Re: Woody packages for nagios?

2004-01-12 Thread Teun Vink
On Mon, 2004-01-12 at 16:18, Peter wrote:
 Hi,
 
 are there any woody packages for nagios?
 
 Thanks!
 
 


http://www.apt-get.org/search.php?query=nagiossubmit=arch%5B%5D=i386arch%5B%5D=all


Teun



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Re: Woody packages for nagios?

2004-01-12 Thread Teun Vink
On Mon, 2004-01-12 at 16:18, Peter wrote:
 Hi,
 
 are there any woody packages for nagios?
 
 Thanks!
 
 


http://www.apt-get.org/search.php?query=nagiossubmit=arch%5B%5D=i386arch%5B%5D=all


Teun





Re: Apply this pack

2003-12-05 Thread Teun Vink
- Original Message - 
 From: Ben Blier [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: debian-isp@lists.debian.org
 Sent: Thursday, December 04, 2003 10:13 PM
 Subject: Re: Apply this pack
 

 Just making sure noone is dumb enough to download this file. It is 
 virus infected.


No, it's not. It's a mail sent from an infected computer, 
but with a broken virus. The attachment is 0 bytes,
you can open the email without any problems.


Teun

PS: would it matter, a W32 virus on a list for debian? ;)




Re: Apply this pack

2003-12-04 Thread Teun Vink
- Original Message - 
 From: Ben Blier [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Thursday, December 04, 2003 10:13 PM
 Subject: Re: Apply this pack
 

 Just making sure noone is dumb enough to download this file. It is 
 virus infected.


No, it's not. It's a mail sent from an infected computer, 
but with a broken virus. The attachment is 0 bytes,
you can open the email without any problems.


Teun

PS: would it matter, a W32 virus on a list for debian? ;)


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Re: Spoon feeding Exchange with Sendmail

2003-10-10 Thread Teun Vink

- Original Message - 
From: Jody Grafals [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, October 10, 2003 8:52 PM
Subject: Spoon feeding Exchange with Sendmail


 Spoon feeding Exchange with Sendmail
 
 Is it possible to somehow use my Debian Linux server as a tool to 
 download pop mail from a remote server then forward it to my  local mail 
 server (Exchange), I was thinking Sendmail might be able to do something 
 like this but I could not find any documentation.
 


Never used it, but fetchmail should be able to do this, I think.

Regards,


Teun


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Re: amavisd-new and clamav for woody???

2003-10-01 Thread Teun Vink
 - Original Message - 
  From: Peter Holm [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Thursday, October 02, 2003 2:14 AM
 Subject: amavisd-new and clamav for woody???


 Hi,

 where can I get recent versions of amavisd-new and clamav for woody?

 Ot would be very helpful, if there where some packages for woody out
 there, because I do not want to change my sources.list...

Hi Peter,

I'm using these apt-sources on my production filterboxes:

deb http://people.debian.org/~aurel32/BACKPORTS woody main
deb http://people.debian.org/~hmh/woody/ hmh/amavisd-new/

Both have amavisd-new, the first one also has clamAV and spamassassin.

They work great, new updates are released shortly after they become
available in sid.



Teun


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Re: Count traffic

2003-08-14 Thread Teun Vink
On Wed, 2003-08-13 at 10:56, Guillaume Plessis wrote:
 Le Wed, Aug 13, 2003 at 10:22:51 +0200, Daniel Kradolfer - smile solutions gmbh a 
 écrit:
  Hi,
  
  I'm searching a solution to count in- and outgoing traffic for each
  virtual user (domain). Our boxes are running Apache, Proftpd and qmail.
  Does anybody know some good working GPLed software/tool to do one of
  these tasks.
 
 Hi!
 
 Take a look at the ipac-ng package. It works with iptables and works
 fine, even with an important traffic.
 
 It's easy to configure and to integrate with your existant firewalling
 rules.
 
 Best regads


And how would that work with _virtual_ servers?


Teun


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Re: Cyrus Could not shut down filedescriptor...

2003-08-06 Thread Teun Vink
On Wed, 2003-08-06 at 15:03, Jean-Marc V. Liotier wrote:
 I am getting trios of messages from Cyrus at random intervals apparently
 not linked to any other even, a few dozen times a day :
 
 Aug  4 10:43:25 localhost cyrus/imapd[10867]: Could not shut down filedescriptor 0: 
 Bad file descriptor
 Aug  4 10:43:25 localhost cyrus/imapd[10867]: Could not shut down filedescriptor 1: 
 Bad file descriptor
 Aug  4 10:43:25 localhost cyrus/imapd[10867]: Could not shut down filedescriptor 2: 
 Bad file descriptor
 
 I found nothing with Google. Does anyone know what this is about ?

Nope, but I've got lot's of them in my logs as well. Couldn't figure out what it was 
either.


Teun


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Re: Problem with squirrelmail

2003-07-29 Thread Teun Vink
On Tue, 2003-07-29 at 00:41, kgb wrote:
 Hey thanks, now themes work great but language don't want and this for
 browser language is strange whatever i put for language from display
 settings in squirrelmail the language everytime is english but on redhat
 or slackware, fbsd work fine any ideas ?


Yup: make sure you've got the right locales generated on your machine.


Hope this helps,


Teun


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Re: Problem with squirrelmail

2003-07-28 Thread Teun Vink
On Sun, 2003-07-27 at 21:11, kgb wrote:
 Hello evrybody,
 
 I have some problems with squirrelmail running on Debian 3.0 woody and
 php 4.2.3 the problem is when i try to change themes or language from
 display preferenses they don't change no errors nothing everything seems
 to be ok i try it on other distros and everything was fine is this bug
 in this versian of php or squirrelmail ? i don't know what happen
 anymore but this is sucks really any ideas?
 Thanks in advanced

I've seen similar things. 
For the themes: there's a wrong path in the config file for the themes,
so new themes can't be loaded. Don't know if a bug has been filed
against it (and I'm too lazy to check right now), but modifying
/etc/squirrelmail/config.php fixes it. Theme paths should have a
location like 

SM_PATH . 'themes/theme.php' 

If I recall correctly, the default debian config has 'config' instead of
'themes' in all of them.

For the language problems: make sure your browser has the same language
selected as preferred language as you select in SquirrelMail, this fixes
it for me.


Regards,

Teun Vink


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Re: Open Relay Testing

2003-07-03 Thread Teun Vink

- Original Message - 
From: Gene Grimm [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: debian-isp@lists.debian.org
Sent: Wednesday, July 02, 2003 3:12 PM
Subject: Open Relay Testing


 What is the best method of testing mail servers to determine if they are
 susceptible to being exploited as an open relay? We have several mail
 servers that I want to verify are secured. Also, I have been having
 problems with sending mail, specifically to AOL users, through my Zoom
 Internet account at home. I'm not entirely sure I believe Zoom when they
say
 that their systems are not open relays. Plus I am considering configuring
a
 relay MTA on my home Debian box to route all of my outgoing mail through
 our own office mail servers. Are there any HOWTO's describing ways of
 creating a secure relay channel between remote MTA's?


http://www.abuse.net/relay.html


Teun




Re: Open Relay Testing

2003-07-02 Thread Teun Vink

- Original Message - 
From: Gene Grimm [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, July 02, 2003 3:12 PM
Subject: Open Relay Testing


 What is the best method of testing mail servers to determine if they are
 susceptible to being exploited as an open relay? We have several mail
 servers that I want to verify are secured. Also, I have been having
 problems with sending mail, specifically to AOL users, through my Zoom
 Internet account at home. I'm not entirely sure I believe Zoom when they
say
 that their systems are not open relays. Plus I am considering configuring
a
 relay MTA on my home Debian box to route all of my outgoing mail through
 our own office mail servers. Are there any HOWTO's describing ways of
 creating a secure relay channel between remote MTA's?


http://www.abuse.net/relay.html


Teun


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Re: HELP .. need to upgrade libc6 to a higher version ????

2003-06-07 Thread Teun Vink

- Original Message - 
From: Gregory Machin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, June 07, 2003 5:25 PM
Subject: HELP .. need to upgrade libc6 to a higher version 


 1 ) I need to upgrade libc6 to a test version so i can install clamav ,
 but it has a lot of dependanies .. how do i install the new version ?
 2 ) Is there an easy way to install test/unstable packges and have the
 dependancies automaticly installed (all the files i've used are on the
 debian ftp) at the moment i install the packages manually along with the
 dependancies..



Here's an apt source which has clam for woody (can also be found op
www.apt-get.org), works like a charm for me:

deb http://people.debian.org/~aurel32/BACKPORTS woody main


Regards,

Teun Vink
Luna.nl System  Network Engineer


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Re: HELP .. need to upgrade libc6 to a higher version ????

