Re: spamassassin: whitelist_from_rcvd ?!?!

2003-09-04 Thread Karsten M. Self
on Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 09:23:49PM -0500, Michael D Schleif ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Wow!
> 
> I have just discovered a serious mis-judgment by the spamassassin folks,
> or possibly by the debian maintainer of spamassassin!
> 
>/usr/share/spamassassin/60_whitelist.cf
> 
> This file contains ``Default whitelists'' ... ``addresses which send
> mail that is often tagged (incorrectly) as spam ...''
> 
>amazon.com
>walmart.com
>orbitz.com
> 
> I don't know about any of you; but, I really want the opportunity -- up
> front -- to decide *FOR MYSELF* whether or not I consider the email sent
> to me from these sites to be spam.

My suspicion is that these are domains which have given, erm, good
reason to the SA team to whitelist them.

If you want to override the WL, you've got the explicit data to do so.
Fixes with procmail are similarly straightforward.

Peace.

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Re: overnet, mldonkey, which one??

2003-09-04 Thread Paul Johnson
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On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 03:53:08PM -0700, Vineet Kumar wrote:
> sed -e s/microsoft/debian/g Earth > Better_World
> 
> Although, I think the regex replacement might be too simplistic.  Would
> "Debian Windows XP" really make the world a better place?  ;-)
> 
> How about s/microsoft//g ?

< Earth sed -e s/Microsoft/Debian/g | sed -e s/Debian Windows XP/Xandros/g > 
Better_World

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Re: overnet, mldonkey, which one??

2003-09-04 Thread Paul Johnson
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On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 04:03:22PM +0200, Alfredo Valles wrote:
> Also mldonkey advice you to create a new acount for it to work should any 
> hacker gets access to the machine. So I guess that it's not very secure.
> But seems to me that overnet isn't free, which is a big drawback.

Use xmule instead.

> 3- Proxy support. (I live behind a firewall)

Good network design forwards packets in existing connections fine.  My
might get a low-id occasionally, but who cares?  It really cuts down on
the people leaching from you.

> 4- Work well in low bandwith.

You have eliminated all possibilities.

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Re: Faked From-Adress with my domain on them

2003-09-04 Thread Michael C.
In linux.debian.user, Stefan Waidele jun. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>  Ken Raeburn wrote:
> > Paul Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >>OK, but I'm not entirely convinced he's sending a host, which is why
> >>everybody's local mail server is adding in the host part.
> > 
> > I've seen some hints of "@localhost" in the email I got.  I sent email
> > to Kevin about two weeks ago asking him to fix it.  Since it hasn't
> > been fixed yet, and he never answered, I just assumed he didn't care.
>  
>  Well, Kevin has fixed it, so he is not indifferent.
>  
>  But there is another case of the same misconfiguration on the list.
>  But since I now know it is not a conscious attempt to use my domain, I 
>  am way more relaxed than before :)
>  
I hope this fixes it.  Sorry, I don't know of a test list.

Michael C.
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Re: spamassassin: whitelist_from_rcvd ?!?!

2003-09-04 Thread Jacob Anawalt
Michael D Schleif wrote:

Wow!

I have just discovered a serious mis-judgment by the spamassassin folks,
or possibly by the debian maintainer of spamassassin!
  /usr/share/spamassassin/60_whitelist.cf

This file contains ``Default whitelists'' ... ``addresses which send
mail that is often tagged (incorrectly) as spam ...''
  amazon.com
  walmart.com
  orbitz.com
I don't know about any of you; but, I really want the opportunity -- up
front -- to decide *FOR MYSELF* whether or not I consider the email sent
to me from these sites to be spam.
I'm not sure what "up front" would be for you, or for others. Perhaps 
you would have been happy to see orbitz.com in the 'blacklist' rules by 
default. I've not used spamassassin for a while and it wasn't a Debian 
package when I did, so I have no experiance with how it is set up.

Your idea of 'deciding for yourself what is spam or not' sounds 
reasonable.  From what I remember of spamassassin there were so many 
rules that it might be best to just say 'it's installed, but it wont do 
anything for you until you read all the documentation and configure 
every detail.' If that's what it does, then all the rule lists should be 
empty by default. It's not like squid, which can filter junk out of web 
content but works just fine as a web cache without any of the filtering 
rules.

Are there some filtering rules on by default? If so, maybe I'd be as 
upset if I was getting my Orbitz notices and they stopped working after 
installing spamassassin, but I couldn't figure out how to turn it on. I 
know this is a weak point, but someone must prefer the settings that are 
in the package.

Frankly, I regularly receive spam from orbitz, and recently I have
received spam from amazon.  By spam, I mean email for which I have made
*NO* request, and have no desire to receive . . .
What do you think?

 

Well, with such an open invitation how can I resist?
If those rules are default in a fresh install of spamassassin, you 
should file a bug report for spamassassin.

Jacob

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Re: More than one /etc/apt/sources.list possible?

2003-09-04 Thread Paul Johnson
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On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 01:45:04PM +0200, P?l Dahle wrote:
> I would like my system to inform me whenever there are 
> security related updates available.

> Anyone got a better solution?

Mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the
subject subscribe.

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Re: ..trundling OT; Traction (was Re: OT: Debian Mailinglist server slow?)

2003-09-04 Thread Paul Johnson
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On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 02:29:21PM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
> > Wait, wait, wait...is that a bobby with a Kalishnikov in that picture?
> 
> An AK-x  H&K, probably.

The angle of the photo is really bad for identifying the weapon, but
it looks like an AK-47.  Not familiar with H&K to know what they look
like.

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Re: Traction (was Re: OT: Debian Mailinglist server slow?)

2003-09-04 Thread Paul Johnson
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On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 11:51:03AM -0400, David Z Maze wrote:
> I'm actually curious about how various bus technologies do in San
> Francisco, where there's a lot of wired-electric busses but also a lot
> of steep hills.  But I haven't spent that much time exploring the MUNI
> system, and most of what I have has been on their light rail.

The diesel-hydraulic busses couldn't climb the hills at all when I was
there last.  All the routes going over the steep stuff were trolleys
(trackless trolley is redundant, if it's on tracks, it's a streetcar,
not a trolley), and they handled it well.  Vancouver, BC has a similar
issue, though the steep stuff doesn't hit until you hit the outskirts
of town well past the end of the electrified grid, so your closest
stop is at the bottom of the hill and you get to go hike.

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Re: Traction (was Re: OT: Debian Mailinglist server slow?)

2003-09-04 Thread Paul Johnson
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On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 02:34:29PM -0400, Greg Folkert wrote:
> Well... just eat some beans and drink some beer... you'll have a REALLY
> GOOD "Fuel Self"... and it CAN ride a bike as well.

That's a good way to suffer some nasty bloating while riding (beans
and bikes don't mix from what I've seen of other local riders...I
don't do too bad, but then again I like Mexican food and adapted).

DON'T DRINK AND RIDE.  ODOT's even running billboards in Oregon
featuring wrecked motorcycles and bicycles with the caption, "After a
couple beers, they go down easy."  In the United States and Canada
(and probably throughout the British commonwealths), bicycles are
classified as vehicles and the same rules of the road apply to
bicycles as other vehicles.  At the very least, it's a good way to
spend the night in the drunk tank and have your bicycle impounded.

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Re: gdm/desktop password protected shutdown

2003-09-04 Thread Jacob Anawalt
Jacob Anawalt wrote:

I am using Debian Sid and I would like to enable graphical 
shutdown/reboot/halt of my system using either a menu item in my 
desktop (KDE/Gnome) or in the display manager (gdm). I don't want to 
enable it for everyone,  just for people who know the root password, 
or even nicer, accounts that are sudo enabled for the shutdown command. 
[snip]

It is interesting that when I choose 'configure' from the system menu 
I am prompted for the root password. Is there a configuration setting 
I have overlooked to make it do the same root password prompt for 
other system menu items?
[snip]

Well shut my mouth...

Either this is now standard with the latest update for gdm on Sid, or 
the feature (prompting for the root password on shutdown/reboot/halt) is 
enabled only on the standard greeter.

The graphical isn't working on my system at the moment due to a bug that 
I'll wait out instead of backing off the library so I don't know if the 
new graphical greeter does it.

I am still interested in hearing about pros/cons of having the shutdown 
run from within the desktop environment and about sudo implementations.

Jacob

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CUPS alt.

2003-09-04 Thread David Palmer
Hi,

I don't know about the HL1440, but Turboprint drives the HL1270N, HL1450, and 
the HL1470.
Regards,

David.


/quote:Hello,

after minor difficulties I've gotten cups to work on my decrepit
laptop, using a brother hl-1440 laserprinter (the printer interprets
PostScript on its own, though I think it doesn't use the Adobe
interpreters).  Right now it seems to be working well (though for a
while it was printing strangely at unpredictable intervals, and I keep
worrying it will resume its ugly old habits).  

But I only have 96 megs of ram, and cups seems unnecessarily lrge,
given that I don't want to act assa printserver or anything.  I DO,
however, want to print pretty documents from OpenOffice & one or two
other programs (possibly sometimes gimp).  

Are there any workable alternatives to CUPS?  Any alternatives that
folks actually RECOMMEND using?  It would be great to run a somewhat
leaner print system...

thanks again,
matt/unquote.


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Re: Traction (was Re: OT: Debian Mailinglist server slow?)

2003-09-04 Thread Paul Johnson
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On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 04:41:22PM +0200, Pim Bliek | PingWings.nl wrote:
> No flame intended, but I signup to a mailinglist called debian-user to get
> emails about the use of debian. I understand that threads might go
> offtopic after a while. 

Read the list description.  It says it's a list for Debian users, not
a list exclusively about Debian.  Debianites like to socialise, too.  8:o)


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Re: Traction (was Re: OT: Debian Mailinglist server slow?)

2003-09-04 Thread Paul Johnson
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On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 01:59:03PM +0100, Pigeon wrote:
> Fascinating. How do they compare on raw bhp and power-to-weight ratio?

The diesel-electrics and fuel-cell busses are taller by about a foot
and a half due to a very large unit on the roof, but it doesn't seem
to be an issue since they still come in shorter than most semi's.

> What kind of generator and motor technology are they using to get the
> weight down? Do they have a bank of auxiliary batteries for
> regenerative braking and starting boost?

They don't do regenerative braking and the engine's always running,
just remains idle or nearly idle except when accelerating hard, and
then it's still not running anywhere near as hard as the
diesel-hydraulics.

> Fuel cells? Already? Cool. I want one for my bicycle.

No, you don't.  Mopeds aren't allowed to run on power in bicycle
lanes, and tend to go slower than anybody commuting for more than two
weeks can maintain comfortably on their own when on power.  Mopeds
weigh a good two to three times as much as a normal bicycle as well;
they're mostly worthless machines.  Which is why you don't see many of
them except at car lots that sell electric mopeds to look
environmentally friendly (never mind most of them still have models
five years old unsold on the showroom floor).

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Re: Linux permissions and which(1)

2003-09-04 Thread Jacob Anawalt
Bill Moseley wrote:

On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 09:45:53PM -0700, Bill Moseley wrote:
 

I was looking at the source code to the which(1) command (apt-get source 
which = which-2.14 ).
   

Just to add, the which(1) command installed on my Debian system is
working correctly -- but only when I build which(1) from the source
package:
Filename: pool/main/w/which/which_2.14-4_i386.deb

I just want to be clear that I'm understanding Linux perms correctly.

 

Wow, when I read your first post I thought 'his shell is messed up or 
something, that cant be right...'. So I tested it. Then I tested it with 
csh and ksh.

http://www.seas.rochester.edu:8080/CNG/docs/Security/node11.html

If that is correct, (it makes a lot of sense) then I think I'm going to 
blame my misconception on 1) VMS as my first multi-user OS experiance 
and their 'world' flag and 2) lots of bad documentation. I probably 
ought to blame it on myself for not proving to myself what all the 
different file permissions do. Out of habit (and not correct knowledge) 
I've given user execute when I give it to group or other, and group 
execute when I give it to other.

File permissions: -r--r--r-x
whoami => jacob
groups => jacob audio
user.group
jacob.jacob ./t => sh: permission denied
root.jacob ./t => sh: permission denied
root.root ./t =>  Hello world
So, either everything else is wrong, or the author of which had made an 
assumption about other being 'world' like I had made.

