Memory fault problems,
 reducing the access speed from 133 Mhz to 100 Mhz reduces the
 problem significatively

 Using a plain Pentium kernel we got no memory faults anymore.

 Is this a Motherboard/Memory problem, or is there any known problem
 with the AMD-Duron optimization?

 gcc-version: 2.95.4 20010902 (Debian prerelease)

 Thanks,

 Jorge-León


 --
 To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 http://www.zentek-international.com
 http://www.zentek.biz




Re: Problems with Duron Procesor

2001-12-16 Thread Matt Ryan
Try this - hash out (or remove) the statements CONFIG_X86_USE_3DNOW from
PATH_TO_KERNEL_SRC/arch/i386/config.in then run make oldconfig and
rebuild the kernel as usual.


Matt.

- Original Message -
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: debian-isp@lists.debian.org
Sent: Saturday, December 15, 2001 11:37 PM
Subject: Problems with Duron Procesor


 Hello!

 We bought a Clone with a 950k, AMD-Duron Processor, Motherboard by
 Biostar to build an Intranet Server out of it.

 When installing a new Kernel (2.4.7), compiled for this processortype
 the machine stopped to work, because of severe Memory fault problems,
 reducing the access speed from 133 Mhz to 100 Mhz reduces the
 problem significatively

 Using a plain Pentium kernel we got no memory faults anymore.

 Is this a Motherboard/Memory problem, or is there any known problem
 with the AMD-Duron optimization?

 gcc-version: 2.95.4 20010902 (Debian prerelease)

 Thanks,

 Jorge-León


 --
 To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact
[EMAIL PROTECTED]







Re: [pslave] compiling on Debian/potato

2001-12-16 Thread Russell Coker
On Sat, 15 Dec 2001 22:52, Milan P. Stanic wrote:
  libpsr.c: In function `plugin_init':
  libpsr.c:69: `cbcp_init_hook' undeclared (first use in this
  function)
  libpsr.c:69: (Each undeclared identifier is reported only once
  libpsr.c:69: for each function it appears in.)
 
  Yes, callback currently doesn't compile.  I'll have to fix that.

 Bad news. :(
 Call back is why I'm trying port slave.12.11

 Just for fun, I declared cbcp_init_hook (in libpsr.c) as static int and
 after that it compiles. But I don't expect it will work.

  I've put a Potato package on http://www.coker.com.au/portslave/ .

 Downloaded. Thanks again!

I've uploaded a new version which compiled with callback support (haven't 
tested it though).  It's uploaded to woody (but not with CB).

I've put it on http://www.coker.com.au/portslave/ as well as a diff file for 
making a potato package.  Let me know how it goes.

-- 
http://www.coker.com.au/bonnie++/ Bonnie++ hard drive benchmark
http://www.coker.com.au/postal/   Postal SMTP/POP benchmark
http://www.coker.com.au/projects.html Projects I am working on
http://www.coker.com.au/~russell/ My home page




Email filtering

2001-12-16 Thread Dave Smith
I am planing on using fetchmail to get my emails from a single email account
at my ISP and to split those emails up depending on who it is addressed to.
With that, I have no problem. What I also wish to do is deliver the emails
to a cyrus IMAP server, sorting the emails into folders on the IMAP server.
What sort of setup would I need to do this?

I currently have procmail, fetchmail and cyrus IMAP.

For example, if an email comes addressed to user dave, it would be checked
against a table, and then would be filtered to a folder in the dave account.
I am presuming this is possible?

Dave




RE: Email filtering

2001-12-16 Thread Keith Elder
Be sure this is at the top of your .procmailrc:


ORGMAIL=/var/mail/username
MAILDIR=$HOME/mail
LOGFILE=$HOME/proclog
DEFAULT=$ORGMAIL

Then put a line like this:

# phpusers
:0:
* ^To:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Phpusers

That will basically filter any email on this group to a IMAP box called
Phpusers.

Keith

-Original Message-
From: Dave Smith [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Sunday, December 16, 2001 11:33 AM
To: debian-isp@lists.debian.org
Subject: Email filtering


I am planing on using fetchmail to get my emails from a single email
account at my ISP and to split those emails up depending on who it is
addressed to. With that, I have no problem. What I also wish to do is
deliver the emails to a cyrus IMAP server, sorting the emails into
folders on the IMAP server. What sort of setup would I need to do this?