2003-06-07 Thread Teun Vink

- Original Message - 
From: Gregory Machin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: debian-isp@lists.debian.org
Sent: Saturday, June 07, 2003 5:25 PM
Subject: HELP .. need to upgrade libc6 to a higher version 


 1 ) I need to upgrade libc6 to a test version so i can install clamav ,
 but it has a lot of dependanies .. how do i install the new version ?
 2 ) Is there an easy way to install test/unstable packges and have the
 dependancies automaticly installed (all the files i've used are on the
 debian ftp) at the moment i install the packages manually along with the
 dependancies..



Here's an apt source which has clam for woody (can also be found op
www.apt-get.org), works like a charm for me:

deb http://people.debian.org/~aurel32/BACKPORTS woody main


Regards,

Teun Vink
Luna.nl System  Network Engineer




Re: Remove Large File

2003-06-02 Thread Teun Vink
On Mon, 2003-06-02 at 02:42, Rudi Starcevic wrote:
 Hi,
 
 I have a file I've created which appears to be too large for my ext2
 filesystem.
 
 The file I created is a large text file which is a Postgresql database
 backup.
 
 I now know when dumping large databases to pipe the dump command to
 something like 'split' so that the resulting output file
 is split into smaller chunks.
 
 However before I was aware of this I created a file which is too large
 to handle.
 
 I want to remove this file but am getting this error message:
 
 rm: cannot remove `camper.dump20020116': Value too large for defined 
 data type
 
 So I'm kinda stuck. I can't access the file whatsoever. Even the file
 size doesn't appear for me.
 
 Any idea's on how I can delete this file ?

Here's a little trick:

Start python and do:

import os
os.unlink('filename')

This will remove the file (worked for me on a 15G logfile).


Regards,


Teun Vink
Luna.nl System  Network Engineer





Re: Which SSL Company? (Slightly OT)

2003-05-21 Thread Teun Vink
- Original Message - 
From: Dustin Douglas [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: debian-isp@lists.debian.org
Sent: Wednesday, May 21, 2003 10:23 PM
Subject: Which SSL Company? (Slightly OT)


 While this isn't exactly Debian related, it _is_ ISP related.

 We'll shortly be purchasing an SSL Cert for one of our clients who is
 going to be launching an e-commerce site, but I'm at a loss as to
 which company to buy the Cert from. I'd prefer to avoid Verisign out
 of general principal, not to mention the fact that their prices are
 pretty steep. Thawte is a consideration with MUCH cheaper prices, but
 again Verisign is in the picture. Anyone have any other
 suggestions? I have considered signing my own certs, but
 don't think the client would appreciate the barrage of dialogs popped
 forth from IE.


Hi,

We used to buy them from Thawte, but switched to Tucows/OpenSRS. My
experience is that Thawte works ok, but is slower in signing and renewing
certificates than Tucows. Both parties are accepted as a valid CA by most
browsers, so I doubt people would experience issues with them.

Regards,

Teun Vink




Re: gre tunnel MTU adjustment

2003-05-15 Thread Teun Vink
On Thu, 2003-05-15 at 09:40, Jeff S Wheeler wrote:
 Dear List,
 
 I have a GRE tunnel setup between a debian linux/zebra router at my
 co-lo and my home office.  This allows me to have a /27 without coughing
 up $7/IP to the local cable monopoly.  There are no other broadband IP
 options available.
 
 My problem is I can't raise the MTU on the intermediate links over which
 the tunneled packets must travel, thus the MTU of my GRE tunnel is less
 than 1500.  Many popular Internet sites, including paypal, hotmail,
 portions of Yahoo, and my beloved friendster, have utterly broken Path
 MTU Detection.  The problem is wide-spread, and I don't think these
 sites are going to correct their problem or disable PMTUd on their
 servers, load balancers, and whatnot.
 
 Cisco routers have the ability to fragment and reassemble IP packets
 traversing GRE tunnels in order to effectively increase the tunnel MTU. 
 The command syntax is e.g. `ip mtu 1500` in interface configuration.
 
 Is similar functionality available on linux?  If not, can someone with
 iptables clue give me an example of how to disable the IP Don't-Fragment
 bit on ip packets that are being routed to my tunnel, allowing them to
 be fragmented even though the transmitting TCP stack has set DF?
 
 Kind thanks,

Hi,

I use a GRE tunnel between my DSL connection at home and the network of
the ISP I work for. I use this iptables line in my setup, which fixes
the MTU for all outgoing packets:

iptables -A FORWARD -p tcp --tcp-flags SYN,RST SYN -j TCPMSS --clamp

Works just fine...


grtz,

Teun Vink
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RE: gre tunnel MTU adjustment

2003-05-15 Thread Teun Vink
On Thu, 2003-05-15 at 11:51, Christian Storch wrote:
 Perhaps you want to say:
 
 iptables -A FORWARD -p tcp --tcp-flags SYN,RST SYN -j
 TCPMSS --clamp-mss-to-pmtu
 

You're right, that's the correct argument (--clamp-mss-to-pmtu)
Incidently, --clamp works as well, iptables obviously does some sort of
argument completion.



Teun





Re: Postfix log analizer

2003-04-02 Thread Teun Vink
On Wed, 2003-04-02 at 14:53, Andre Luis Lopes wrote:
[..]
Actually, I'm already using pflogsum but it doesn't seems to support
 generating the kind of report I'm looking for. It's good enough for
 generating statistics about a lot of useful data, but what I would like
 to see in a report is something like :
 
 Message IDSender   Recipient   Size
 X [EMAIL PROTECTED][EMAIL PROTECTED]   XXX
 

This shouldn't be too hard to do with some grepping/regexp'ing on
mailserver logs, now should it?

The size is not that important. 
 

Who made you believe that? ;-)



Teun

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Re: Postfix log analizer

2003-04-02 Thread Teun Vink
On Wed, 2003-04-02 at 14:53, Andre Luis Lopes wrote:
[..]
Actually, I'm already using pflogsum but it doesn't seems to support
 generating the kind of report I'm looking for. It's good enough for
 generating statistics about a lot of useful data, but what I would like
 to see in a report is something like :
 
 Message IDSender   Recipient   Size
 X [EMAIL PROTECTED][EMAIL PROTECTED]   XXX
 

This shouldn't be too hard to do with some grepping/regexp'ing on
mailserver logs, now should it?

The size is not that important. 
 

Who made you believe that? ;-)



Teun

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Re: Advice on remote kernel changes?

2003-03-27 Thread Teun Vink
On Thu, 2003-03-27 at 14:34, Peter Holm wrote:
 Hi,
 
 are there any tutorials / packages out there that address the
 situation of patching / upgrading / changing the installed kernel
 remotely?
 
 three main problems come to my mind that could bring a fatal situation
 of not being able to access the machine after a reboot: 
 
 A kernel does not work with hardware for any reason and machine hangs
 B kernel / modules do not work with network device for any reason. 
 C kernel does not start sshd for any reason
 
 How would one prevent this? 
[...]

The best solution here is using serial consoles. This will enable you to
remotely access the bios and lilo boot menu, so you can reboot with an
older kernel when anything goes wrong with your new kernel.


Regards,

Teun Vink
Luna.nl NOC


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Re: Advice on remote kernel changes?

2003-03-27 Thread Teun Vink
On Thu, 2003-03-27 at 14:34, Peter Holm wrote:
 Hi,
 
 are there any tutorials / packages out there that address the
 situation of patching / upgrading / changing the installed kernel
 remotely?
 
 three main problems come to my mind that could bring a fatal situation
 of not being able to access the machine after a reboot: 
 
 A kernel does not work with hardware for any reason and machine hangs
 B kernel / modules do not work with network device for any reason. 
 C kernel does not start sshd for any reason
 
 How would one prevent this? 
[...]

The best solution here is using serial consoles. This will enable you to
remotely access the bios and lilo boot menu, so you can reboot with an
older kernel when anything goes wrong with your new kernel.


Regards,

Teun Vink
Luna.nl NOC


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Re: Courier MTA

2003-03-24 Thread Teun Vink
On Sun, 2003-03-23 at 22:50, Andrew Miehs wrote:
 On Sun, Mar 23, 2003 at 10:13:24PM +0100, martin f krafft wrote:
  also sprach Andrew Miehs [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2003.03.23.2147 +0100]:
   Can I use it as a replacement for postfix, or am I better off sticking
   to postfix?
  
  why would you want to replace postfix? it's an excellent MTA, and it
  interacts with the other courier servers without any problems.
 
 Sorry... should have been a bit clearer...
 
 Am wanting to use the 'userdb' feature of courier, and thought that
 the courier-mta may support this
 
 Otherwise, I am looking at
 
   * Postfix uses virtual_mailbox_map for usernames (and uid)  delivery
   * Postfix uses sasl(1) and sasldb  for SMTP AUTH
   * Courier uses 'userdb' for password, and UID
 
   - And a shell script to keep them all in sync.
 
 Mysql and ldap are a bit overkill, and I don't like /etc/passwd as
 I don't want users which shell accounts 'accidently continously' talking
 to a pop3/ imap server.
 