Jacob

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Re: Routing

2003-09-04 Thread Mark Maas
Thank you Kevin,

This is what my table looked like:

Kernel IP routing table
Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric RefUse
Iface
localnet*   255.255.255.0   U 0  00 eth0
217.149.32.0*   255.255.240.0   U 0  00 eth1
default 217.149.34.113  0.0.0.0 UG0  00 eth1
default 192.168.8.4 0.0.0.0 UG0  00 eth0

so what do I need to do?

Just keep: route add -net 192.168.3.0/24 eth0 ?

Thanks again.

- Original Message -
From: "Kevin Buhr" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Mark Maas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, September 05, 2003 1:28 AM
Subject: Re: Routing


> Kevin Buhr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >
> > route add -net 192.168.3.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 eth0
>
> Oh, and David Z Maze is probably correct.  Even if this works, it
> probably isn't what you want to do anyway.
>
> When you only brought "eth0" up and were able to reach the
> 192.168.3/24 and 10.1.0/24 networks, what did your routing table look
> like?  If you had a 192.168.8.0/255.255.255.0 route to eth0 and a
> default route to a specific gateway machine (say 192.168.8.1), then
> packets to those other networks were going out via that gateway
> machine and you want to duplicate that environment in your new
> configuration.
>
> --
> Kevin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
>


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RE: ms exchange to courier imap

2003-09-04 Thread Joyce, Matthew
They are both servers, so it's not clear what you mean.

What are you trying to achieve ?

Matt


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> -Original Message-
> From: Louie Miranda [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Sent: Friday, 5 September 2003 3:27 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: ms exchange to courier imap
> 
> 
> can courier imap get emails to an exchange server?
> 
> 
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ms exchange to courier imap

2003-09-04 Thread Louie Miranda
can courier imap get emails to an exchange server?


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Re: ?dm startup problems

2003-09-04 Thread Jacob Anawalt
Robert Rati wrote:

On Thu, 2003-09-04 at 01:37, Andreas Janssen wrote:
 

Hello

Robert Rati (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) wrote:

   

I'm running Debian unstable with the DRI trunk ATI drivers, and gdm
just
stopped starting.  I used to use kdm as my display manager, but it
exhibited the problems gdm is now displaying earlier.  When either
display manager attempts to start, I see the normal gray background
 

X
 

startup and the X mouse cursor, but before the background and login
manager load it appears to crash.  It tries to start several times,
but
is never able to.  I can't find any reasons for this in the messages
or
XFree86.0.log files.  kdm.log has this listed at the end:
AUDIT: Wed Sep  3 19:02:45 2003: 968 X: client 2 rejected from local
host
 Auth name: XDM-AUTHORIZATION-1 ID: -1
Xlib: connection to ":0.0" refused by server^M
Xlib: Protocol not supported by server
^M
kdm_greet: cannot connect to X server :0
 

Does logging in on a console and using startx work?
   

Yes.  Running startx works just fine.  It seems like it is somehow
display manager specific.  It seems like some kind of default
configuration setting was changed.
Rob
 

If you edit /etc/gdm/gdm.conf to change the greeter type, gdm will run. See:
http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=208457
I know I had the gdm problem and was able to run xdm just fine. It isn't 
an X issue which is why you weren't getting the 'X is dying, want to 
reconfigure' screen, it's in a library that gdm is using.

I don't know about kdm. You could search the kdm bug reports.

Jacob

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Re: No audio/mixer device - was (no subject)

2003-09-04 Thread Jacob Anawalt
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Hi my name is stephany for quit a while now i have no sound and it 
keeps saying nmo audio device or no active mixer devices i w3nt to the 
control panel to install hardware but it wouldn't work any idea's? help!
It sounds like your sound (card/chip) wasn't built into the kernel and 
the module for driving it wasn't selected.

Another possibility is that there is another error message: "You do not 
have permissions to  access /dev/dsp", which means you need to add your 
user to the 'audio' group.

Do you know what type of sound card you have, or if it's an onboard 
chip, what chipset it is part of? Some newer chipsets are only supported 
by "ALSA", and may not have a kernel module available to drive it.

What release of Debian are you using (version # or name like Woody, 
Sarge or Sid)?

What kernel are you using? (uname -a)

Jacob

P.S.
For future posts:
Try putting a subject line.
Use just plain text formatted messages wrapped at 80 or less columns.
When you reply, send it to [EMAIL PROTECTED], not directly to 
me and put your answer at the bottom of the existing text.
See the Code of Conduct section: http://www.debian.org/MailingLists/

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Re: Linux permissions and which(1)

2003-09-04 Thread Russell Shaw
Bill Moseley wrote:
I was looking at the source code to the which(1) command (apt-get source 
which = which-2.14 ).

As you might imagine, which(1) prepends the path to a name, checks if 
it exists and then checks if it's executable by the current process 
(your uid).

In the which package is a file "bash.c" that contains the following 
code.  At this point the file has been found and now it's just checking 
permissions.

  /* If we are the owner of the file, the owner execute bit applies. */
  if (user_id == finfo.st_uid && X_BIT (u_mode_bits (finfo.st_mode)))
return (FS_EXISTS | FS_EXECABLE);
  /* If we are in the owning group, the group permissions apply. */
  if (group_member (finfo.st_gid) && X_BIT (g_mode_bits (finfo.st_mode)))
return (FS_EXISTS | FS_EXECABLE);
  /* If `others' have execute permission to the file, then so do we,
 since we are also `others'. */
  if (X_BIT (o_mode_bits (finfo.st_mode)))
return (FS_EXISTS | FS_EXECABLE);
  else
return (FS_EXISTS);
This seems wrong, if I understand Linux permissions correctly.  If you 
are the *owner* of a file, then it's the *owner* permissions that count.  
If the owner perms say you can't read it then it doesn't matter what the 
group and other perms are.

In that code above if you are the owner but don't have execute perms 
then it moves onto checking the group perms, and then "other" perms.

Am I crazy is is that code wrong?
After some simple tests, it seems wrong. -rw-r-xr-- and -rw-r--r-x aren't
executable while -rwxr--r-- *is*.
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Re: Linux permissions and which(1)

2003-09-04 Thread Bill Moseley
On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 09:45:53PM -0700, Bill Moseley wrote:
> I was looking at the source code to the which(1) command (apt-get source 
> which = which-2.14 ).

Just to add, the which(1) command installed on my Debian system is
working correctly -- but only when I build which(1) from the source
package:

 Filename: pool/main/w/which/which_2.14-4_i386.deb

I just want to be clear that I'm understanding Linux perms correctly.


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?dm startup problems

2003-09-04 Thread Robert Rati
On Thu, 2003-09-04 at 01:37, Andreas Janssen wrote:
> Hello
> 
> Robert Rati (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) wrote:
> 
> > I'm running Debian unstable with the DRI trunk ATI drivers, and gdm
> > just
> > stopped starting.  I used to use kdm as my display manager, but it
> > exhibited the problems gdm is now displaying earlier.  When either
> > display manager attempts to start, I see the normal gray background
X
> > startup and the X mouse cursor, but before the background and login
> > manager load it appears to crash.  It tries to start several times,
> > but
> > is never able to.  I can't find any reasons for this in the messages
> > or
> > XFree86.0.log files.  kdm.log has this listed at the end:
> > 
> > AUDIT: Wed Sep  3 19:02:45 2003: 968 X: client 2 rejected from local
> > host
> >   Auth name: XDM-AUTHORIZATION-1 ID: -1
> > Xlib: connection to ":0.0" refused by server^M
> > Xlib: Protocol not supported by server
> > ^M
> > kdm_greet: cannot connect to X server :0
> 
> Does logging in on a console and using startx work?

Yes.  Running startx works just fine.  It seems like it is somehow
display manager specific.  It seems like some kind of default
configuration setting was changed.

Rob
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[EMAIL PROTECTED]2002-03 |   LI  N NN  U U   X
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Linux permissions and which(1)

2003-09-04 Thread Bill Moseley
I was looking at the source code to the which(1) command (apt-get source 
which = which-2.14 ).

As you might imagine, which(1) prepends the path to a name, checks if 
it exists and then checks if it's executable by the current process 
(your uid).

In the which package is a file "bash.c" that contains the following 
code.  At this point the file has been found and now it's just checking 
permissions.

  /* If we are the owner of the file, the owner execute bit applies. */
  if (user_id == finfo.st_uid && X_BIT (u_mode_bits (finfo.st_mode)))
return (FS_EXISTS | FS_EXECABLE);

  /* If we are in the owning group, the group permissions apply. */
  if (group_member (finfo.st_gid) && X_BIT (g_mode_bits (finfo.st_mode)))
return (FS_EXISTS | FS_EXECABLE);

  /* If `others' have execute permission to the file, then so do we,
 since we are also `others'. */
  if (X_BIT (o_mode_bits (finfo.st_mode)))
return (FS_EXISTS | FS_EXECABLE);
  else
return (FS_EXISTS);

This seems wrong, if I understand Linux permissions correctly.  If you 
are the *owner* of a file, then it's the *owner* permissions that count.  
If the owner perms say you can't read it then it doesn't matter what the 
group and other perms are.

In that code above if you are the owner but don't have execute perms 
then it moves onto checking the group perms, and then "other" perms.

Am I crazy is is that code wrong?


[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ cat t.c
#include 
int main( void )
{
   printf("hello world\n"); 
   return 0;
}

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ gcc -o t t.c

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ chmod 755 t

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ ./t
hello world

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ chmod 655 t

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ ./t
bash: ./t: Permission denied

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ ls -l t
-rw-r-xr-x1 moseley  moseley  4161 2003-09-04 21:42 t



-- 
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[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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gdm/desktop password protected shutdown

2003-09-04 Thread Jacob Anawalt
I am using Debian Sid and I would like to enable graphical 
shutdown/reboot/halt of my system using either a menu item in my desktop 
(KDE/Gnome) or in the display manager (gdm). I don't want to enable it 
for everyone,  just for people who know the root password, or even 
nicer, accounts that are sudo enabled for the shutdown command.

I think it would be helpful if the person initiating the shutdown was 
given a message like 'The following users are logged in still, are you 
sure you want to shut down? (list)" and an option for the amount of 
delay for the shutdown command or to wait before suspending, but that's 
far from an initial requirement.

I tried adding gksu to the shutdown command in the gdm config file, and 
it didn't work. Shutdown disappeared from the 'system' menu in gdm. The 
same thing happened when I tried it with halt or suspend.

I could add gksu shutdown entries to personal menus for people I want to 
have access to the command, or some shell window calling sudo (or gksudo 
if it were available). This still wouldn't seem as optimal as a system 
based on sudo for shutdown. I know RH systems have shutdown in the 
desktop environment. Is there any disadvantage to running shutdown 
before logging out of your desktop session, if root shutdown privileges 
were available to the user (which isn't the way the RH shutdown is 
configured)? There must be a good reason that it's not in the Debian 
Gnome or KDE menus already.

I could just not have the system menu on GDM, I did that at first. I was 
annoyed with waiting for my display to switch modes to the Virtual 
Terminal so I could log in to run shutdown so I enabled the system menu. 
I also tried running shutdown with a conservative time parameter from an 
xterm then logged out of X. Both solutions seemed cludgy - at least not 
ones I want to explain to less technically inclined users.

It is interesting that when I choose 'configure' from the system menu I 
am prompted for the root password. Is there a configuration setting I 
have overlooked to make it do the same root password prompt for other 
system menu items?

I have looked into this, but it seems I haven't looked in the right 
places. Any pointers to projects implementing this, old discussions that 
have already hashed the topic to death, or insight to the best way to 
implement this is appreciated.

Jacob



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Re: dynamic dns IP assignment from behind router

2003-09-04 Thread Terry Carney
On Thu, 4 Sep 2003, Matt Price wrote:

> I'm trying to get a dynamic dns client working on my home machines.
> The home connection is dsl (bell sympatico in Canada), and works fine,
> but the IP seems to be changing more often nowadays than it used to.
> I've set up a little network between my office and my home, so it's
> somewhat important for me to have some way of knowing what my home IP
> is when I'm at work...  dynamic dns seems to be the answer.