I currently have procmail, fetchmail and cyrus IMAP.

For example, if an email comes addressed to user dave, it would be
checked against a table, and then would be filtered to a folder in the
dave account. I am presuming this is possible?

Dave


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[EMAIL PROTECTED]





Re: procmail

2001-12-16 Thread Craig Sanders
On Sat, Dec 15, 2001 at 12:16:27PM +0100, KOZMAN Balint wrote:
 I use procmail to sort incoming mails downloaded via fetchmail among
 my internal users. The procmail rules refer to the To, cc, bcc
 headers, but if someone subscribes to a mailing list, his/her address
 won't be among these.

 Any ideas?

you've just discovered why POP is completely inadequate as a mail
transport protocol - it loses the envelope recipient information.

POP was never designed to do the job you're trying to make it do. it was
designed to be a protocol that allowed remote access by a user to their
personal mailbox. it does that job reasonably well.  

it was not designed to transport the mail for an entire domain...at
best, it can be kludged to do a bad imitation of that particular job
(see choice 1 below).

the same goes for IMAP.

your two choices are:

1. convince your ISP to hack their MTA to add the envelope-recipient
   info (e.g. in an X-Envelope-Recipient header or by somehow munging
   the To: or Delivered-To: or whatever header) when delivering mail to
   a local mailbox...and do that without compromising privacy (i.e. BCC
   means Blind Carbon Copy - other recipients are not supposed to see
   who it was delivered to)

2. use a protocol designed for the job you're trying to do. uucp is
   ideal.



btw, it's not at all uncommon to get clueless NT consultants telling you
that POP works well for this. that's because they're clueless and have
no idea how mail works. i had an MS Exchange consultant whining at me
last week, demanding to pick up his client's mail by using finger which
is, according to him, the industry standard for mail. i still don't
know for sure what he was crapping on about - my guess is he had one ISP
set up some ugly kludge where finger would trigger a delivery via smtp
(which is a pretty stupid and insecure idea). i told him his choices
were to either use uucp or to put up with the limitations of POP.

of course, that scary word uucp terrified him, even though it's
actually pretty easy to set up and there are free uucp programs that
work as an add-on to Exchange (e.g. UUPC/Extended).

speaking of uucp, does anyone have any recommendations for uucp programs
that work with Exchange? i've never used either, but have been referring
people to either UUPC/Extended[1] (free) or mailcoach[2] (commercial).

[1] http://web.kew.com:8080/kendra/uupc/
[2] http://www.mailcoach.com/


craig

PS: there's no such thing as a BCC header in incoming mail. it is
stripped either by the user-agent when sending a message or, at the
latest, by the MTA when it receives the message. it can't be used to
sort mail because it doesn't exist.


-- 
craig sanders [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Fabricati Diem, PVNC.
 -- motto of the Ankh-Morpork City Watch




Re: procmail

2001-12-16 Thread Glenn Hocking
Hi all

I've been down the single mailbox/fetchmail path many times. If you do this
expect regular support calls from irate customers whose email never made it to
them.

The only real solution (except running your own mail server) is a separate mail
box for all. I have found that many ISPs will now do this for free as apart from
the setup there are no extra resources used. And any good ISP has automated
'unique' mail box set up online, so you create and configure your own. Look for
'Unlimited pop accounts' in your ISP. This should not cost any more.

By no extra resources I mean that the mail server still has to process the same
amount of mail. And apply the same rules.

Kind regards
Glenn Hocking

Craig Sanders wrote:

 On Sat, Dec 15, 2001 at 12:16:27PM +0100, KOZMAN Balint wrote:
  I use procmail to sort incoming mails downloaded via fetchmail among
  my internal users. The procmail rules refer to the To, cc, bcc
  headers, but if someone subscribes to a mailing list, his/her address
  won't be among these.
 
  Any ideas?




SSH Debian Woody

2001-12-16 Thread James Mclean


All,

I am building a debian woody machine as we speak, and i have installed the 
latest .deb of OpenSSH...

Installed fine, but it fails to authenticate a remote login, and if i try a 
login from the same machine's command line it also fails.