 Unfortunately cyrus in woody is a very old version, and doesnt support
 sasl! :-( so This effectively leaves me with the postfix courier solution.

There is a cyrus (and postfix) backport from sid to woody:

deb http://people.debian.org/~hmh/woody/ hmh/cyrus/
deb http://people.debian.org/~hmh/woody/ hmh/postfix/
deb http://people.debian.org/~hmh/woody/ hmh/misc/

(mailman, squirrelmail and amavis-new are also available there)

You might want to take a loot at that... I've been using them for some time 
now, 
without any problems.


Regards,

Teun Vink
Luna.nl NOC




Re: load balancing

2003-03-11 Thread Teun Vink
On Tue, 2003-03-11 at 09:11, Markus Welsch wrote:
  Depends on what you want to balance, just TCP/IP traffic, or a specific
  service (mail/web/etc). For TCP/IP traffic, we use VRRP (Virtual
  Redundant Router Protocol), which works fine.
 
 What would you recommend if you want to realize load balancing between mail 
 and 
 webservers ? (Mail server should also include POP3/IMAP-Server).
 

I haven't got much experience in load balancing POP or IMAP. The only
thing we do here is that we have multiple POP- and IMAP-proxies which
talk to one server hosting the mailboxes. You could try letting building
multiple mailbox servers, and let the proxies figure out which mailbox
server they need to talk to... 

I don't know if there are tools available for this, you might need some
custom made stuff...

Regards,


Teun Vink
Luna.nl NOC




Re: BGP memory/cpu req

2003-03-11 Thread Teun Vink
On Tue, 2003-03-11 at 11:28, Valkai Elod wrote:
 Anyone running BGP with a global routing table on zebra/debian/gnu/linux?
 
 How much memory would it require? Does the CPU matter or is it mostly a 
 RAM issue?
 
 thx,


Check out the Zebra mailinglist, it has been discussed there over and
over. Basically, a full routing table would require 512Mb at least. CPU
isn't that much of an issue, any 'normal' CPU (P3) would do...


Teun




Re: load balancing

2003-03-10 Thread Teun Vink
On Mon, 2003-03-10 at 22:41, danilo lujambio wrote:
 Hi:
 
 what is the package or tool that you can recommended to make a load
 balancing between two internet outputs. I read docs about high
 availability servers, LVS and so on , but I am confused. Can someone
 orient to me ?

Depends on what you want to balance, just TCP/IP traffic, or a specific
service (mail/web/etc). For TCP/IP traffic, we use VRRP (Virtual
Redundant Router Protocol), which works fine.


Regards,


Teun Vink
Luna.nl




Re: Routing with Linux

2003-03-06 Thread Teun Vink
On Thu, 2003-03-06 at 13:16, Randy Kramer wrote:
 On Wednesday 05 March 2003 02:41 pm, Burner wrote:
  load average is about 5Mbyte/s spikes at 10MByte/s, all traffic is
  webcontent.
 
 That seems to be large volume -- three to seven T1s unless my math is 
 off (my coffee hasn't kicked in yet).
 
 I'd almost expect a firewall per T1, or what kind of performance can you 
 get out of a Linux box serving as a router??  (Well, it is just within 
 the capability of a single 100 mbps Ethernet card, but it's a lot of 
 traffic.)


To give some indication: we run a complete ISP backbone based on Debian
boxes running Zebra for routing. This is all done on fairly standard
hardware (usually Pentium III, 256Mb RAM), which can easily handle the
load. Actually, the greater part of the load is caused by SNMP calls and
user interaction. You can see some public statistics of our network on
http://noc.luna.nl. We also have a router connecting  5 T1 lines. It has
been up for over 600 days now, with a load average of about 0.05, also
on very standard hardware.

So I'd say a fairly recent box should be able to handle this amount of
traffic without any problems...


Regards,


Teun Vink
Luna.nl NOC
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Re: Routing with Linux

2003-03-06 Thread Teun Vink
On Thu, 2003-03-06 at 13:16, Randy Kramer wrote:
 On Wednesday 05 March 2003 02:41 pm, Burner wrote:
  load average is about 5Mbyte/s spikes at 10MByte/s, all traffic is
  webcontent.
 
 That seems to be large volume -- three to seven T1s unless my math is 
 off (my coffee hasn't kicked in yet).
 
 I'd almost expect a firewall per T1, or what kind of performance can you 
 get out of a Linux box serving as a router??  (Well, it is just within 
 the capability of a single 100 mbps Ethernet card, but it's a lot of 
 traffic.)


To give some indication: we run a complete ISP backbone based on Debian
boxes running Zebra for routing. This is all done on fairly standard
hardware (usually Pentium III, 256Mb RAM), which can easily handle the
load. Actually, the greater part of the load is caused by SNMP calls and
user interaction. You can see some public statistics of our network on
http://noc.luna.nl. We also have a router connecting  5 T1 lines. It has
been up for over 600 days now, with a load average of about 0.05, also
on very standard hardware.

So I'd say a fairly recent box should be able to handle this amount of
traffic without any problems...


Regards,


Teun Vink
Luna.nl NOC
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Re: Radius Question

2003-02-28 Thread Teun Vink
On Fri, 2003-02-28 at 01:02, Kevin Lynch wrote:
 I'm switching from Radius on a NT Server and I have the program
 install but, I'm not sure where the config files are supposed to go in
 Debian?
  
 I also can't seem to find useful help files.
  
  
 Suggestions?
  
  

It would help if you told us which radius server you're using...

For radiusd-cistron (which we use at the ISP I work for), the
configuration files are in /etc/raddb, documentation can be found in
/usr/share/doc/radiusd-cistron.


Teun Vink
Luna.nl System  Network Engineer




Re: Weakest point of a server?

2003-02-06 Thread Teun Vink
On Thu, 2003-02-06 at 14:13, Jason Lim wrote:
 Hi all,
 
 I was wondering what kind of failures you experience with long-running
 hardware.
 
 Most of us run servers with very long uptimes (we've got a server here
 with uptime approaching 3 years, which is not long compared to some, but
 we think it is pretty good!).
[...]


This is only from my own experiences at the ISP I work for. Old machines
(~5 year) which we used for testing purposes usually had problems with
the harddisk and/or the fans. Motherboards, NIC's and CPU's usually
worked fine in test setups...



Teun


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Re: apache broke

2002-10-30 Thread Teun Vink
On 29 Oct 2002, Michael Knorra wrote:

  any additional info, please do not hesitate to contact me.
 
 Yes, I hope so. It is the imap.so. 
 You can comment out the entry extension=imap.so in the php.ini file
 and start the apache.

Ah ok thankx, I'll check that. Too bad the main site which I host on that
machine is a webmail application using php+imap :(

For now, I've downgraded libc6, which was a lot of fun ;-)


Teun




Re: apache broke

2002-10-30 Thread Teun Vink
On 30 Oct 2002, Michael Knorra wrote:

 Teun Vink [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
  
  Ah ok thankx, I'll check that. Too bad the main site which I host on that
  machine is a webmail application using php+imap :(
 
 Bjoern.Falkenhagen said, that he has got a fixed imap.so module at
 ftp://ftp.falkenhagen.net. Didn't check it.. perhaps you can try this.
 

Thanks, I will look into that.

  For now, I've downgraded libc6, which was a lot of fun ;-)
 
 That was the first thing I have done, but the emacs didn't work
 anymore with that :-(
 

Hehe I saw postfix, ssh, proftpd and imap die after downgrading libc6 and
some other packages. Luckily, restarting those services did the trick.


Teun

-- 
If an infinite number of monkeys sit at an infinite number of typewriters
 and randomly press keys, they will eventually produce the source code of 
 MS-Windows.




apache broke

2002-10-29 Thread Teun Vink

Hi,

Since I upgrade my SID box yesterday, I've been having major problems with
my Apache. The problems started when cron.d ran this morning. The config
has been like this for over a month, so I doubt it that that is the
problem. When I do a 'strace -f apachectl start', the last lines are:

old_mmap(0x40383000, 16384, PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE, MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_FIXED,
9, 0xae000) = 0x40383000
close(9)= 0
munmap(0x4024e000, 15836)   = 0
stat64(/etc/cram-md5.pwd, 0xbfff7260) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or
directory)
stat64(/dev/urandom, {st_mode=S_IFCHR|0444, st_rdev=makedev(1, 9),
...}) = 0
--- SIGSEGV (Segmentation fault) ---

Switching the Apache LogLevel to 'debug' doesn't help at all. My error
logs only show which config files are processed, no more.

Can anyone give me a hint (or solution ;-) for this problem? If you need
any additional info, please do not hesitate to contact me.


TIA,


Teun

-- 
If an infinite number of monkeys sit at an infinite number of typewriters
 and randomly press keys, they will eventually produce the source code of 
 MS-Windows.