I don't know about your provider, but my DSL connection is through
Telus, and even though the dynamic IP address might change the hostname
is static (x.bc.hsia.telus.net). You might want to check if this
is so for you. If you do a reverse lookup on your IP address and the
hostname returned does not contain the IP address it might be true for
you as well.

Regards,


Terry.

[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://haven.selterra.com/
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Re: New Savage driver with unstable?

2003-09-04 Thread csj
At Thu, 4 Sep 2003 14:10:47 -0700,
Vineet Kumar wrote:
> 
> * Evan Simpson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [030904 11:53]:
> > Has anyone on this list been able to compile the new Free
> > driver from S3 (http://www.linux.org.uk/~alan/S3.zip)?  I
> > have never built X before, but I downloaded the XFree86
> > 4.2.1-11 source package, applied the patch, and managed to
> > get most of it to compile.  Of course, the Savage driver was
> > the one part to fail :-(

I would be interested in getting this included in the Debian's X
packages.  It's nice to be able to play tuxracer and chromium on
my other computer (built-in Savage).  It's the first opensource
driver for the savage that supposedly provides hardware
acclerated 3D.

> What version of the driver are you trying?  I remember fiddling
> with it for a little while (never to the point of trying to
> compile X, though) before finding a deb (s3savage-driver),
> which is working just fine for me.  I've got 1.1.23t-1.  I
> don't remember where I got it, but I can send it your way if
> you want to give it a shot.

That is old.  The latest is 1.1.27t, which is the one included
afaik in the sid X.  The standalone drivers (source and binary)
can be downloaded from:

http://www.probo.com/timr/savage40.html

IRC I once just copied over the binary into the proper xserver
module directory.


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Re: video playback problems

2003-09-04 Thread csj
At Fri, 5 Sep 2003 01:51:16 +0200,
David Sibai wrote:
> 
>  Unfortunately, I'm already using xv. When I mean it video
> playback stops, I really mean it stops: frozen screen. the
> sound plays fine, but instead of a video I get a still
> picture. Besides, as I said before I get the same problem with
> ogle.

[...] 

> > One thing to try with mplayer is using mplayer -vo xv as it
> > could be something to do with the video drivers in X

Sounds like a sound card problemo to me.  Are you by any chance
using ALSA and VIA-based motherboard with built-in sound?  Try
fiddling with the controls in alsamixer, particulary the control
libeled  VIA DXS.


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Re: run win/dos file on linux, please help

2003-09-04 Thread Paul Johnson
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On Wed, Sep 03, 2003 at 04:15:24PM -0700, eric lin wrote:
> I had win/dos format hardware firmware update file, like it run on
> linux, I tried wine, but not success

Ask your vendor for a Linux version.  If they refuse, ship them back
the unit.

- -- 
 .''`. Paul Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
: :'  :
`. `'` proud Debian admin and user
  `-  Debian - when you have better things to do than fix a system
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.2.3 (GNU/Linux)

iD8DBQE/WAzsUzgNqloQMwcRAkfrAJ9pcR5GUW8gfmLyCs/0nHVaRlSjpACfWk5r
4ybU2G1hPvsQ0YeM+BFphQA=
=hJV1
-END PGP SIGNATURE-


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Re: [OT] Why does X need so much CPU power?

2003-09-04 Thread Micha Feigin
On Thu, 2003-09-04 at 04:00, Colin Watson wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 01:01:19AM +0300, Micha Feigin wrote:
> > Second is the fact that most people just use the OS they get with their
> > computer and are afraid to try and replace it. Plus, they already paid
> > for the M$ license (even if forcefully/unknowingly) so why switch to a
> > free one after you already paid for something. Same thing with macs/osX,
> > where its even harder to get linux to work.
> > Linux need to change its public image and start coming pre-installed.
> 
> You're aware that this has already started to happen, right? Lindows
> are/were doing exactly this with cheap PCs sold by Wal-Mart in the US.
> 
> > There is also the problem of too much options. Unlike M$ where people
> > exactly what program does a given job, on linux there are 10, and when
> > there are so many its actually sometimes harder finding the right one
> > for you or even finding what programs there are to do a given job.
> > Too much choice can sometime be as much a liability as not enough (as
> > much as I like the options).
> 
> My impression of Lindows has been that they're presenting single
> applications for each niche, fixing this problem for their target
> audience. I'm quite sure others will follow.
> 
> As far as Debian is concerned, we have our niche of providing maximal
> choice and power and I think it's right that we stay there. Many of the
> early contributors to and leaders of Debian wanted to make it something
> that could work well as a base for more customized distributions, and
> that seems to be succeeding quite nicely. To those who say that Debian
> has too much flexibility and choice for Mr. Average, I say: that's OK.
> Not everything has to cater for Mr. Average, and that still doesn't stop
> us doing useful things one level back and catering for the people who
> cater for Mr. Average.
> 
> > Don't take from this that I don't like linux. I think its much better
> > then M$ and there are no alternatives for me for some of the things that
> > it offer, but its exactly those things that make, at list for the
> > moment, to be a non-option for the Joe-Public m$ user.
> 
> I think there's a lot of work to do before we're ready to replace the
> major proprietary operating systems completely, but the situation is
> improving year by year so I don't see any grounds for despair. The
> balance is still swinging Microsoft's way, but is beginning to tip with
> news of organizations like the city government of Munich and major banks
> switching over, which erode the document format lock-in that Microsoft
> Office has had for many years. Once organizations are no longer locked
> in to what the organizations they deal with use, the balance can only
> tip further.
> 
> In my opinion, it's only after that happens when we need to be ready for
> home users. Office use leads this kind of thing, and is easier because
> businesses can afford to hire sysadmins and provide basic training to
> smooth over the wrinkles. Only after that happens on a large scale do
> you start getting lots of office workers thinking "hey, I wonder if I
> could use this to handle things at home?", and so on.
> 
> So I don't think it's necessary to prophesy doom because there are still
> problems that would confuse those who aren't so technically literate.
> We've got time to work on these, and it makes sense to be realistic
> about our audience in the meantime so that we don't do a disservice to
> those who are already interested and capable.
> 

I completely agree to you comments, I was just trying to point where are
the problems with hitting the home niche. I never said that linux has
arrived at a point that it ready to solve those problems.
Even when it finally is it will probably be distributions like lindows
providing customized distributions.
I quite like the options debian give me and I try to start up m$ on my
computer as little as possible, usually just to keep a backup of my
girlfriends files in case she may want to work on them away from home.
On that note, the debian package tree could be organized a little better
it order to help finding the alternative programs for performing given
tasks. This could be done with a field in the deb file linking it into
some virtual tree. The problem with the current state is that its not
always clear where to look for a given program. For example you may look
for a sound editing program in any of kde/gnome/x11/sound. Also, the
current implementation allows for only one value, where sometimes
several are applicable.
I am aware that this can be mostly done using search terms, but this
method has its advantages, since searches to produce too many/little
results, depending on the terms and description included. Also,
sometimes you just have an idea of what to look for but you don't know
exactly the term defining it.

> Cheers,
> 
> -- 
> Colin Watson  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-- 
Micha Feigin
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


-- 

Re: spamassassin: whitelist_from_rcvd ?!?!

2003-09-04 Thread Michael D Schleif
Oliver Fuchs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2003:09:05:05:21:11+0200] scribed:
> On Thu, 04 Sep 2003, Michael D Schleif wrote:
> 
> > I don't know about any of you; but, I really want the opportunity -- up
> > front -- to decide *FOR MYSELF* whether or not I consider the email sent
> > to me from these sites to be spam.
> 
> To control the spam-emails before they are send to /dev/null I put this in
> my .procmailrc:
> 
> 
> # Spamassassin #
> 
>   :0fw
>   | spamc
> 
>   :0:
>   * ^X-Spam-Status: Yes
>   caughtspam
> 
> So using mutt I can deceide on my own if spam delivered to folder caughtspam
> should be definitive deleted.

That's terrific, Oliver; but, that has _nothing_ to do with my
complaint.

When an email comes in from amazon.com, and spamassassin finds
amazon.com listed in /usr/share/spamassassin/60_whitelist.cf, then
spamassassin gives that email a USER_IN_WHITELIST, which is scored
thusly:

   -100.00

Obviously, it will take alot of other bad spammy things to raise the
score for this email to >= +5.0 ;<

-- 
Best Regards,

mds
mds resource
877.596.8237
-
Dare to fix things before they break . . .
-
Our capacity for understanding is inversely proportional to how much
we think we know.  The more I know, the more I know I don't know . . .
--


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Description: PGP signature


Re: CUPS alternative?

2003-09-04 Thread Russell Shaw
Christoph Simon wrote:
On Thu, 4 Sep 2003 22:53:24 -0400
Matt Price <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Are there any workable alternatives to CUPS?  Any alternatives that
folks actually RECOMMEND using?  It would be great to run a somewhat
leaner print system...
lpd or lprng are still the best solutions. They are modular, i.e., you
can have the functionality you wish without carrying around things you
don't need, they have decent documentation, not a repetitive prayer
like CUPS, and above all, they are transparent, i.e., they allow you
to trace down any strange situation to the very point where things are
breaking. This particular point can be extremely annoying if you first
have to set up a webserver to do CUPS configuration, as CUPS is so
authoritative to decide what you may know and see and what not. Once I
had a breve conversation with one of the gimpprint developers who
loves CUPS, but finally admited that there is nothing in CUPS you
can't also do with lpd. CUPS seems to be designed for former windows
users who need a graphical interface to set up a printcap file. For
anybody else, even with more than enough RAM I would always recommend
lpd or lprng. I use them with magicfilter, but apsfilter seems to do
an equally good job.
HTH
Which one is best? :

gnulpr - GNUlpr printing system.
lpr - BSD lpr/lpd line printer spooling system
lpr-ppd - BSD lpr/lpd line printer spooling system
lprng - lpr/lpd printer spooling system
pdq - Simple printing system for workstations
rlpr - A utility for lpd printing without using /etc/printcap
tlpr - a Trivial LPR client
Are there others? (i have a postscript laser and an epson stylus inkjet)

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(no subject)

2003-09-04 Thread KENRICKRAMPAUL
Hi my name is stephany for quit a while now i have no sound and it keeps saying nmo audio device or no active mixer devices i w3nt to the control panel to install hardware but it wouldn't work any idea's? help!


Re: Installing Debian on IBM Thinkpad X24

2003-09-04 Thread Jaldhar H. Vyas
On Thu, 28 Aug 2003, Jaldhar H. Vyas wrote:

> So I got myself one of these nifty things.  It's really nice but it won't
> be perfect until I can get Debian on it.

Thanks to all those who replied.  I now have the thinkpad dual-booting
between Win2K (though I don't imagine much use for it.) and Debian.

Hooking up a CD or floppy drive I'd already rejected as it would have been
too boring and cost extra money.

The suggestion to use a USB keychain drive was a good one.  I definitely
want to get one of these to store my GPG key and other sensitive data on
but I'll do that later some time.

I decided to go with Installing via TFTP.  It is very straightforward
(though the documentation I found was as usual not 100% accurate.)  The
one hurdle I faced was shrinking the windows partition to make room for
Linux.  Luckily IBM uses FAT32 instead of NTFS so I was able to use GNU
parted.  The Debian boot floppies don't have parted (the new Installer I'm
told will.) so I had to actually start the installation process with Red
Hat 9.  After resizing and partitioning the drive I stopped that and
started the Debian install.  It went without a hitch.  Even installing
LILO on the MBR was uneventful which impressed me because I recall you had
to do some voodoo with boot sectors to get Windows and Linux to co-exist
in the past.  After installing a minimal woody system I dist-upgraded it
to sarge.  So far though the only things I haven't configured are the
wireless networking and the modem.  The first should be very easy but the
second could be a problem as it is a winmodem.  But neither is very
important to me right now.  Everything else configured without a hitch.

I'll write a full step-by-step HOWTO soon.


-- 
Jaldhar H. Vyas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


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Re: CUPS alternative?