This is the message from the command line...
# ssh -l jamesmc xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
Neighbour Table Overflow
ssh: connect to address xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx port 22. No Buffer Space

I recieve no errors when attempting to login remotely, but fails to 
authenticate and continues to ask for the password...
I cannot see anything the messages or syslog logfiles.

# ssh -V
OpenSSH_3.0.1p1, SSH Protocols 1.5/2.0, OpenSSL 0x0090602f

I am tempted to install from source next. Any Ideas?

Regards,

James Mclean

Windows didn't get as bad as it is overnight -- it took over ten years of 
careful development.




Re: SSH Debian Woody

2001-12-16 Thread tps
On Mon, Dec 17, 2001 at 11:58:26AM +1030, James Mclean wrote:
 
 
 All,
 
 I am building a debian woody machine as we speak, and i have installed the 
 latest .deb of OpenSSH...
 
 Installed fine, but it fails to authenticate a remote login, and if i try a 
 login from the same machine's command line it also fails.
 
 This is the message from the command line...
 # ssh -l jamesmc xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
 Neighbour Table Overflow
 ssh: connect to address xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx port 22. No Buffer Space
 
 I recieve no errors when attempting to login remotely, but fails to 
 authenticate and continues to ask for the password...
 I cannot see anything the messages or syslog logfiles.
 
 # ssh -V
 OpenSSH_3.0.1p1, SSH Protocols 1.5/2.0, OpenSSL 0x0090602f
 
 I am tempted to install from source next. Any Ideas?

Try running 'ssh -v -l jamesmc xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx' and see if that tells you
anything more...

Tim

-- 
   
Tim Sailer (at home)   Coastal Internet, Inc.  
Network and Systems Operations PO Box 671  
http://www.buoy.comRidge, NY 11961 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]/[EMAIL PROTECTED]   (631) 924-3728
  
   




Re: SSH Debian Woody

2001-12-16 Thread Jose Celestino
Is your loopback device (lo) up ?

/sbin/ifconfig lo

Thus spake James Mclean, on Mon, Dec 17, 2001 at 11:58:26AM +1030:
 
 
 All,
 
 I am building a debian woody machine as we speak, and i have installed the 
 latest .deb of OpenSSH...
 
 Installed fine, but it fails to authenticate a remote login, and if i try a 
 login from the same machine's command line it also fails.
 
 This is the message from the command line...
 # ssh -l jamesmc xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
 Neighbour Table Overflow
 ssh: connect to address xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx port 22. No Buffer Space
 
 I recieve no errors when attempting to login remotely, but fails to 
 authenticate and continues to ask for the password...
 I cannot see anything the messages or syslog logfiles.
 
 # ssh -V
 OpenSSH_3.0.1p1, SSH Protocols 1.5/2.0, OpenSSL 0x0090602f
 
 I am tempted to install from source next. Any Ideas?
 
 Regards,
 
 James Mclean
 
 Windows didn't get as bad as it is overnight -- it took over ten years of 
 careful development.
 
 
 -- 
 To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

-- 
Jose Celestino [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Systems Administration || Networks Eng. 
SAPO - PT Multimedia || http://www.sapo.pt




Re: SSH Debian Woody

2001-12-16 Thread Chuck Peters

/etc/ssh/sshd_config has PasswordAuthenication no
set it to yes.

Chuck

On Mon, 17 Dec 2001, James Mclean wrote:



 All,

 I am building a debian woody machine as we speak, and i have installed the
 latest .deb of OpenSSH...

 Installed fine, but it fails to authenticate a remote login, and if i try a
 login from the same machine's command line it also fails.

 This is the message from the command line...
 # ssh -l jamesmc xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
 Neighbour Table Overflow
 ssh: connect to address xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx port 22. No Buffer Space

 I recieve no errors when attempting to login remotely, but fails to
 authenticate and continues to ask for the password...
 I cannot see anything the messages or syslog logfiles.

 # ssh -V
 OpenSSH_3.0.1p1, SSH Protocols 1.5/2.0, OpenSSL 0x0090602f

 I am tempted to install from source next. Any Ideas?

 Regards,

 James Mclean

 Windows didn't get as bad as it is overnight -- it took over ten years of
 careful development.


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