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Re: apache broke

2002-10-29 Thread Teun Vink
On Tue, 29 Oct 2002, Stephane Bortzmeyer wrote:

 On Tue, Oct 29, 2002 at 10:45:44AM +0100,
  Teun Vink [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote 
  a message of 39 lines which said:
 
  Since I upgrade my SID box yesterday, I've been having major
 
 First, sid is named unstable (sid == System In Development) and for a
 reason.
 

I know that that's why it's called unstable. But that doesn't mean that we
shouldn't mention that and just wait until the package maintainer fixes
it.

  my Apache.
 
 Probably the Glibc problem mentioned in the last issue of Debian
 Weekly News.
 

Thanks, I'll look into that.


Teun

-- 
If an infinite number of monkeys sit at an infinite number of typewriters
 and randomly press keys, they will eventually produce the source code of 
 MS-Windows.


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Re: apache broke

2002-10-29 Thread Teun Vink
On Tue, 29 Oct 2002, Mark Lijftogt wrote:

 
  On Tue, 29 Oct 2002, Stephane Bortzmeyer wrote:
  
   On Tue, Oct 29, 2002 at 10:45:44AM +0100,
Teun Vink [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote 
a message of 39 lines which said:
   
Since I upgrade my SID box yesterday, I've been having major
   
   First, sid is named unstable (sid == System In Development) and for a
   reason.
   
  
  I know that that's why it's called unstable. But that doesn't mean that we
  shouldn't mention that and just wait until the package maintainer fixes
  it.
 
 Both one point :-) Although I understand Stephane, I always thought this was
 the way of improving, building etc.etc.etc. Dev-work. And because it's sid
 in this case, maybe your better of in the debian's dev. department. I
 personaly wouldn't be at ease running a sid production box. 
 
 :-)
 

:)

This isn't a real production box. On some of those we're still planning
the migration from potato to woody. This is my personal box on which I
host sites and mail for some friends... 

I'll check debian-devel mailinglists and IRC if i can find the time :)


Thanx


Teun

-- 
If an infinite number of monkeys sit at an infinite number of typewriters
 and randomly press keys, they will eventually produce the source code of 
 MS-Windows.


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Re: Using testing (sarge) in production.

2002-10-29 Thread Teun Vink
On Tue, 29 Oct 2002, Fred Clausen wrote:

 Hi all,
 
 I read Teun Vink's posting about his Apache problems with unstable. I am
 currently using a mixture of stable and testing in production systems,
 depending on which versions of the applications I require. What are your
 experiences with testing in production environments? I have not had any
 problems but I would like to know others' experience. Most of our
 production systems are web/database systems.
 

Hi,

We try to minimize the use of testing, but in some cases we had no real
other option, since we really needed woody stuff when potato was still
stable, and backporting would imply backporting way too many packages to
keep the systems stable.

Up 'till now, we haven't had many problems with running testing in
production, although I must say that we started using testing (before
woody was released), when it was pretty mature.

For now, all we're still planning to migrate some of our more complicated
machines to woody. We're not running testing on production machines yet,
and I don't see many reasons for now to do so, but all will depend on how
fast Debian will release their next release...



Teun



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apache broke

2002-10-29 Thread Teun Vink

Hi,

Since I upgrade my SID box yesterday, I've been having major problems with
my Apache. The problems started when cron.d ran this morning. The config
has been like this for over a month, so I doubt it that that is the
problem. When I do a 'strace -f apachectl start', the last lines are:

old_mmap(0x40383000, 16384, PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE, MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_FIXED,
9, 0xae000) = 0x40383000
close(9)= 0
munmap(0x4024e000, 15836)   = 0
stat64(/etc/cram-md5.pwd, 0xbfff7260) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or
directory)
stat64(/dev/urandom, {st_mode=S_IFCHR|0444, st_rdev=makedev(1, 9),
...}) = 0
--- SIGSEGV (Segmentation fault) ---

Switching the Apache LogLevel to 'debug' doesn't help at all. My error
logs only show which config files are processed, no more.

Can anyone give me a hint (or solution ;-) for this problem? If you need
any additional info, please do not hesitate to contact me.


TIA,


Teun

-- 
If an infinite number of monkeys sit at an infinite number of typewriters
 and randomly press keys, they will eventually produce the source code of 
 MS-Windows.




Re: apache broke

2002-10-29 Thread Teun Vink
On Tue, 29 Oct 2002, Stephane Bortzmeyer wrote:

 On Tue, Oct 29, 2002 at 10:45:44AM +0100,
  Teun Vink [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote 
  a message of 39 lines which said:
 
  Since I upgrade my SID box yesterday, I've been having major
 
 First, sid is named unstable (sid == System In Development) and for a
 reason.
 

I know that that's why it's called unstable. But that doesn't mean that we
shouldn't mention that and just wait until the package maintainer fixes
it.

  my Apache.
 
 Probably the Glibc problem mentioned in the last issue of Debian
 Weekly News.
 

Thanks, I'll look into that.


Teun

-- 
If an infinite number of monkeys sit at an infinite number of typewriters
 and randomly press keys, they will eventually produce the source code of 
 MS-Windows.




Re: apache broke

2002-10-29 Thread Teun Vink
On Tue, 29 Oct 2002, Mark Lijftogt wrote:

 
  On Tue, 29 Oct 2002, Stephane Bortzmeyer wrote:
  
   On Tue, Oct 29, 2002 at 10:45:44AM +0100,
Teun Vink [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote 
a message of 39 lines which said:
   
Since I upgrade my SID box yesterday, I've been having major
   
   First, sid is named unstable (sid == System In Development) and for a
   reason.
   
  
  I know that that's why it's called unstable. But that doesn't mean that we
  shouldn't mention that and just wait until the package maintainer fixes
  it.
 
 Both one point :-) Although I understand Stephane, I always thought this was
 the way of improving, building etc.etc.etc. Dev-work. And because it's sid
 in this case, maybe your better of in the debian's dev. department. I
 personaly wouldn't be at ease running a sid production box. 
 
 :-)
 

:)

This isn't a real production box. On some of those we're still planning
the migration from potato to woody. This is my personal box on which I
host sites and mail for some friends... 

I'll check debian-devel mailinglists and IRC if i can find the time :)


Thanx


Teun

-- 
If an infinite number of monkeys sit at an infinite number of typewriters
 and randomly press keys, they will eventually produce the source code of 
 MS-Windows.




Re: Using testing (sarge) in production.

2002-10-29 Thread Teun Vink
On Tue, 29 Oct 2002, Fred Clausen wrote:

 Hi all,
 
 I read Teun Vink's posting about his Apache problems with unstable. I am
 currently using a mixture of stable and testing in production systems,
 depending on which versions of the applications I require. What are your
 experiences with testing in production environments? I have not had any
 problems but I would like to know others' experience. Most of our
 production systems are web/database systems.
 

Hi,

We try to minimize the use of testing, but in some cases we had no real
other option, since we really needed woody stuff when potato was still
stable, and backporting would imply backporting way too many packages to
keep the systems stable.

Up 'till now, we haven't had many problems with running testing in
production, although I must say that we started using testing (before
woody was released), when it was pretty mature.

For now, all we're still planning to migrate some of our more complicated
machines to woody. We're not running testing on production machines yet,
and I don't see many reasons for now to do so, but all will depend on how
fast Debian will release their next release...



Teun





Re: blocking trough MAC Address

2002-10-25 Thread Teun Vink
On Fri, 2002-10-25 at 15:31, Maarten Vink wrote:
 As far as I know, there's an iptables module that allows you to match on 
 MAC addresses. I've seen it several times when compiling a new kernel... 
 Haven't used it yet though.
 

Yeah there is: CONFIG_IP_NF_MATCH_MAC

Then you can do things like:

iptables -A in-eth0 -m mac --mac-source 00:11:22:33:44:55 -j refuse


Regards,

Teun Vink


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Re: SpamAssassin PHP-MySQL User Interface Problems

2002-08-29 Thread Teun Vink
On Wed, 2002-08-28 at 16:51, Gene Grimm wrote:
 I recently installed the SpamAssassin php-sa-mysql module to allow clients
 access to their userprefs options. It authenticates against shadow passwords
 using validate from libapache-mod-auth-shadow. The login script validates
 the username and password then redirects the browser to the phpsa.php page.
 I added the user name spamby to MySQL via webmin and set this in
 config.inc.php as per the readme file. I confirmed the configured host, user
 and password by inserting an echo statement in the phpsa file. The problem
 is that I get the below error messages and can't figure out why it is trying
 to connect as root.
 
 Warning: Access denied for user: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' (Using password: NO) in
 /var/www/phpsa/phpsa.php on line 16
 
 Warning: MySQL Connection Failed: Access denied for user: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
 (Using password: NO) in /var/www/phpsa/phpsa.php on line 16
 Could not connect
 

It looks like the root account does not have permission to access the
database in mysql, so I'd suggest you verify that. More info on that can
be found here: http://www.mysql.com/doc/en/Adding_users.html.