2003-09-04 Thread Christoph Simon
On Thu, 4 Sep 2003 22:53:24 -0400
Matt Price <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Are there any workable alternatives to CUPS?  Any alternatives that
> folks actually RECOMMEND using?  It would be great to run a somewhat
> leaner print system...

lpd or lprng are still the best solutions. They are modular, i.e., you
can have the functionality you wish without carrying around things you
don't need, they have decent documentation, not a repetitive prayer
like CUPS, and above all, they are transparent, i.e., they allow you
to trace down any strange situation to the very point where things are
breaking. This particular point can be extremely annoying if you first
have to set up a webserver to do CUPS configuration, as CUPS is so
authoritative to decide what you may know and see and what not. Once I
had a breve conversation with one of the gimpprint developers who
loves CUPS, but finally admited that there is nothing in CUPS you
can't also do with lpd. CUPS seems to be designed for former windows
users who need a graphical interface to set up a printcap file. For
anybody else, even with more than enough RAM I would always recommend
lpd or lprng. I use them with magicfilter, but apsfilter seems to do
an equally good job.

HTH

-- 
Christoph Simon
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
---
^X^C
q
quit
:q
^C
end
x
exit
ZZ
^D
?
help
.


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Re: spamassassin: whitelist_from_rcvd ?!?!

2003-09-04 Thread Oliver Fuchs
On Thu, 04 Sep 2003, Michael D Schleif wrote:

> I don't know about any of you; but, I really want the opportunity -- up
> front -- to decide *FOR MYSELF* whether or not I consider the email sent
> to me from these sites to be spam.

To control the spam-emails before they are send to /dev/null I put this in
my .procmailrc:


# Spamassassin #

:0fw
| spamc

:0:
* ^X-Spam-Status: Yes
caughtspam

So using mutt I can deceide on my own if spam delivered to folder caughtspam
should be definitive deleted.


Oliver
-- 
... don't touch the bang bang fruit


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Re: Getting XFree 4.3?

2003-09-04 Thread Russell Shaw
Jon Haugsand wrote:
* Russell Shaw

E: Sorry, broken packages
I think by setting up apt-get "pinning" or something, these
dependancies
can be downloaded and installed automatically. However, i haven't figured
that out, so i resolve these problems manually (it doesn't happen very
often). Some of these errors may go away if you put this in apt.conf:
APT::Default-Release "testing";
APT::Cache-Limit 1000;
Also, put an official "testing" source into sources.list too.
How?


http://www.debian.org/mirror/
http://www.debian.org/mirror/list
Primary mirrors:

Norway  ftp.no.debian.org  /debian/  /debian-non-US/

http://ftp.no.debian.org/debian/
http://ftp.no.debian.org/debian-non-US/
Secondary Mirrors:

NO Norway
-
ftp.no.debian.org  /debian/   /debian/
debian.marked.no   /debian/
Try in sources.list:

For stable:
  deb ftp://ftp.no.debian.org/debian/ stable main contrib non-free
For testing:
  deb ftp://ftp.no.debian.org/debian/ testing main contrib non-free
For unstable:
  deb ftp://ftp.no.debian.org/debian/ unstable main contrib non-free
Then do: apt-get update

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Re: mixing stable and testing

2003-09-04 Thread Russell Shaw
Vikki Roemer wrote:
On Mon, Sep 01, 2003 at 04:27:36PM -0800, Greg Madden wrote:

You would need to setup a /etc/apt/preferences file, add testing to yor 
sources.list, and use pinning. Even so libc6 (upgrade) will be a depend 
on anythig from Testing. For what you want, it may be safer/easier to 
use 'apt-source' and build the few packages you want. If you are lucky 
there won't be any depends or only a couple that you will have to also 
build. You may need to run 'apt-get build-dep' in order to build your 
package, you would get an error message to this effect.
Um, ok, another stupid newbie question: how do I build a package from
source?  I downloaded metalog's source, but the package won't build if I use
dpkg -b metalog-dir -- it comes up with errors in the DEBIAN/control file.
Am I going about it the right way?  I've compiled programs before, I've just
never compiled a *package*.
http://packages.debian.org/testing/admin/metalog.html

Download source:

http://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/m/metalog/metalog_0.7beta-3.dsc
http://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/m/metalog/metalog_0.7beta.orig.tar.gz
http://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/m/metalog/metalog_0.7beta-3.diff.gz
In same directory:

dpkg-source -x metalog_0.7beta-3.dsc
cd metalog_0.7beta
dpkg-buildpackage -us -uc -rfakeroot
cd ..
dpkg -i metalog_0.7beta-3_i386.deb
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Re: CUPS alternative?

2003-09-04 Thread Shyamal Prasad
"Matt" == Matt Price <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

Matt> Are there any workable alternatives to CUPS?  Any
Matt> alternatives that folks actually RECOMMEND using?  It would
Matt> be great to run a somewhat leaner print system...

lpd?

Between somewhere in 1994 until about a year ago I used the standard
lpd package spooler with apsfilter and associated filters (mostly on
Slackware, I switched to Debian somewhere in 2000). It worked great
for me, and I'm not sure CUPS is any better (yet).

Cheers!
Shyamal


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Re: dynamic dns IP assignment from behind router

2003-09-04 Thread Tom Allison
Matt Price wrote:
Hi folks,

I'm trying to get a dynamic dns client working on my home machines.
The home connection is dsl (bell sympatico in Canada), and works fine,
but the IP seems to be changing more often nowadays than it used to.
I've set up a little network between my office and my home, so it's
somewhat important for me to have some way of knowing what my home IP
is when I'm at work...  dynamic dns seems to be the answer.
At home, 3 computers (1 debian desktop, one debian laptop, one windoze
xp laptop) sit behind an SMC Barricade router.  IP assignment on this
intranet seems to work fine, and I only mention it b/c I suspect the
router plays into some of my difficulties (see below).
So I went and got an account at dyndns.org (mmtprice.dyndns.org). Set
up through their web interface works without a hitch, and I'm able to
change the IP address assigned to the domain name instantaneously on
the web site.  I verified this from a couple of different computers
using ping.
Unfortunately, though, I haven't yet been able to get any of the
dynamic dns clients available in debian to actually remap the hostname
correctly.  I've tried and failed with both ddclient and ipcheck,
leading me to wonder whether (a) I'm missing some basic point, or (b)
there's some serious problem with my setup.
-- neither script seems to be able to interact well with my router,
though both have switches that are meant to get IP data from the SMC router.  

-- so I've resorted to using "checkip.dyndns.org" to figure out what
my IP address is.
I've been using this solution with ipcheck for a year now and it's worked 
very well.

Start with lots of debugging and you should be able to figure it out.

I never tried the ddclient and now that I think of it, I never used any .deb 
packages.  These packages are small, stable and easy to install so I guess I 
just grabbed them from the dyndns.org website.

but I do know I used ipcheck.

I've since replaced all these worries with a "smoothie" (www.smoothwall.org) 
and it works great.
--
No problem is so formidable that you can't just walk away from it.
		-- C. Schulz

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CUPS alternative?

2003-09-04 Thread Matt Price
Hello,

after minor difficulties I've gotten cups to work on my decrepit
laptop, using a brother hl-1440 laserprinter (the printer interprets
PostScript on its own, though I think it doesn't use the Adobe
interpreters).  Right now it seems to be working well (though for a
while it was printing strangely at unpredictable intervals, and I keep
worrying it will resume its ugly old habits).  

But I only have 96 megs of ram, and cups seems unnecessarily lrge,
given that I don't want to act assa printserver or anything.  I DO,
however, want to print pretty documents from OpenOffice & one or two
other programs (possibly sometimes gimp).  

Are there any workable alternatives to CUPS?  Any alternatives that
folks actually RECOMMEND using?  It would be great to run a somewhat
leaner print system...

thanks again,
matt


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Re: Routing

2003-09-04 Thread Jacob Anawalt
David Z Maze wrote:

"Mark Maas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

[snip]

when only eth0 is up I can reach my local lan, 192.168.8.0-255, the
lan of another firm, 192.168.3.0-255 and yet another firm,
10.1.0.0-255.
But when I bring up eth1, I can only reach my local lan, and not the
other two anymore.
My guess is that everything other then 192.168.8.0-255 is thought to
be Internet so it tries the eth1 nic. Which will not answer.
Now how do I tell Debian to route all traffic for 192.168.3.0-255
and 10.1.0.0-255 over the eth0 interface?
   

You probably need to use /sbin/route to tell the machine that there
are routes to 192.168.3.0/24 and 10.1.0.0/24 (/16?) via the gateway
machine on 192.168.8.0/24.  This will look something like:
 route add -net 192.168.3.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 192.168.8.1
 route add -net 10.1.0.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 192.168.8.1
(Just using 'dev eth0' tells route to spew packets for those networks
on to the local network, which isn't what you want.)
 

Once you see that is working for you, add those lines to 
/etc/network/interfaces in the eth0 block, eg:

iface eth0 
   [other options you may have set]
   up route add -net 192.168.3.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 192.168.8.1
   up route add -net 10.1.0.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 gw 192.168.8.1
That way when your other interface comes up later and becomes the 
default route, these static routes are already there and you didn't have 
to remember to type the route add commands.

see "man 5 interfaces" for more details.

--
Jacob
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Re: "Restoring" system after MB/processor upgrade

2003-09-04 Thread Neal Lippman
On Thu, 2003-09-04 at 16:22, Karsten M. Self wrote:
> on Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 12:07:04AM -0400, Neal Lippman ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> > I'm thinking about upgrading my system from its current AMD Athlon XP
> > based system to a P4 (actually, I need to put together a new system for
> > my son, so I'm thinking of giving him my current MB/processor and
> > putting a new MB/processor into my system).
> > 
> > Obviously, I don't want to lose my current testing installation in the
> > process. I'm hoping that an MB/processor swap into the case and a reboot
> > will leave me just with a rerun of modconf to change installed modules
> > to match the new hardward's ethernet and sound cards (I'm goign to reuse
> > my current video card) and I'll be back in business.
> 
> Most likely, nothing's going to change.

That was my assumption / hope...but you never know.
> 
> There are no drivers specific to the CPU (mostly), though there are
> kernel flavors specific to specific kernel architectures.  If you're
> upgrading CPUs within the P4 familiy, it's a transparent change.

Well, I'm going from an Athlon XP to a P4 system; the new system will
probably by i865 based - as far as I can tell, 2.4.21 supports the 865
chipset. With sATA, on board lan, etc, there will be some modconf'ing to
do. The only package I am aware of that is specifically compiled for the
K7 platform is mplayer, so I'll obviously need to remove and reinstall
the 586 platform version.

> 
> Best bet is to have bootable media (boot floppy, Tom's Root Boot,
> LNX-BBC, Knoppix) handy.

I always keep a tom's root boot handy just in case (it's also helpful
at work when I need to reboot a windows workstation into Linux too ).




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spamassassin: whitelist_from_rcvd ?!?!

2003-09-04 Thread Michael D Schleif
Wow!

I have just discovered a serious mis-judgment by the spamassassin folks,
or possibly by the debian maintainer of spamassassin!

   /usr/share/spamassassin/60_whitelist.cf

This file contains ``Default whitelists'' ... ``addresses which send
mail that is often tagged (incorrectly) as spam ...''

   amazon.com
   walmart.com
   orbitz.com

I don't know about any of you; but, I really want the opportunity -- up
front -- to decide *FOR MYSELF* whether or not I consider the email sent
to me from these sites to be spam.

Frankly, I regularly receive spam from orbitz, and recently I have
received spam from amazon.  By spam, I mean email for which I have made
*NO* request, and have no desire to receive . . .

What do you think?

-- 
Best Regards,

mds
mds resource
877.596.8237
-
Dare to fix things before they break . . .
-
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we think we know.  The more I know, the more I know I don't know . . .
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dynamic dns IP assignment from behind router

2003-09-04 Thread Matt Price
Hi folks,

I'm trying to get a dynamic dns client working on my home machines.
The home connection is dsl (bell sympatico in Canada), and works fine,
but the IP seems to be changing more often nowadays than it used to.
I've set up a little network between my office and my home, so it's
somewhat important for me to have some way of knowing what my home IP
is when I'm at work...  dynamic dns seems to be the answer.

At home, 3 computers (1 debian desktop, one debian laptop, one windoze
xp laptop) sit behind an SMC Barricade router.  IP assignment on this
intranet seems to work fine, and I only mention it b/c I suspect the
router plays into some of my difficulties (see below).

So I went and got an account at dyndns.org (mmtprice.dyndns.org). Set
up through their web interface works without a hitch, and I'm able to
change the IP address assigned to the domain name instantaneously on
the web site.  I verified this from a couple of different computers
using ping.