Teun





Re: Setting up an SSL Server

2002-08-03 Thread Teun Vink
On 3 Aug 2002, Shri Shrikumar wrote:

 Hi,
 
 How would one go about setting up an ssl server. Do I need to purchase a
 certificate for Verisign or anything ? What are the costs involved ?
 
 I've found OpenSSL - Is that adequate for an online shop ? Also, how
 difficult is it to set up SSL / Apache SSL.
 

Hi,

You can do 2 things: buy a certificate from a trusted party (e.g. Thawte
or OpenSRS), or use an unsigned certificate. You can create an unsigned
certificate yourself, but visitors of the https-site will be notified that
the cert is unsigned. A certificate should cost you somewhere between $100
and $200 a year...

OpenSSL is very well capable of hosting a SSL site. Apache-ssl and Apache
with mod-ssl are other possibilities. 

Installing isn't that hard. Just run apt-get apache-ssl, and check
http://www.apache-ssl.org for information on configuring SSL if you want
to use apache-ssl.


Teun

-- 
If an infinite number of monkeys sit at an infinite number of typewriters
 and randomly press keys, they will eventually produce the source code of 
 MS-Windows.





Re: Setting up an SSL Server

2002-08-03 Thread Teun Vink
On Sat, 3 Aug 2002, Marcin Sochacki wrote:

 On Sat, Aug 03, 2002 at 05:26:54PM +0200, Teun Vink wrote:
  You can do 2 things: buy a certificate from a trusted party (e.g. Thawte
  or OpenSRS), or use an unsigned certificate. You can create an unsigned
  certificate yourself, but visitors of the https-site will be notified that
  the cert is unsigned. A certificate should cost you somewhere between $100
  and $200 a year...
 
 To be exact, the certificate is signed in both cases, the difference is
 in the signing authority. Thawte, Verisign are trusted (in theory),
 your own CA (Certificate Authority) if not trusted, and that's why
 most browsers complain when entering such a website.
 
[...]

You're right. But the result for the person visiting the website is that a
self signed certificate is usually marked by their browser as untrusted,
resulting in a warning, while a certificate signed by a trusted party is
not.


Teun

-- 
If an infinite number of monkeys sit at an infinite number of typewriters
 and randomly press keys, they will eventually produce the source code of 
 MS-Windows.




webbased postfix configuration tool

2002-03-27 Thread Teun Vink

Hi,

I'm looking for a webbased configuration tool for postfix, somewhat like
the inter7 tools do for qmail.

Does anyone have any pointers?


Thanx,


Teun




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Re: Mailinglist software recommendations?

2001-12-07 Thread Teun Vink
On Fri, 7 Dec 2001, Marcel Hicking wrote:

 Hi folks
 
 could anyone recommend a mailinglist software for
 several small to medium sized mailinglists (say,
 from very few to maybe a thousand or so subscribers)?
 
 I would need
 a) The mailingslist software (obviously)
 b) Some admin web interface for the guys going
 to use and feed the lists. Need to be able to add lists,
 see and modify subscribers. And, if possible, write and
 post mails to the list via the web itnerface, too.
 c) A web interface to (un)subscribe to lists (which I
 could probably do myself ;-)
 
 Subscribers should not be able to post to the list in
 general, but having this optional for each list would
 be nice to have.
 
 Is there anythinglike this packaged for Debian?
 

Try Mailman, it can do all the things you asked.


Teun

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Re: 56K dialup for CCIL

2001-12-06 Thread Teun Vink

On Thu, 6 Dec 2001, Russell Coker wrote:

 On Thu, 6 Dec 2001 06:06, Chuck Peters wrote:
  One of our Network Admins Eric likes the USR Total Control and says we can
  pick up a used one for a good price.  Does anyone have experience with
  them or comments on the performance and reliablity?
 
 A google search on USR Total Control turns up two security issues in the 
 first page of results...
 
  We also offer text/shell dialup access because a few people still use slow
  old machines and a number of seniors just use PINE for email.  We can keep
  a few of the old analog lines going for them, but it would be prefable to
  offer both ppp and shell on the same dialup pool like we are now.
 
 I suggest getting a Cyclades card and running Portslave the machine that has 
 it.  It allows PPP, SLIP, telnet, rsh, and ssh connections from the terminal 
 server to a specified machine (controlled by RADIUS).
 
  We will be using OpenLDAP for authenication.  It is a must that we be able
  to control users online time and vary it for a few, volunteers and other
  specified people get extra time while most of the users get a couple of
  hours per day and we limit it during heavy usage.  Does anyone have
  comments on that issue?
 
 There are a number of RADIUS servers that talk LDAP.  FreeRADIUS seems pretty 
 good, I expect it can do what you want. Portslave supports limiting connect 
 time based on the RADIUS data.
 
  CCIL is expecting to spend 5-7K on this so that kind of limits our
  equipment options.  Maybe something besides the USR Total Control would be
  a better choice.  Any recommendations?
 
 Cyclades products cost considerably less.  See http://www.cyclades.com/ .
 
 

At the ISP I work at, we used to work with a Total Control for our dial up
customers, and we bought a couple of Cyclades PR4000's to replace the
Total Control.

Frankly, I'm not too happy about both. The TC still has some unexplained 
problems, which couldn't be solved by their tech support. The only way we
could keep the machine running, was by shutting it down of 30 minutes
every night. Of course, I don't know if this is a general TC problem, or
if our TC is just buggy.

Now, we also have some difficulties with some of the more advanced
features of the PR4000. Cyclades Tech Support is quite helpful, but hasn't
been able to solve these problems yet, after 4 months of debugging, trying
new firmware releases, etc.


Maybe this info helps,


Teun 

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Re: 56K dialup for CCIL

2001-12-06 Thread Teun Vink

On Thu, 6 Dec 2001, Russell Coker wrote:

 On Thu, 6 Dec 2001 14:06, Teun Vink wrote:
 
[...]
  Frankly, I'm not too happy about both. The TC still has some unexplained
  problems, which couldn't be solved by their tech support. The only way we
  could keep the machine running, was by shutting it down of 30 minutes
  every night. Of course, I don't know if this is a general TC problem, or
  if our TC is just buggy.
 
 Sounds like a cooling problem (or maybe a low quality component that can't 
 deal with heat properly).

That could very well be the problem. But it doesn't matter anymore, since
we replaced it now.

 
  Now, we also have some difficulties with some of the more advanced
  features of the PR4000. Cyclades Tech Support is quite helpful, but hasn't
  been able to solve these problems yet, after 4 months of debugging, trying
  new firmware releases, etc.
 
 What advanced features are you having problems with?  Is it with the RAS2000 
 (the Cyclades version of Portslave)?
 
 

We have several problems, all of which have been reported to Cyclades Tech
Support. They include: random reboots and dangling MLPPP and MCPPP
sessions, and some minor issues, e.g. a part of the SNMP tree is missing.


Teun

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Re: 56K dialup for CCIL

2001-12-06 Thread Teun Vink
On Thu, 6 Dec 2001, Russell Coker wrote:

 On Thu, 6 Dec 2001 06:06, Chuck Peters wrote:
  One of our Network Admins Eric likes the USR Total Control and says we can
  pick up a used one for a good price.  Does anyone have experience with
  them or comments on the performance and reliablity?
 
 A google search on USR Total Control turns up two security issues in the 
 first page of results...
 
  We also offer text/shell dialup access because a few people still use slow
  old machines and a number of seniors just use PINE for email.  We can keep
  a few of the old analog lines going for them, but it would be prefable to
  offer both ppp and shell on the same dialup pool like we are now.
 
 I suggest getting a Cyclades card and running Portslave the machine that has 
 it.  It allows PPP, SLIP, telnet, rsh, and ssh connections from the terminal 
 server to a specified machine (controlled by RADIUS).
 
  We will be using OpenLDAP for authenication.  It is a must that we be able
  to control users online time and vary it for a few, volunteers and other
  specified people get extra time while most of the users get a couple of
  hours per day and we limit it during heavy usage.  Does anyone have
  comments on that issue?
 
 There are a number of RADIUS servers that talk LDAP.  FreeRADIUS seems pretty 
 good, I expect it can do what you want. Portslave supports limiting connect 
 time based on the RADIUS data.
 
  CCIL is expecting to spend 5-7K on this so that kind of limits our
  equipment options.  Maybe something besides the USR Total Control would be
  a better choice.  Any recommendations?
 
 Cyclades products cost considerably less.  See http://www.cyclades.com/ .
 
 

At the ISP I work at, we used to work with a Total Control for our dial up
customers, and we bought a couple of Cyclades PR4000's to replace the
Total Control.

Frankly, I'm not too happy about both. The TC still has some unexplained 
problems, which couldn't be solved by their tech support. The only way we
could keep the machine running, was by shutting it down of 30 minutes
every night. Of course, I don't know if this is a general TC problem, or
if our TC is just buggy.

Now, we also have some difficulties with some of the more advanced
features of the PR4000. Cyclades Tech Support is quite helpful, but hasn't
been able to solve these problems yet, after 4 months of debugging, trying
new firmware releases, etc.


Maybe this info helps,


Teun 

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Re: 56K dialup for CCIL

2001-12-06 Thread Teun Vink
On Thu, 6 Dec 2001, Russell Coker wrote:

 On Thu, 6 Dec 2001 14:06, Teun Vink wrote:
 
[...]
  Frankly, I'm not too happy about both. The TC still has some unexplained
  problems, which couldn't be solved by their tech support. The only way we
  could keep the machine running, was by shutting it down of 30 minutes
  every night. Of course, I don't know if this is a general TC problem, or
  if our TC is just buggy.
 
 Sounds like a cooling problem (or maybe a low quality component that can't 
 deal with heat properly).

That could very well be the problem. But it doesn't matter anymore, since
we replaced it now.

 
  Now, we also have some difficulties with some of the more advanced
  features of the PR4000. Cyclades Tech Support is quite helpful, but hasn't
  been able to solve these problems yet, after 4 months of debugging, trying
  new firmware releases, etc.
 
 What advanced features are you having problems with?  Is it with the RAS2000 
 (the Cyclades version of Portslave)?
 
 

We have several problems, all of which have been reported to Cyclades Tech
Support. They include: random reboots and dangling MLPPP and MCPPP
sessions, and some minor issues, e.g. a part of the SNMP tree is missing.


Teun

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Re: Mailing Lists

2001-11-08 Thread Teun Vink
On Thu, 8 Nov 2001, Martin WHEELER wrote:

 On Thu, 8 Nov 2001, Andre Luis Lopes wrote:
 
  Em Qui 08 Nov 2001 10:19, Craigsc escreveu:
 
   We are wanting to set-up a mailing list for our clients
   and were wondering which program(s) we should use. At
   present our mail is handled by exim.
 
 I did it sometime ago and I've used mailman which is quite easy to use 
  and
  powerfull, but I'm not an ISP so people in the list would help you best.
 
 I *am* an ISP, and after messing around with quite a few list managers
 eventually settled on mailman as being the best solution for my
 situation.  (Lazy admin with lots of lists :)
 
 It's worth it for the web-based administration and archiving alone.
 
 msw
 

I totally agree. At the ISP I work for we switched from majordomo to
mailman some time ago, and it works perfectly.

The web-based admin is great, both for us as admins and for our customers. 


Teun

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Re: Sendmail

2001-10-10 Thread Teun Vink

On Wed, 10 Oct 2001, Craig wrote:

 Hi Guys
 
 Does anyone know how I can test to see if sendmail
 is relaying for domains that are in the relay-domains
 file ?? And not an open relay ?
 
 ..Craig
 
 
 

A nice test to check if your machine isn't an open relay is opening a
telnet session to mail-abuse.org from the machine you want to test.

Although it doesn't seem to work now:

einstein:~# telnet mail-abuse.org
Trying 204.152.186.193...
Connected to mail-abuse.org.
Escape character is '^]'.
/proj/maps/bin/in.relaytest: socket failed [Bad file descriptor]


But it usually is a nice test... we use it at the ISP I work for to test
every colocated machine which is placed.


Teun

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Re: Sendmail

2001-10-10 Thread Teun Vink
On Wed, 10 Oct 2001, Craig wrote:

 Hi Guys
 
 Does anyone know how I can test to see if sendmail
 is relaying for domains that are in the relay-domains
 file ?? And not an open relay ?
 
 ..Craig
 
 
 

A nice test to check if your machine isn't an open relay is opening a
telnet session to mail-abuse.org from the machine you want to test.

Although it doesn't seem to work now:

einstein:~# telnet mail-abuse.org
Trying 204.152.186.193...
Connected to mail-abuse.org.
Escape character is '^]'.
/proj/maps/bin/in.relaytest: socket failed [Bad file descriptor]


But it usually is a nice test... we use it at the ISP I work for to test
every colocated machine which is placed.


Teun

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Re: SOS Bind

2001-09-05 Thread Teun Vink

On Tue, 4 Sep 2001, Jeremy C. Reed wrote:

 On Tue, 4 Sep 2001, Craig wrote:
 
  I have a debian box running Bind, acting as a primary DNS server. I
  have update the serial numbers on the zone files but nothing is
  propagating out. Its been about 72 hours now and still has the old
  IP of the server. Bind version 8.2.3
 
 This is unclear.
 
 Does the primary (that you made the change on) know the new info? If not,
 then reload the named or the zone itself.
 

And make sure you don't have any typo's in the zone configuration. Bind
will not reload the zone if there are errors in it.


Teun

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Re: SOS Bind

2001-09-04 Thread Teun Vink

On Tue, 4 Sep 2001, Craig wrote:

 Hi debian people
 
 I have a debian box running Bind, acting as a primary DNS server. I
 have update the serial numbers on the zone files but nothing is
 propagating out. Its been about 72 hours now and still has the old
 IP of the server. Bind version 8.2.3
 
 Any help would be great appreciated :)
 
 ..Craig
 
 
 

Did you make sure that your primary DNS server is listed as authorative
name server in the whois information for the domains you are serving?



Regards,


Teun

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Re: ispman

2001-07-12 Thread Teun Vink

On Thu, 12 Jul 2001, Russell Coker wrote:

 On Wed, 11 Jul 2001 23:48, Waldemar Brodkorb wrote:
  Hello debianfriends,
 
  have anyone of you tested ispman?
  http://www.ispman.org
 
  Anyone seen a deb-package of it?
 
 I checked it out as I wanted to make a deb out of it.  At the time at least 
 it seemed rather tricky to package.  It had a number of install sub-scripts 
 that put files in various locations and it was difficult to sort out how to 
 force it into the standard debian places...  I eventually gave up and worked 
 on other things.
 
 If you're going to do it then I'll help you...
 
 

I also checked it out, but wasn't that happy about it. Like Russel said,
you need some tweaking to make it work on a Debian box. Also, removing it
wasn't that much fun either.


Teun

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Re: Exim and SMS gateways

2001-07-10 Thread Teun Vink

On Tue, 10 Jul 2001, Marcin Sochacki wrote:

 Hi all,
 
 I have got some problems with users on my server using email-to-SMS gateways.
 They put .procmailrc like this one:
 
 --
 SENDMAIL=/usr/sbin/sendmail
 :0c
 * ^[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 | $HOME/email2sms | $SENDMAIL -t
 --
 
 When the SMS gateway of someone's operator dies, the messages are bounced back
 and processed again by procmail. The error message is sent to SMS gateway,
 which bounces it again...
 
 So after some time I have thousands of messages in my spool. How can
 I prevent this behavior with Exim configuration options?
 
 Marcin
 
 

You could write a procmail rule which filters the bounces and drop them in
a mailbox (or send them to /dev/null). Of course, you need to place this
rule _before_ the rule which sends the SMS.


Teun

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Re: Exim and SMS gateways

2001-07-10 Thread Teun Vink
On Tue, 10 Jul 2001, Marcin Sochacki wrote:

 Hi all,
 
 I have got some problems with users on my server using email-to-SMS gateways.
 They put .procmailrc like this one:
 
 --
 SENDMAIL=/usr/sbin/sendmail
 :0c
 * [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 | $HOME/email2sms | $SENDMAIL -t
 --
 
 When the SMS gateway of someone's operator dies, the messages are bounced back
 and processed again by procmail. The error message is sent to SMS gateway,
 which bounces it again...
 
 So after some time I have thousands of messages in my spool. How can
 I prevent this behavior with Exim configuration options?
 
 Marcin
 
 

You could write a procmail rule which filters the bounces and drop them in
a mailbox (or send them to /dev/null). Of course, you need to place this
rule _before_ the rule which sends the SMS.


Teun

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Re: Image disk for debian

2001-06-20 Thread Teun Vink

On Wed, 20 Jun 2001, Craig wrote:

 Hi ladies and fellas
 
 Is there a way of selecting packages and storing them in a flat text file,
 that
 debian uses to reference in the installation procedure.
 
 Thanks
 Craig
 

dpkg --get-selections  file
dpkg --set-selections  file

should do the trick if you only want to store package names...


Teun

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Re: WAN Adapters...Wan in general

2001-06-08 Thread Teun Vink

On 8 Jun 2001, Alex wrote:

 A question to you all:
 
 Im sort of in a tight spot here. I want to connect my enterprise through
 a cable line provided by a big carrier. They call it an internet
 link.well a modem can be an internet link but ive never needed a
 1,200 dls. device to route it (yeah, they want me to buy a router as
 well). Now, i dont want to buy the router, i want to implement a linux
 router for this kind of network. Some call it WAN link ups.some
 call it Direct inet links. im just calling it WAN
 
 Now, as far as ive gotten by my research, one needs to buy a WAN card
 that understands the HDLC protocol or the SyncPPP protocol (depending on
 your provider). Ive foung at least three that run under linux.
 