Unfortunately, though, I haven't yet been able to get any of the
dynamic dns clients available in debian to actually remap the hostname
correctly.  I've tried and failed with both ddclient and ipcheck,
leading me to wonder whether (a) I'm missing some basic point, or (b)
there's some serious problem with my setup.

-- neither script seems to be able to interact well with my router,
though both have switches that are meant to get IP data from the SMC router.  

-- so I've resorted to using "checkip.dyndns.org" to figure out what
my IP address is.

--ddclient seems to be ble to figure out the address, but as far as I
can tell it doesn't actually SET the IP at dyndns.org.  Unfortunately
ddclient doesn't have very verbose messaging, so I'm not exactly sure
what's going wrong.  One thing I noticed is that I do not get an error
message if I change my username or password, suggesting to me that
whatever goes wrong happens before this stage.

For reference, here's my /etc/ddclient.conf
# Configuration file for ddclient generated by debconf
#
# /etc/ddclient.conf

pid=/var/run/ddclient.pid
protocol=dyndns2
# use=if, if=
server=members.dyndns.org
login=WishYouKnew
password=NotTelling
# use=smc-barricade, fw=192.168.2.1:80
# fw-login=admin
# fw-password=WontSay
use=web, web=checkip.dyndns.org, fw-skip='IP Address' mercey.dyndns.org 
mprice.dyndns.org

-

ddclient gives the following responses:  

# ddclient -daemon=0 -query
use=if, if=eth0 address is 192.168.2.198
use=if, if=lo address is 127.0.0.1
use=web, web=dyndns address is 67.69.252.101 
   ^^^
this is the address I want

# ddclient -daemon=0   
WARNING:  unable to determine IP address

--

Isn't that kinda wierd?  

Anyone know what's going on?

thanks as always,

matt


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Re: AnyOne know if apt-build can make Apache2 work with php4?

2003-09-04 Thread Kevin Johnson
On Thu, 2003-09-04 at 12:35, John Foster wrote:
> Basicaly what it says. I want to get Apache2 to work with php4. I found 
> a .rpm at SuSe that I converted with alien but it depends on prefork. I 
> do not like prefork. php4 in debian still has apache-common 1.3 as a 
> dependency so even with the module installed and apache configured with 
> prefork it still requires apache-common 1.3. I am VERY surprised that 
> there is not already a php4 module for apache2 in Debian. Any ideas on 
> getting this to work would be greatly appreciated. Maybe someone is 
> working on this and needs a testerWELL HERE I AM!!!
> 
> -- 
> John Foster

Hi-

This is so odd... I was about to write a similar email I am trying
to get APache2 and PHP working.  But everytime I install it it requires
Apache.  I finally got it to install but the apache2.conf file is never
built and all of the modules are for 1.3 not 2.0.  I am assuming that
something is wrong on my end but I can't seem to figure it out.

I would also be willing to test for someone...

Kevin



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Re: New Savage driver with unstable?

2003-09-04 Thread Evan Simpson
Vineet Kumar wrote:
What version of the driver are you trying?
Brand new one, released by S3, not related to Tim Roberts' driver 
series.  It supports DRI and OpenGL, among other niceties. See:

http://www.probo.com/pipermail/savage40/2003-July/38.html

I've got 1.1.23t-1.
That's the last release from Tim Roberts.

Cheers,

Evan @ 4-am



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Re: problem with mutt and imap

2003-09-04 Thread David J. Weller-Fahy
* Dan Hunt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2003-09-04 11:22]:
> > set ssl_starttls=no
> >
> > And try to connect.  Just a WAG, but it might help.
> >
> Great guess, fixed that right up.

Excellent!  Glad I could help.

Regards,
-- 
dave [ please don't CC me ]


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Re: Dependencies and .deb vs creating .deb's from source code

2003-09-04 Thread Karsten M. Self
on Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 09:43:06PM +0100, Chris Wilcox ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Hi all,
> 
> I'm currently involved in a Debian-distro based project which aims to 
> create an Internet caching product for schools which would hopefully take 
> the form of a Debian install CD which would install relevant packages from 
> CD and then update when required from the Internet via existing servers 
> where possible and our own servers for deb packages which we need to create 
> ourselves (This is a very basic description!).

See apt-proxy.

Your solution will almost certainly use it to a greater or lesser
extent.  Sounds like what you want to do is manage your own mirrors, for
the most part.

> We're currently debating which will be easier in relation to creating and 
> maintaing the packages we'll need.  From those in the know, are we better 
> doing either of the following:
> 
> 1) We alter existing deb's and from that point forth need to check the 
> debian package list for updates, get them and their dependencies, alter 
> them and host them

See above.  If there are general docs on setting up a Debian mirror,
read 'em.

> 2) We use stable source code, create our own deb's, host them, check the 
> web sites for the relevant package for updates important enough to make use 
> create a new deb package and host that

This can be accomplished to a certain extent through pinning.  That is,
define sources and a release level, but include additional sources (also
proxied) which can be explicitly installed, if necessary.

> How will we be affected by dependencies on other apps with either of
> the above?  

Probably horribly. 

I'm curious as to what you're changing from base Debs that's so crucial
to isolate yourself from the mainstream Debian distro, and why you feel
you have to do this.

> We currently have a blank canvas to work from which is based around
> the bf24 kernel install of Debian with only the C++ Development option
> installed.

Peace.

-- 
Karsten M. Self <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>http://kmself.home.netcom.com/
 What Part of "Gestalt" don't you understand?
   TWiki:  documentation for the GNU millennium.
 http://twiki.org/


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Re: route function of actiontec 1524, please help

2003-09-04 Thread Kevin Buhr
"eric" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 
>I had actiontec 1524 dsl modem, firmware 1.60.50.0.51, with one pc
> (wtih linux, redhat 9) with one static ip, I want to broadcast
> webserver by above
> but when I type in my (static ip) in my browser, it show the modem
> configuration page, not my apache test page which I suppose to see.

I don't have an Actiontec modem, but it looks like it's a combination
DSL modem and NATting router.

Working from their user manual, I gather that---under the "WAN IP
Address" advanced setting page---you've set the modem up to either
obtain its (static) IP address automatically or you've specified the
static IP address manually.  In particular, you don't have
"transparent bridging" enabled, so your WAN IP address is your global
static IP address and your RedHat machine is obtaining a 192.168.0.xxx
IP address from the modem via DHCP, right?

If this is correct, I'd suggest that you begin by entering the
advanced configuration and double-check that "remote management" is
disabled and that, on the "port forwarding" screen, you have an entry
that will forward packets for TCP port 80 to the *internal* IP
address, say 192.168.0.2, of your PC.

Now, even with everything set up this way, it may *still* be the case
that when you "http://my.static.ip/"; from within your internal
network, you get the configuration pages for your modem (or you get
nothing at all).  In fact, this probably *is* what will happen; it's
just a pecularity of how NAT works.  The only way to get to your
RedHat webserver from your internal network will be to do
"http://192.168.0.2/";.

The key is whether or not a buddy, connecting from the *outside* to
"http://my.static.ip/"; gets your RedHat webserver or not.

-- 
Kevin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


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Re: OT: RAID Controllers

2003-09-04 Thread Ron Johnson
On Thu, 2003-09-04 at 17:35, Jacob S. wrote:
> I'm still a little new to the RAID side of the world and the hardware
> howto doesn't have the information I'm looking for.
> 
> Does anyone have any recommendations for good hardware RAID(5)
> controllers (mainly SCSI, but possibly IDE too) that are supported by
> Linux?

MegaRAID has always been good to Linux.  Being a DBA, I'd only
specify RAID controllers with lots of cache and a battery backup.

For rack-mount systems, I'd choose simple raid controllers, and a
storage controller (invisible to Linux, since it's behind the RAID
controller) that has upwards of 512MB cache and on-line changeable
cache batteries.  (It's the storage controller that is what the 
drives plug into.  The DEC/Compaq/HP HSZ80 is my favorite.

-- 
-
Ron Johnson, Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Jefferson, LA USA

"All machines, no matter how complex, are considered to be based 
on 6 simple elements: the lever, the pulley, the wheel and axle, 
the screw, the wedge and the inclined plane."
Marilyn Vos Savant 


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mutt: thread reconstruction?

2003-09-04 Thread Karsten M. Self
I'm subscribed to a mailing list in which message-ID and references are
being rewritten by an utterly broken mailing list manager (Communigate
Pro).  This breaks threading badly:

http://guildenstern.dyndns.org/~karsten/cni-thread.png
http://guildenstern.dyndns.org/~karsten/cni-nothread.png


Both the Message-ID and References headers are being munged.

I'd like suggestions on how I might go about restoring at least
pseudo-threading of articles, though I'm also posting to the list on
this matter.

Peace.

-- 
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 What Part of "Gestalt" don't you understand?
Windows Refund Day II:  fight for your right to refund
http://www.windowsrefund.net/


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Re: OT: RAID Controllers

2003-09-04 Thread Alvin Oga

hi ya jacob

On Thu, 4 Sep 2003, Jacob S. wrote:

> I'm still a little new to the RAID side of the world and the hardware
> howto doesn't have the information I'm looking for.
> 
> Does anyone have any recommendations for good hardware RAID(5)
> controllers (mainly SCSI, but possibly IDE too) that are supported by
> Linux?

supported hw raid controllers
http://www.linux-ide.org/chipsets.html
if your chipset is not listed ... you're gonna have some fun

lsi or adaptec chipset based controllers would be my choice

if you want to make ide look like scsi drives
- 3ware escolades works good when properly configured
( but dont try hot-swp ...


i prefer software ide raid, and use the extra $$$ saved on
hw raid controller on extra servers and extra disks instead
- raid1 is worthless for stuff i do ...
- raid5 is okay  when you have 2 independent raid5 arrays

- i build raid for large data storage .. not necessarily
speed and thruput ... though it has to be fast enough
and NOT noticeably slow

testing your raid setup
- unplug  /dev/sda or /dev/hda
- it should still keep working and see if you got
any error messages that your raid is not longer
raiding
- repeat for each drive  including replacing with 
a virgin disk

- right now you can get maxtor 8MB buffer 7200rpm 160GB ide disks
  for $80 each at "fries"
-- 5x $ 80  --> $400 in disks for 800GB of space !!!

try building that raid subsystem capacity with scsi ... :-)

more raid fun
http://www.1U-Raid5.net

c ya
alvin


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Re: Routing

2003-09-04 Thread Kevin Buhr
Kevin Buhr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 
> route add -net 192.168.3.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 eth0

Oh, and David Z Maze is probably correct.  Even if this works, it
probably isn't what you want to do anyway.

When you only brought "eth0" up and were able to reach the
192.168.3/24 and 10.1.0/24 networks, what did your routing table look
like?  If you had a 192.168.8.0/255.255.255.0 route to eth0 and a
default route to a specific gateway machine (say 192.168.8.1), then
packets to those other networks were going out via that gateway
machine and you want to duplicate that environment in your new
configuration.

-- 
Kevin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


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Re: Pipping the output of bash completion; command line navigation

2003-09-04 Thread Stefan Waidele jun.
Josh Rehman wrote:
Hi,

I was wondering if it is possible to grep through the output of bash 
command line completion. If you type "k" and then tab twice, you'll be 
asked to show all 398,499 entries on your path, y or n. Hit y and a big 
list comes up. Seems like it would be nice to search through that list, 
but there is no obvious way to pipe it to anything (like grep).
'script' lets you log complete sessions to a file.

You could to something like (Sorry for the german output):

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ script
Script wurde gestartet, die Datei ist typescript
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ k
Display all 162 possibilities? (y or n) y
[...]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ exit
Script wurde beendet, die Datei ist typescript
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ less typescript
HTH,

Stefan

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Bugzilla broken in sid?

2003-09-04 Thread Kevin Ruml
Hello,

I tried installing bugzilla (in SID) and it wouldn't complete installation.  
Anyone have any news on this?  I tried looking on and searching the lists, but didn't 
find anything.

Thanks,
Kevin


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Re: route function of actiontec 1524, please help

2003-09-04 Thread Colin Watson
On Fri, Sep 05, 2003 at 03:22:35AM -0400, eric wrote:
> Dear [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
> 
>   I had actiontec 1524 dsl modem, firmware 1.60.50.0.51, with one pc 
> (wtih linux, redhat 9)

Please stop cc'ing debian-user on things that don't concern Debian.