 Now something made me nervous my provider said he can get me a V.35
 line or a g207 line (i dont know what does that mean), i cant find docs
 on bridging from this kind of interface to ethernet.
 
 Anyway, some of this cards support this kind of interface and they range
 from 500 to a 1000 dollars. I dont know what to buy, i cant find further
 documentation, i dont know dick (pardon me). 
 
 I want to make a bridge between this kind of interface (this HDLC or
 SyncPPP or WAN connection) and my internal networko yeah, by the
 way, I need this to give internet access to all the people here...if
 your answer is go buy the router, quit posting here then please at
 least point me to some docs on WAN's and currently available protocols
 and stuff...
 
 Sincerely
 Alex  
 
 

What kind of connection does your ISP provide? Is it a tv cable, T1/E1,
T3/E3, or something else? 

Make sure you take a good look at at least these things:

* protocols (hdlc, syncPPP, etc)
* in case of T1/T3/E1/E3: does it support fractional T1/T3/E1/E3
* connector type (V.35, RJ48, BNC, etc)
* driver support: open source drivers

The company I work for uses linux routers for E1 and T3 connections to our
upstream providers and customers. They work just fine...


kind regards,


Teun Vink

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Re: WAN Adapters...Wan in general

2001-06-08 Thread Teun Vink

On Fri, 8 Jun 2001, Nicolas Bougues wrote:

[snip]
 
 I believe you're talking about a T1/E1 link. Basically, the telco
 brings you the T1/E1 trunk. Then, depending on the country/operator,
 they provide you with a CSU/DSU, or not.
 
 It they do, the CSU/DSU will provide a sync serial port, either V35 or
 X21. V35 should be avoided, connectors are ugly and expensive, X21 is
 OK. Then you'll need a sync board with a matching serial interface
 (see below).
 
 If they don't, they provide you a basic G703 T1 or E1 line. You have
 either to buy a CSU/DSU, or to use a board that doesn't require
 one. In this case, your board will connect directly to the 4 telco
 wires, using (usually) an RJ45 plug.

 
 Such board (with or without CSU/DSU) exist for Linux. Try :
 www.sangoma.com, www.etinc.com, etc.
 
 
 

At my work we use Cyclades PC300 boards
(http://www.cyclades.com/products/svrbas/pc300.htm), available with
different types of connectors. 

They are quite easy to configure and offer open source drivers.



Teun

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Re: WAN Adapters...Wan in general

2001-06-08 Thread Teun Vink

On Fri, 8 Jun 2001, Jason Lim wrote:

 We also use PR3000s with various WAN cards. Cyclades have wonder products
 and great support. I recommend them. www.cyclades.com
 
 Sincerely,
 Jason
 

Indeed, I recommend them as well :)
Although we've had some hard times getting the PR4000 RAS to work the way
we wanted to (and found a couple of bugs in the firmware on the way). But
they techsupport is very fast, friendly and skilled.


Teun

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Re: WAN Adapters...Wan in general

2001-06-08 Thread Teun Vink
On 8 Jun 2001, Alex wrote:

 A question to you all:
 
 Im sort of in a tight spot here. I want to connect my enterprise through
 a cable line provided by a big carrier. They call it an internet
 link.well a modem can be an internet link but ive never needed a
 1,200 dls. device to route it (yeah, they want me to buy a router as
 well). Now, i dont want to buy the router, i want to implement a linux
 router for this kind of network. Some call it WAN link ups.some
 call it Direct inet links. im just calling it WAN
 
 Now, as far as ive gotten by my research, one needs to buy a WAN card
 that understands the HDLC protocol or the SyncPPP protocol (depending on
 your provider). Ive foung at least three that run under linux.
 
 Now something made me nervous my provider said he can get me a V.35
 line or a g207 line (i dont know what does that mean), i cant find docs
 on bridging from this kind of interface to ethernet.
 
 Anyway, some of this cards support this kind of interface and they range
 from 500 to a 1000 dollars. I dont know what to buy, i cant find further
 documentation, i dont know dick (pardon me). 
 
 I want to make a bridge between this kind of interface (this HDLC or
 SyncPPP or WAN connection) and my internal networko yeah, by the
 way, I need this to give internet access to all the people here...if
 your answer is go buy the router, quit posting here then please at
 least point me to some docs on WAN's and currently available protocols
 and stuff...
 
 Sincerely
 Alex  
 
 

What kind of connection does your ISP provide? Is it a tv cable, T1/E1,
T3/E3, or something else? 

Make sure you take a good look at at least these things:

* protocols (hdlc, syncPPP, etc)
* in case of T1/T3/E1/E3: does it support fractional T1/T3/E1/E3
* connector type (V.35, RJ48, BNC, etc)
* driver support: open source drivers

The company I work for uses linux routers for E1 and T3 connections to our
upstream providers and customers. They work just fine...


kind regards,


Teun Vink

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Re: WAN Adapters...Wan in general

2001-06-08 Thread Teun Vink
On Fri, 8 Jun 2001, Nicolas Bougues wrote:

[snip]
 
 I believe you're talking about a T1/E1 link. Basically, the telco
 brings you the T1/E1 trunk. Then, depending on the country/operator,
 they provide you with a CSU/DSU, or not.
 
 It they do, the CSU/DSU will provide a sync serial port, either V35 or
 X21. V35 should be avoided, connectors are ugly and expensive, X21 is
 OK. Then you'll need a sync board with a matching serial interface
 (see below).
 
 If they don't, they provide you a basic G703 T1 or E1 line. You have
 either to buy a CSU/DSU, or to use a board that doesn't require
 one. In this case, your board will connect directly to the 4 telco
 wires, using (usually) an RJ45 plug.

 
 Such board (with or without CSU/DSU) exist for Linux. Try :
 www.sangoma.com, www.etinc.com, etc.
 
 
 

At my work we use Cyclades PC300 boards
(http://www.cyclades.com/products/svrbas/pc300.htm), available with
different types of connectors. 

They are quite easy to configure and offer open source drivers.



Teun

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Re: WAN Adapters...Wan in general

2001-06-08 Thread Teun Vink
On Fri, 8 Jun 2001, Jason Lim wrote:

 We also use PR3000s with various WAN cards. Cyclades have wonder products
 and great support. I recommend them. www.cyclades.com
 
 Sincerely,
 Jason
 

Indeed, I recommend them as well :)
Although we've had some hard times getting the PR4000 RAS to work the way
we wanted to (and found a couple of bugs in the firmware on the way). But
they techsupport is very fast, friendly and skilled.


Teun

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Re: force queue Postfix

2001-05-28 Thread Teun Vink

On Mon, 28 May 2001, Manuel Trujillo wrote:

 Hi!
 
 I'm reading the documentation of Postfix, but, I don't know if this is
 for my impatient, I don't see the manner of make a force queue with
 Postfix.
 
 Can anybody help me, please??
 
 Thank's for all, and excuse me my bad english... :(
 
 Have a nice day  ;-)
 TooManySecrets
 
 

Hi,

Just check the postfix manpages:

   flush  Force delivery: attempt to deliver every message in
  the  deferred  mail  queue.  Normally,  attempts to
  deliver delayed mail happen at  regular  intervals,
  the interval doubling after each failed attempt.



grtz,


Teun

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Re: force queue Postfix

2001-05-28 Thread Teun Vink
On Mon, 28 May 2001, Manuel Trujillo wrote:

 Hi!
 
 I'm reading the documentation of Postfix, but, I don't know if this is
 for my impatient, I don't see the manner of make a force queue with
 Postfix.
 
 Can anybody help me, please??
 
 Thank's for all, and excuse me my bad english... :(
 
 Have a nice day  ;-)
 TooManySecrets
 
 

Hi,

Just check the postfix manpages:

   flush  Force delivery: attempt to deliver every message in
  the  deferred  mail  queue.  Normally,  attempts to
  deliver delayed mail happen at  regular  intervals,
  the interval doubling after each failed attempt.



grtz,


Teun

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setting up my own apt source

2001-05-09 Thread Teun Vink


Hi all,

I need to set up an apt source for my work, where we can store our custom
made packages and kernels. I know that this can be done using
dpkg-scanpackages, but I can't find any help on that besides the
manpages. Does anybody know of a FAQ or HOWTO?


thanks,

Teun

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setting up my own apt source

2001-05-09 Thread Teun Vink

Hi all,

I need to set up an apt source for my work, where we can store our custom
made packages and kernels. I know that this can be done using
dpkg-scanpackages, but I can't find any help on that besides the
manpages. Does anybody know of a FAQ or HOWTO?


thanks,

Teun

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Re: Performance monitor

2001-05-03 Thread Teun Vink

On Thu, 3 May 2001, Jason Lim wrote:

 Strange...
 
 dselect tells me:
 
 atsar - system activity reporter
 
 monitor system resources such as cpu  disk, record data for later
 analysis
 
 does it also monitor network activity (eg. 100mb link 23% utilization)?
 