(I wouldn't normally copy this to you directly, but I want to make
absolutely sure you see this. You've been doing this a fair bit
recently.)

Thanks,

-- 
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OT: Works for hire (was Re: SCO identifies code?)

2003-09-04 Thread Karsten M. Self
on Mon, Aug 18, 2003 at 06:56:33PM -0700, Bill Moseley ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 18, 2003 at 09:33:03PM -0400, Bijan Soleymani wrote:
> > 
> > What's more extreme is the view that *any code* you write while being
> > employed by them is their property. Even code you write in your spare
> > time. I mean I think to some extent this can be defended especially if
> > it's in the same field. Because you could slack off on your real work
> > and do your version of the thing on the side for profit.
> > 
> > Example the guys working at ebay start their own auction site (in direct
> > competition with ebay) on the side and spend their spare time working on
> > that. How moral is that? I mean that doesn't even have to do with
> > copyright so much as common sense.
> 
> I can see where if you hire someone to create something for you, and you
> pay them to do it then it's yours.  People commission artists all the
> time for private work.  Clearly, there should be a way to protect your
> investment in development.  As Ebay you wouldn't want to pay programmers
> to develop your code and then allow them to take that and compete.  Not
> very fair competition.

Sorry to drag up this old thread, but there's some bogus data here.

The issue is called "works for hire".  One landmark case actually
involves a piece of art -- sculpture -- created for IIRC homeless
rights group.  The artist sued for copyright in the work.  See:

http://www.gigalaw.com/library/ccnv-reid-1989-06-05-p1.html


The term "work for hire" is defined in the definitions section of 17
U.S.C. (the US copyright code):

http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/101.html

A ''work made for hire'' is -

(1) a work prepared by an employee within the scope of his or her
employment; or

(2) a work specially ordered or commissioned for use as a
contribution to a collective work, as a part of a motion picture
or other audiovisual work, as a translation, as a supplementary
work, as a compilation, as an instructional text, as a test, as
answer material for a test, or as an atlas, if the parties
expressly agree in a written instrument signed by them that the
work shall be considered a work made for hire.


which is why those of you who've contracted in the US generally find
a rights assignment clause in your contract.  I typically request that
this be specifically limited to "works created at the request of
Company" or similar language.  In years of this practice, I've never had
significant pushback on this issue.

> Unfortunately there's a lot of gray area.  Programmers develop tools
> and idioms for doing common tasks.  Clearly that's something that
> belongs to the individual programmer and not the company.  If you work
> for one company developing some network code, you will likely use the
> same methods writing another program that is also network aware. 

This falls to an extend under noncompete law, which is governed in the
US by state, and can vary tremendously.  New York State, for example, is
particularly employee-unfriendly in this regard.

I'd strongly recommend perusing an article by a friend of mine who ran
into conflict when a general-use method he wanted to contribute to Perl
caught the attention of his employer:

Professional Employees and Works for Hire
http://perlmonks.thepen.com/153046.html

The upshot was that an informal arrangement between tilly and his
immediate supervisor was countermanded by corporate counsel and
management.  As tilly hadn't completed implementation of the concept, he
refused to do so, and negotiated an arrangement by which he would remain
with his employer for a period of time, with benefits accruing, etc.  He
left this employer in May, moved to California, and is working under far
more favorable law, at a better salary, and with a team he enjoys, not
to mention a disgustingly brief commute and sweet pad.  His former
employer is down their star employee of the past six years.


Peace.

-- 
Karsten M. Self <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>http://kmself.home.netcom.com/
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Re: overnet, mldonkey, which one??

2003-09-04 Thread Vineet Kumar
* Mark Ferlatte ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [030904 15:16]:
> Couldn't help it:
> 
> "Useless use of cat award!"
> 
> Olivier Robert said on Fri, Sep 05, 2003 at 12:08:08AM +0200:
> >  : :'  :# cat Earth | sed -e s/microsoft/debian/g > Better_World
> 
> 
> sed -e s/microsoft/debian/g < Earth > Better_World

Or this less-frequently-seen form:

< Earth sed -e s/microsoft/debian/g > Better_World

I prefer it on the one hand because it's a more accurate visual
representation of the logical data pipeline, but it is less idiomatic.  
Of course, sed can take a filename, so this is probably the best:

sed -e s/microsoft/debian/g Earth > Better_World

Although, I think the regex replacement might be too simplistic.  Would
"Debian Windows XP" really make the world a better place?  ;-)

How about s/microsoft//g ?

good times,
Vineet
-- 
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-- 
#include
int main() {
puts("Reader! Think not that \n"
 "technical information \n"
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Re: overnet, mldonkey, which one??

2003-09-04 Thread Scott C. Linnenbringer
On Thu, 4 Sep 2003 16:03:22 +0200, Alfredo Valles <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote: 

<...>
> Now I readed a bit about this but still I don't  feel like I can make
> the choice.
>
> 1- Easy of use.
> 2- Security.
> 3- Proxy support. (I live behind a firewall)
> 4- Work well in low bandwith.
> 5- Free (GPL)

Try giFT.

giFT is actually just a daemon that sits in the background and manages
connections to a variety of networks. Currently it can connect to the
OpenFT and Gnutella networks officially, but unofficial plugins have
been produced to connect to FasTrack which can't be made official for
nonfree issues.

The daemon will then listen on a local port to which a client
can communicate. I have both used giFTcurs and giFToxic, preferring the
latter. All of the above are available in the Debian unstable archive,
and I have had no problems related to security utilizing the OpenFT and
Gnutella networks, nor with the daemon itself. The issues would really
only lie with a grossly malformed configuration (a tool should walk you
through it easily) or any issues that would pop up in Gnutella, OpenFT
or FasTrack.

http://gift.sourceforge.net


-- 
Scott Christopher Linnenbringer [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: "route" issue

2003-09-04 Thread Kevin Buhr
Nick Lindsell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> I have a problem with portsentry in that I cannot remove
> blocked IPs.  The portsentry.conf is configured to use
> "route add -host $TARGET$ reject" for any $TARGET that crosses
> its path - in my previous experience "route del -host $TARGET$ reject"
> would remove the offender from the reject route. However on this
> machine I get "SIOCDELRT: no such process" and the target remains
> in the routing table. 

If you manually perform:

route add -host 192.168.3.1 reject
route del -host 192.168.3.1 reject

does it still fail?

Which Debian version of the net-tools package do you have installed?
It works for me with net-tools 1.60-4 on the stable Debian
2.4.18-bf2.4 kernel.

-- 
Kevin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


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Re: overnet, mldonkey, which one??

2003-09-04 Thread skyshadow
On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 03:26:50PM -0700, Mark Ferlatte wrote:
> Couldn't help it:
> 
> "Useless use of cat award!"
> 
> Olivier Robert said on Fri, Sep 05, 2003 at 12:08:08AM +0200:
> >  : :'  :# cat Earth | sed -e s/microsoft/debian/g > Better_World
> 
> 
> sed -e s/microsoft/debian/g < Earth > Better_World

You got a point ;)
Anyway, the spirit it is :)

-- 
 .''`'. Olivier Robert
 : :'  :# cat Earth | sed -e s/microsoft/debian/g > Better_World
 `. `'`
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Re: OT: RAID Controllers

2003-09-04 Thread Scott C. Linnenbringer
On Thu, 4 Sep 2003 23:42:56 +0100, "Karsten M. Self"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 

> on Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 05:35:02PM -0500, Jacob S.
> ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> > I'm still a little new to the RAID side of the world and the
> > hardware howto doesn't have the information I'm looking for.
> > 
> > Does anyone have any recommendations for good hardware RAID(5)
> > controllers (mainly SCSI, but possibly IDE too) that are supported
> > by Linux?
> 
> My experience strongly suggests SW RAID, or a good SCSI RAID
> controller.
> 
> My experience with 3Ware cards on RAID 0/1/5 systems is decidely
> mixed, likely a combination of issues with both 3Ware and ATA drive
> flakiness.
> 
> SCSI will be much more robust on both counts.

Truthfully, SW RAID will probably be as flaky as you are describing for
hardware ATA RAID. Probably the best bet is to do a SCSI hardware RAID
array setup in any event. But I have been running a 3ware S/ATA hardware
controller on a RAID 0 array without any problems noticable to me, but
if he wants to setup RAID 5, he probably demands a mission-critical
setup in which case SCSI wins. 


-- 
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Re: Routing

2003-09-04 Thread Kevin Buhr
"Mark Maas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> Ok thanks, tried it but I get:
> 
> SIOCADDRT: Invalid argument
> 
> when I issue:
> route add -net 192.168.3.0 eth0

Include the netmask anyway:

route add -net 192.168.3.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 eth0

or, if you prefer the short version (CIDR style address):

route add -net 192.168.3.0/24 eth0

The manpage was presumably correct at some point, but it's wrong now.
This was either a kernel or "route" change.  The IP address class
system has been largely obsoleted by CIDR, and that's made it
inappropriate for either "route" or the kernel to try to guess a
netmask for the most part.

-- 
Kevin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


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Re: OT: RAID Controllers

2003-09-04 Thread Scott C. Linnenbringer
On Thu, 4 Sep 2003 17:35:02 -0500, "Jacob S." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote: 

> I'm still a little new to the RAID side of the world and the hardware
> howto doesn't have the information I'm looking for.
> 
> Does anyone have any recommendations for good hardware RAID(5)
> controllers (mainly SCSI, but possibly IDE too) that are supported by
> Linux?

I myself use a hardware serial ATA RAID controller from 3ware,
specifically the 3ware Escalade 8500. It is in the Linux
kernel with a fully open-source kernel since the 2.2 series, and has
worked very well for my needs. I'm not familiar with any other offerings
for SCSI, as I haven't dealt with any SCSI components at all. But there
are a lot of options out there; just wait for some more people to give
you some more input. ;)

It can do RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 5, JBOD definetely, and some other RAID
something that I can't think of right now (3?)


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Re: linux(knoppix

2003-09-04 Thread Karsten M. Self
on Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 12:52:35PM -0700, Hugo Vanwoerkom ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Je kunt er in het nederlands over praten hier:
> 
> http://unix-gg.hobby.nl/forums/index.php?bn=unixgg_knoppix

Pleae post to debian-user in English.

There's no Dutch list, but you'll find French, German, and Danish.

Thanks.

-- 
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Re: Dependency issue : resolving them, how ?

2003-09-04 Thread Karsten M. Self
on Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 09:44:41PM +0200, Joris Lambrecht ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Hi People,
> 
> I'd like to know about some good tips to fix dependencies wich are
> broken because of more up-to-date libraries etc.
> 
> Any help would be welcome, it is quite confusing as to why newer
> versions are obsoleted by older version dependency's.

More detail and specifics would be useful.  The output of
apt-get|aptitude dist-upgrade|install, for example.


Peace.

-- 
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Re: OT: RAID Controllers

2003-09-04 Thread Karsten M. Self
on Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 05:35:02PM -0500, Jacob S. ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> I'm still a little new to the RAID side of the world and the hardware
> howto doesn't have the information I'm looking for.
> 
> Does anyone have any recommendations for good hardware RAID(5)
> controllers (mainly SCSI, but possibly IDE too) that are supported by
> Linux?

My experience strongly suggests SW RAID, or a good SCSI RAID controller.

My experience with 3Ware cards on RAID 0/1/5 systems is decidely mixed,
likely a combination of issues with both 3Ware and ATA drive flakiness.

SCSI will be much more robust on both counts.

Peace.

-- 
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 What Part of "Gestalt" don't you understand?
We are the unwilling... led by the unqualified... to do the
unnecessary...  for the ungrateful...
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Re: Piping the output of bash completion; command line navigation

2003-09-04 Thread Karsten M. Self
on Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 12:43:04AM -0700, Josh Rehman ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> I was wondering if it is possible to grep through the output of bash 
> command line completion. If you type "k" and then tab twice, you'll be 
> asked to show all 398,499 entries on your path, y or n. Hit y and a big 
> list comes up. Seems like it would be nice to search through that list, 
> but there is no obvious way to pipe it to anything (like grep).