 Sincerely,
 Jason Lim
 

Here's some of the output of atsar, maybe this will tell you what you want
to know:

stardust:~ atsar --help
atsar: invalid option -- -
usage: atsar [-flags] t [n]  or
   atsar [-flags] [-s hh:mm] [-e hh:mm] [-i sec] [-n day# | -f file]
flags:
-A  all flags
-u  cpu (default flag)
-d  disk
-D  disk-partition
-r  memory  swap
-p  paging  swapping
-I  interrupts
-v  kernel-resources
-l  net-interf (general)
-L  net-interf (errors)
-w  ip (general)
-W  ip (errors)
-t  tcp(general)
-T  tcp(errors)
-U  udp
-m  icmp   (general)
-M  icmp   (per type)
-N  nfs(general)
-E  nfs(errors)
-R  nfs-rpc(%calls)



stardust:~ atsar -wt

Linux  stardust  2.2.18  #1 Mon Feb 5 14:22:51 CET 2001  i586  05/03/2001

10:00:02  inrecv/s outreq/s indeliver/s forward/s reasmok/s fragcreat/s
_ip_
10:10:02   1.1  0.9 0.3   0.0   0.0 0.0
10:20:01   1.3  0.9 0.4   0.0   0.0 0.0
10:30:01   1.1  0.8 0.4   0.0   0.0 0.0
10:40:01   1.2  0.9 0.5   0.0   0.0 0.0
10:50:02   1.2  1.1 0.3   0.0   0.0 0.0
11:00:01   0.6  0.5 0.2   0.0   0.0 0.0
11:10:01   1.1  0.8 0.4   0.0   0.0 0.0
11:20:01   1.1  0.8 0.3   0.0   0.0 0.0
11:30:02   0.9  0.7 0.2   0.0   0.0 0.0
11:40:01   1.5  1.4 0.4   0.0   0.0 0.0
11:50:01   1.1  0.7 0.4   0.0   0.0 0.0
12:00:01   1.9  1.7 0.3   0.0   0.0 0.0

10:00:02  insegs/s otsegs/s actopen/s pasopen/s  nowopen  socknow sockmax
_tcp_
10:10:02   0.6  0.6   0.0   0.03   23 158
10:20:01   0.7  0.6   0.0   0.03   23 158
10:30:01   0.5  0.5   0.0   0.03   23 158
10:40:01   0.5  0.5   0.0   0.03   23 158
10:50:02   0.7  0.8   0.0   0.04   24 158
11:00:01   0.2  0.3   0.0   0.04   24 158
11:10:01   0.5  0.5   0.0   0.04   24 158
11:20:01   0.6  0.6   0.0   0.04   24 158
11:30:02   0.5  0.6   0.0   0.03   23 158
11:40:01   0.9  1.1   0.0   0.03   23 158
11:50:01   0.5  0.4   0.0   0.03   23 158
12:00:01   1.4  1.4   0.0   0.04   24 158




Regards,


Teun


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Re: Performance monitor

2001-05-03 Thread Teun Vink
On Thu, 3 May 2001, Jason Lim wrote:

 Strange...
 
 dselect tells me:
 
 atsar - system activity reporter
 
 monitor system resources such as cpu  disk, record data for later
 analysis
 
 does it also monitor network activity (eg. 100mb link 23% utilization)?
 
 Sincerely,
 Jason Lim
 

Here's some of the output of atsar, maybe this will tell you what you want
to know:

stardust:~ atsar --help
atsar: invalid option -- -
usage: atsar [-flags] t [n]  or
   atsar [-flags] [-s hh:mm] [-e hh:mm] [-i sec] [-n day# | -f file]
flags:
-A  all flags
-u  cpu (default flag)
-d  disk
-D  disk-partition
-r  memory  swap
-p  paging  swapping
-I  interrupts
-v  kernel-resources
-l  net-interf (general)
-L  net-interf (errors)
-w  ip (general)
-W  ip (errors)
-t  tcp(general)
-T  tcp(errors)
-U  udp
-m  icmp   (general)
-M  icmp   (per type)
-N  nfs(general)
-E  nfs(errors)
-R  nfs-rpc(%calls)



stardust:~ atsar -wt

Linux  stardust  2.2.18  #1 Mon Feb 5 14:22:51 CET 2001  i586  05/03/2001

10:00:02  inrecv/s outreq/s indeliver/s forward/s reasmok/s fragcreat/s
_ip_
10:10:02   1.1  0.9 0.3   0.0   0.0 0.0
10:20:01   1.3  0.9 0.4   0.0   0.0 0.0
10:30:01   1.1  0.8 0.4   0.0   0.0 0.0
10:40:01   1.2  0.9 0.5   0.0   0.0 0.0
10:50:02   1.2  1.1 0.3   0.0   0.0 0.0
11:00:01   0.6  0.5 0.2   0.0   0.0 0.0
11:10:01   1.1  0.8 0.4   0.0   0.0 0.0
11:20:01   1.1  0.8 0.3   0.0   0.0 0.0
11:30:02   0.9  0.7 0.2   0.0   0.0 0.0
11:40:01   1.5  1.4 0.4   0.0   0.0 0.0
11:50:01   1.1  0.7 0.4   0.0   0.0 0.0
12:00:01   1.9  1.7 0.3   0.0   0.0 0.0

10:00:02  insegs/s otsegs/s actopen/s pasopen/s  nowopen  socknow sockmax
_tcp_
10:10:02   0.6  0.6   0.0   0.03   23 158
10:20:01   0.7  0.6   0.0   0.03   23 158
10:30:01   0.5  0.5   0.0   0.03   23 158
10:40:01   0.5  0.5   0.0   0.03   23 158
10:50:02   0.7  0.8   0.0   0.04   24 158
11:00:01   0.2  0.3   0.0   0.04   24 158
11:10:01   0.5  0.5   0.0   0.04   24 158
11:20:01   0.6  0.6   0.0   0.04   24 158
11:30:02   0.5  0.6   0.0   0.03   23 158
11:40:01   0.9  1.1   0.0   0.03   23 158
11:50:01   0.5  0.4   0.0   0.03   23 158
12:00:01   1.4  1.4   0.0   0.04   24 158




Regards,


Teun


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traffic accounting

2001-01-18 Thread Teun Vink


Hi,

I would like to setup up some sort of traffic accounting in our
network. I know how to do this using ipchains rules, but the problem is
that our network is completely redundant, so each machine in the network
has two gateways (both Debian boxes). 

Does anybody know of a tool which can automatically combine the accounting
of multiple routers into one set of statistics?


Regards,

Teun

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Re: traffic accounting

2001-01-18 Thread Teun Vink

On Thu, 18 Jan 2001, Alexander Reelsen wrote:

 Hi
 
 On Thu, Jan 18, 2001 at 03:16:34PM +0100, Teun Vink wrote:
  I would like to setup up some sort of traffic accounting in our
  network. I know how to do this using ipchains rules, but the problem is
  that our network is completely redundant, so each machine in the network
  has two gateways (both Debian boxes). 
 
  Does anybody know of a tool which can automatically combine the accounting
  of multiple routers into one set of statistics?
 Well, if you need graphical accounting you can try to stick with Hoth
 (incidentally written by me ;)). You can stack whatever data you want on
 the top of each other (the example graph on the page stacks tcp with icmp
 with irc, what is completely senseless...), so you can stack the traffic
 of two interfaces as well.
 
 It is based on RRDtool to store the data and the rest is a small perl
 script. See more at:
 http://joker.rhwd.de/software/hoth
 
 Biggest caveat: Not a seamless installation and almost no few docs.
 
 And if someone helps me to read the netlink sockets for accounting in
 Linux 2.4 I will port it as well. I wasn't successful yet in any way,
 neither in perl nor in python (help is really appreciated! :))..
 
 
 MfG/Regards, Alexander
 
 

Well.. I especially need numbers, since we want to bill excessive traffic
:-)

But I be sure to take a look!


Teun

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E1/E3/T3/STM1 cards with Linux support

2000-10-25 Thread Teun Vink


Hello,

Does anybody have any experience with E1/E3/T3 or STM1 cards which are
supported by Linux? Especially cards with a BNC, UTP/RJ345 or SC/APC
connector.

Kind regards,


Teun Vink

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Re: E1/E3/T3/STM1 cards with Linux support

2000-10-25 Thread Teun Vink

On Wed, 25 Oct 2000, Nicolas BOUGUES wrote:

  Does anybody have any experience with E1/E3/T3 or STM1 cards which are
  supported by Linux? Especially cards with a BNC, UTP/RJ345 or SC/APC
  connector.
 
 I know at least three vendors of such products :
 - Sangoma (http://www.sangoma.com)
 - Emerging (http://www.etinc.com)
 - Lanmedia (http://www.lanmedia.com)
 
 Good experiences with the two firsts, no experience with the later.
 

Thanks.. I'll check those out. 


Teun

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