This should be equivalent:

for d in $( echo $PATH | sed -e 's/:/ /g' ); do ls $p/k*; done | less

> Did some digging and found "complete" but it wasn't very helpful (it's
> a bash built-in and the man pages are terse). Am I messing up the
> command line? I tried stuff like complete -o default k but it just
> didn't take.  Google was little help.

'complete' is the action, not the command.   completes file
substitution to the next non-arbitrary point.  Repeat  lists
alternatives, as you've found.

'complete-into-braces' (M-{) might give you what you want:

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:karsten]$ k
Display all 191 possibilities? (y or n)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:karsten]$ k   # hit {
k{eysign-fingerprint,[EMAIL PROTECTED],noppix}
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:karsten]$ echo k{eysign-fingerprint,[EMAIL PROTECTED],noppix} 
keysign-fingerprint [EMAIL PROTECTED] knoppix


> While I'm at it, is there a way to make "CTRL+Left Arrow" move one word 
> to the left on the command line? And similiarly for right? That would be 
> so great...IIRC DRDOS had that a long time ago. The win2k shell does 
> that, too.  I don't even know where to start looking for this one. :-)

man bash
/^ *Readline Key Bindings

Specifically:  forward-word and backward-word


Peace.

-- 
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Re: Duplicating installs across the network

2003-09-04 Thread Mark Ferlatte
Karsten M. Self said on Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 11:24:20PM +0100:
> > I know that there are a whole host of tools out there that for
> > imagining/backup, but I have no experience with any of them.  Can
> > anyone out there provide some pointers and insight?  What do you all
> > use?  Does it work well?  I really hope that there is an easy way to
> > this, as I do not want to have to reinstall 9 machines from scratch.
 
I've been using systemimager for over a year now, and it rocks.  Fully
automatic network installations, pretty easy to setup automatic client updates.

http://www.systemimager.org is the orignal site, but it's well packaged in
Debian.

M


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OT: RAID Controllers

2003-09-04 Thread Jacob S.
I'm still a little new to the RAID side of the world and the hardware
howto doesn't have the information I'm looking for.

Does anyone have any recommendations for good hardware RAID(5)
controllers (mainly SCSI, but possibly IDE too) that are supported by
Linux?

TIA,
Jacob

- 
GnuPG Key: 1024D/16377135

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Re: proftp or wu-ftp?

2003-09-04 Thread Curtis Vaughan
Got it working just before I got the replies.

Actually, I found a how-to dealing with a OSX server, which pointed me 
in the right direction. Seems to be working now.

Thanks!

Curtis

On Thursday, Sep 4, 2003, at 14:40 US/Pacific, Mark Roach wrote:

On Thu, 2003-09-04 at 17:25, Curtis Vaughan wrote:
After editing /etc/pam.d/proftpd do I need to restart proftp?
No

It doesn't seem to work: i.e., for whatever reason I am the only one
allowed to log in.  I can't log in under any other user period.  Now,
this may be due to the fact that I have a home directory on this
server, no one else does.
It could be, I know that proftpd will allow you to "chroot" ftp 
sessions
to the user's home dir. I think you have to do that on purpose though.
Have you tested your pam_ldap setup with other services to make sure it
is correct? I think the default setup requires the user to have a valid
shell (listed in /etc/shells) did you check that? What does "getent
passwd username" show for a user who can't log on. Also, make sure that
"AuthPAM on" is in your config file.

As for the default path for users to see (mentioned in another message)
I believe that all you need is a section like this: "DefaultRoot
/home/ftp" or whatever path.
It sounds like you really need to take a few minutes to go through the
manpage for proftpd.conf to get a general overview of the options 
before
you start trying to wrangle the config file.

-Mark

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Re: strace pppd: open("/dev/ttyS1", O_RDWR

2003-09-04 Thread Karsten M. Self
on Wed, Sep 03, 2003 at 08:58:13PM +0200, Andrea Tasso ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 03, 2003 at 03:04:20PM +0300 or thereabouts, Shaul Karl wrote:
> > On Wed, Sep 03, 2003 at 06:49:15AM +0200, Andrea Tasso wrote:
> > > hi all,
> > > pppd does not connect any more (to another pc with null modem cable), it used to 
> > > work perfectly.
> > > the command
> > > 
> > > pppd -detach debug crtscts 192.168.6.1:192.168.6.2 lock /dev/ttyS1 38400
> > > 
> > >  gives no output, and finally exits
> > > 
> > > if I strace it
> > > 
> > > the last string is
> > > open("/dev/ttyS1", O_RDWR 
> > > 
> > > my libc version is 2.3.2-3
> > > and ppp 2.4.1.uus-5
> > > 
> > 
> > 
> >   What is written in the log file? Are you trying to run it as root?
> > -- 
> > 
> > Shaul Karl,shaulk @ actcom . net . il
> 
> nothing in the log file, I suppose at least (I checked many log in
> /var/log, the most common).  I run pppd as root.

grep -l pppd /var/log/* 2>/dev/null

Should be in /var/log/messages or /var/log/daemon.log

Peace.

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Re: overnet, mldonkey, which one??

2003-09-04 Thread Mark Ferlatte
Couldn't help it:

"Useless use of cat award!"

Olivier Robert said on Fri, Sep 05, 2003 at 12:08:08AM +0200:
>  : :'  :# cat Earth | sed -e s/microsoft/debian/g > Better_World


sed -e s/microsoft/debian/g < Earth > Better_World

:)

M


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Re: Duplicating installs across the network

2003-09-04 Thread Karsten M. Self
on Mon, Sep 01, 2003 at 11:07:43PM +0200, Roberto Sanchez ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> The migration of my lab is nearly complete.  The two servers are
> happily running Woody and so far I have one workstation running Sid,
> and I even managed to get VMWare installed and running properly on it.
> The last I need to do is get printing back up.  Once that is done I
> will be ready to install Sid to the other nine workstations.
> 
> I know that there are a whole host of tools out there that for
> imagining/backup, but I have no experience with any of them.  Can
> anyone out there provide some pointers and insight?  What do you all
> use?  Does it work well?  I really hope that there is an easy way to
> this, as I do not want to have to reinstall 9 machines from scratch.

Personally, I'm fond of the Quick File Distribution Challenge posted to
Advogato some time back:

http://www.advogato.org/article/555.html

Data replication across a (switched) network independent of nodes being
populated.

Peace.

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Re: overnet, mldonkey, which one??

2003-09-04 Thread skyshadow
On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 04:03:22PM +0200, Alfredo Valles wrote:
> Hi all.
> 
> I have no experience with any internet file sharing system.
> Some one told me about overnet. I searched debian repositories for it and I 
> came up with mldonkey, another program to do that.
> 
> Now I readed a bit about this but still I don't  feel like I can make the 
> choice.
> 
> Seems to me that overnet is better. 
> Overnet have proxy support, I have not see this in mldonkey (maybe I miss it).
> Also mldonkey advice you to create a new acount for it to work should any 
> hacker gets access to the machine. So I guess that it's not very secure.
> But seems to me that overnet isn't free, which is a big drawback.
> 
> I'm looking for:
> 
> 1- Easy of use.
> 2- Security.
> 3- Proxy support. (I live behind a firewall)
> 4- Work well in low bandwith.
> 5- Free (GPL)

Kind of off-topic subject, however ...

mldonkey is your friend:
- supports overnet, edonkey, bittorent, limewire, gnutella P2P protocols
  and more.
- core client architecture: telnet, GUI and web interface
- reliable and very stable

Drawbacks: search engine isn't that good (but you don't realy need it,
do you?), likes memory ;)

Save you some time trying out all the shiny clients and stick with mldonkey straight
away.

My 2 cts.
-- 
 .''`'. Olivier Robert
 : :'  :# cat Earth | sed -e s/microsoft/debian/g > Better_World
 `. `'`
   `-  Debian - Just GNU it!
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Re: GRUB hangs at boot

2003-09-04 Thread Shri Shrikumar
On Tue, 2003-09-02 at 11:51, Robert Fenech wrote:
> After having partitioned my hard disk (+ran fdisk /mbr) and installed
> the system GRUB hangs right after displaying the stage2 …… thing.

I actually have a similar problem that I havent solved yet. I think it
has something to do with IDE / DMA or something. It doesnt hang but it
does take a while, maybe 2 - 3 minutes for it to come up to the menu.

Have you tried waiting a little bit to see if is just slower and not
hung ?

Shri

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I.T. Consultant  Edinburgh, Scotland  Mob:   0773 980 3499
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Re: Tips for serial terminal & file transfer?

2003-09-04 Thread Karl E. Jorgensen
On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 02:29:21AM +0100, Karsten M. Self wrote:
> on Tue, Sep 02, 2003 at 08:19:33AM +0100, Karl E. Jorgensen ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) 
> wrote:
> > On Mon, Sep 01, 2003 at 12:41:24PM +0100, Karsten M. Self wrote:
> > > I'm trying to bootstrap an old 486 Thinkpad.  It's got two PCMCIA slots,
> > > and might make a decent gateway.
> > > [ getty/minicom/zmodem stuff: "can't get it to work" ]
> > 
> > Why not run a laplink cable and run pppd at both ends? (remember to
> > specify "local" to pppd).  Or even plip?
> > 
> > It won't be fast, but it should be much less cumbersome than
> > uuenconde/shar or whatever. 
> 
> I've already tried both.  Don't work :-(

Hm. Since it sounds like that you have a laplink cable handy, I don't
mind helping out with ppp (very remotely..).

ppp symptoms? Settings?

-- 
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Re: proftp or wu-ftp?

2003-09-04 Thread Mark Roach
On Thu, 2003-09-04 at 17:25, Curtis Vaughan wrote:
> After editing /etc/pam.d/proftpd do I need to restart proftp?

No

> It doesn't seem to work: i.e., for whatever reason I am the only one 
> allowed to log in.  I can't log in under any other user period.  Now, 
> this may be due to the fact that I have a home directory on this 
> server, no one else does.

It could be, I know that proftpd will allow you to "chroot" ftp sessions
to the user's home dir. I think you have to do that on purpose though.
Have you tested your pam_ldap setup with other services to make sure it
is correct? I think the default setup requires the user to have a valid
shell (listed in /etc/shells) did you check that? What does "getent
passwd username" show for a user who can't log on. Also, make sure that
"AuthPAM on" is in your config file.


As for the default path for users to see (mentioned in another message)
I believe that all you need is a section like this: "DefaultRoot
/home/ftp" or whatever path.

It sounds like you really need to take a few minutes to go through the
manpage for proftpd.conf to get a general overview of the options before
you start trying to wrangle the config file.

-Mark


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Re: lm-sensors

2003-09-04 Thread David Z Maze
Menno <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

>  >> fakeroot debian/rules kdist_image \
>  >> KSRC=/usr/src/kernel-headers-2.4.18-1-686 \
>  >> KVERS=2.4.18-1-686 KDREV=2.4.18-11
>
>  > This ignores the kernel-source package you
>  > installed entirely, incidentally.
>  > But if it works, that's good to hear.
>
> But somehow it is depending on this. I got the following errors
> without the symbolic link to kernel-source-2.4.18, and that is also
> the reason why I made a copy of /boot/config-2.4.18-1-686
>
> grep: /usr/src/linux/Makefile: No such file or directory
> grep: /usr/src/linux/include/linux/autoconf.h: No such file or directory
> grep: /usr/src/linux/.config: No such file or directory
> (last line repeating about 30 times)

Yes, I know; that's an issue with the way the upstream Makefile is
written.  That error message shouldn't actually kill the build, and
you can safely ignore it.

-- 
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"Theoretical politics is interesting.  Politicking should be illegal."
-- Abra Mitchell


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Re: proftp or wu-ftp?

2003-09-04 Thread Curtis Vaughan
After editing /etc/pam.d/proftpd do I need to restart proftp?  It 
doesn't seem to work: i.e., for whatever reason I am the only one 
allowed to log in.  I can't log in under any other user period.  Now, 
this may be due to the fact that I have a home directory on this 
server, no one else does.

Curtis

On Thursday, Sep 4, 2003, at 06:45 US/Pacific, Mark Roach wrote:

On Wed, 2003-09-03 at 16:26, Curtis Vaughan wrote:
[...]
Right now I need to set up an ftp site that authenticated users can
only access in order to download files.  Authentication in our network
is provided by LDAP w/PAM.  I see that proftp has an LDAP package,
which I have installed right now.  So, it seems at first the better.
Ultimately, we may be setting up additional Virtual hosts.
You don't need to use a separate LDAP package, proftp uses pam for
authentication, just twiddle your /etc/pam.d/proftpd
-Mark

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Re: New Savage driver with unstable?

2003-09-04 Thread Vineet Kumar
* Evan Simpson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [030904 11:53]:
> Has anyone on this list been able to compile the new Free driver from S3 
> (http://www.linux.org.uk/~alan/S3.zip)?  I have never built X before, 
> but I downloaded the XFree86 4.2.1-11 source package, applied the patch, 
> and managed to get most of it to compile.  Of course, the Savage driver 
> was the one part to fail :-(

What version of the driver are you trying?  I remember fiddling with it
for a little while (never to the point of trying to compile X, though)
before finding a deb (s3savage-driver), which is working just fine for
me.  I've got 1.1.23t-1.  I don't remember where I got it, but I can
send it your way if you want to give it a shot.

good times,
Vineet
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Re: pptpd server <-> client

2003-09-04 Thread Karl E. Jorgensen
On Tue, Sep 02, 2003 at 08:24:08PM +0200, Mark Maas wrote:
> Hi All,
> 
> I've been trying to get the pptp server (vpn server) working.
> And I think I succeeded!

or perhaps not...
> I can connect from outside to the server, my login is validated and the connection 
> is established.

> Syslog excerpt:
[snip]

> But something is wrong, I can ping the inside nic (eth0 or 192.168.8.5) and the 
> outside nic (eth1)
> but I cannot ping (or reach) any of the inside computers, for instance 192.168.8.50

Have you got IP forwarding enabled?  Or some firewall rules getting in
the way?

> Or when I try to ping google.nl after connection has been established
> I can see that DNS IS working! the name "google.nl" is perfectly
> resolved to 216.239.39.100

Odd. You don't happen to run a (caching) name server at the other end,
do you?  That could explain it.

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Re: proftp or wu-ftp?

2003-09-04 Thread Ryan Nowakowski
On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 01:37:18PM -0700, Curtis Vaughan wrote:
> Ryan do you or does anyone have any instructions for a dim-wit like 
> myself on how to set up proftp.
> 
> I've got it installed and kind of operating, but how do I make it 
> default to /home/ftp whenever ANYONE logs in.

Hrmmm.  I don't know of a howto or anything like that.  I just went and
looked at the proftpd example configs[1].

[1] http://proftpd.linux.co.uk/docs/example-conf.html
-- 
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Re: IDE bus rescan?

2003-09-04 Thread Michael Heironimus
On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 04:03:30PM +0100, Paladin wrote:
> Does anyone know some way to force a rescan to the IDE bus?
> 
> I have a defective IDE drive that almost never is detected by the
> BIOS, but some few times it is. I needed to force a rescan so that I
> didn't have to be rebooting all the time! :/

You don't really need to rescan the IDE bus. Linux doesn't use the BIOS
for disk access, it just needs it for booting (the same applies to most
modern PC operating systems). If you tell Linux to mount a device it
will just try to mount the device, and if there's nothing there or the
hardware doesn't work it will give you an error.

By the way, SCSI is different. You actually do need to rescan a SCSI bus
to pick up new devices.

-- 
Michael Heironimus


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Re: lm-sensors

2003-09-04 Thread Menno
>> fakeroot debian/rules kdist_image \
>> KSRC=/usr/src/kernel-headers-2.4.18-1-686 \
>> KVERS=2.4.18-1-686 KDREV=2.4.18-11
> This ignores the kernel-source package you
> installed entirely, incidentally.
> But if it works, that's good to hear.
But somehow it is depending on this. I got the following errors without the 
symbolic link to kernel-source-2.4.18, and that is also the reason why I 
made a copy of /boot/config-2.4.18-1-686

grep: /usr/src/linux/Makefile: No such file or directory
grep: /usr/src/linux/include/linux/autoconf.h: No such file or directory
grep: /usr/src/linux/.config: No such file or directory
   (last line repeating about 30 times)
Thanks again,
Menno.
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Dependencies and .deb vs creating .deb's from source code

2003-09-04 Thread Chris Wilcox
Hi all,

I'm currently involved in a Debian-distro based project which aims to create 
an Internet caching product for schools which would hopefully take the form 
of a Debian install CD which would install relevant packages from CD and 
then update when required from the Internet via existing servers where 
possible and our own servers for deb packages which we need to create 
ourselves (This is a very basic description!).

We're currently debating which will be easier in relation to creating and 
maintaing the packages we'll need.  From those in the know, are we better 
doing either of the following:

1) We alter existing deb's and from that point forth need to check the 
debian package list for updates, get them and their dependencies, alter them 
and host them

2) We use stable source code, create our own deb's, host them, check the web 
sites for the relevant package for updates important enough to make use 
create a new deb package and host that

How will we be affected by dependencies on other apps with either of the 
above?  We currently have a blank canvas to work from which is based around 
the bf24 kernel install of Debian with only the C++ Development option 
installed.

ANY comments on this would be very gratefully accepted!

Regards,

nry

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Re: proftp or wu-ftp?

2003-09-04 Thread Curtis Vaughan
Ryan do you or does anyone have any instructions for a dim-wit like 
myself on how to set up proftp.

I've got it installed and kind of operating, but how do I make it 
default to /home/ftp whenever ANYONE logs in.

Curtis

On Wednesday, Sep 3, 2003, at 20:50 US/Pacific, Ryan Nowakowski wrote:

On Wed, Sep 03, 2003 at 01:26:20PM -0700, Curtis Vaughan wrote:
I need to set up an ftp server.   I've looked at wu-ftp and a little
at
proftp.  I'm wondering what people find to be the better, and easiest
to set up.
Actually, I'm having trouble setting either up.  But let me tell you
what I want to do.
Right now I need to set up an ftp site that authenticated users can
only access in order to download files.  Authentication in our network

is provided by LDAP w/PAM.  I see that proftp has an LDAP package,
which I have installed right now.  So, it seems at first the better.
Ultimately, we may be setting up additional Virtual hosts.
I use proftpd and find it to be very flexible.  It takes a little time
setting it up but works great.
--
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Computer Support for Small Business and Individuals
http://austincomputersupport.com


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Re: overnet, mldonkey, which one??

2003-09-04 Thread Ryan Nowakowski
On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 04:03:22PM +0200, Alfredo Valles wrote:
> I'm looking for:
> 
> 1- Easy of use.
> 2- Security.
> 3- Proxy support. (I live behind a firewall)
> 4- Work well in low bandwith.
> 5- Free (GPL)

try gtk-gnutella

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Re: Jabber Client can't register

2003-09-04 Thread Jamin W. Collins
On Wed, Sep 03, 2003 at 08:58:24AM -0700, Tim Grogan wrote:
> 
> I've just installed Jabber 1.4.2 and the server seems to be working
> but I can't register/connect.  I've read the thread bout making sure
> mod_auth_plain is loaded and I think it is (see part of jabber.xml)
> I'm sure it's something I've overlooked.  For info I'm running Debian
> 2.4.20 and have the files in /usr/local/jabber with root as the owner.

Are you using the Debian Jabber package or custom compiled?  What error
(if any) is returned?  Which client are you using?  Have you checked the
raw XML transmitted between the server and the client?

-- 
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Re: "Restoring" system after MB/processor upgrade

2003-09-04 Thread Karsten M. Self
on Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 12:07:04AM -0400, Neal Lippman ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> I'm thinking about upgrading my system from its current AMD Athlon XP
> based system to a P4 (actually, I need to put together a new system for
> my son, so I'm thinking of giving him my current MB/processor and
> putting a new MB/processor into my system).
> 
> Obviously, I don't want to lose my current testing installation in the
> process. I'm hoping that an MB/processor swap into the case and a reboot
> will leave me just with a rerun of modconf to change installed modules
> to match the new hardward's ethernet and sound cards (I'm goign to reuse
> my current video card) and I'll be back in business.

Most likely, nothing's going to change.

There are no drivers specific to the CPU (mostly), though there are
kernel flavors specific to specific kernel architectures.  If you're
upgrading CPUs within the P4 familiy, it's a transparent change.

Best bet is to have bootable media (boot floppy, Tom's Root Boot,
LNX-BBC, Knoppix) handy.

Peace.

-- 
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Re: Faked From-Adress with my domain on them

2003-09-04 Thread Stefan Waidele jun.
Ken Raeburn wrote:
Paul Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
OK, but I'm not entirely convinced he's sending a host, which is why
everybody's local mail server is adding in the host part.
I've seen some hints of "@localhost" in the email I got.  I sent email
to Kevin about two weeks ago asking him to fix it.  Since it hasn't
been fixed yet, and he never answered, I just assumed he didn't care.
Well, Kevin has fixed it, so he is not indifferent.

But there is another case of the same misconfiguration on the list.
But since I now know it is not a conscious attempt to use my domain, I 
am way more relaxed than before :)

Thanks for the discussion,
and apologies to Kevin once more for being so rude,
Stefan

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linux(knoppix

2003-09-04 Thread Hugo Vanwoerkom
Je kunt er in het nederlands over praten hier:

http://unix-gg.hobby.nl/forums/index.php?bn=unixgg_knoppix

Groetjes,

Huug.

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Dependency issue : resolving them, how ?

2003-09-04 Thread Joris Lambrecht
Hi People,

I'd like to know about some good tips to fix dependencies wich are
broken because of more up-to-date libraries etc.

Any help would be welcome, it is quite confusing as to why newer
versions are obsoleted by older version dependency's.

Thanks allready people.

-- 
Mvg,

Joris
- - -
http://www.angels.be


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overnet, mldonkey, which one??

2003-09-04 Thread Alfredo Valles
Hi all.

I have no experience with any internet file sharing system.
Some one told me about overnet. I searched debian repositories for it and I 
came up with mldonkey, another program to do that.

Now I readed a bit about this but still I don't  feel like I can make the 
choice.

Seems to me that overnet is better. 
Overnet have proxy support, I have not see this in mldonkey (maybe I miss it).
Also mldonkey advice you to create a new acount for it to work should any 
hacker gets access to the machine. So I guess that it's not very secure.
But seems to me that overnet isn't free, which is a big drawback.

I'm looking for:

1- Easy of use.
2- Security.
3- Proxy support. (I live behind a firewall)
4- Work well in low bandwith.
5- Free (GPL)


Can anyone give me a hint?




Thanks in advice.


Alfredo


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Re: Faked From-Adress with my domain on them

2003-09-04 Thread Ken Raeburn
Paul Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> On Fri, Aug 29, 2003 at 01:04:51AM +0100, Pigeon wrote:
>> Eh? I meant he's sending everything _from_ [EMAIL PROTECTED] sure,
>> if he was sending to [EMAIL PROTECTED] we wouldn't be having this 
>> discussion :-)
>
> OK, but I'm not entirely convinced he's sending a host, which is why
> everybody's local mail server is adding in the host part.

I've seen some hints of "@localhost" in the email I got.  I sent email
to Kevin about two weeks ago asking him to fix it.  Since it hasn't
been fixed yet, and he never answered, I just assumed he didn't care.

I don't know about standard exim configurations, but my sendmail
configuration (on a NetBSD box, built using the standard macros) does
look for "@localhost" and converts it.  So I think it's a standard
part of the sendmail config.

I think it's a misconfiguration problem in multiple places.

 * Kevin's mail software (Ximian Evolution, talking directly to his
   ISP? if there's a local MTA it's not in the Received headers)
   shouldn't be sending out such headers.

 * His ISP's software (Exim) could be more intelligent about detecting
   misconfigured clients.  Since it's an ISP, and they probably don't
   care much about a pesky little thing like this, the easiest
   approach might be to get a fix in upstream so they'll get it next
   time they update their software.

 * One could make an argument that Debian's mailer or list processor
   should require valid addresses, but that might be a tough argument
   to sell, especially for lists where one might turn for help in
   fixing just this problem.  Perhaps messages could be bounced with
   an error message including a URL with advice?

   In some lists, support for anonymity is important.  So bouncing
   invalid addresses in general probably isn't right.  (Maybe for
   Debian lists it doesn't matter except as a spam defense, but
   changing the list software in general wouldn't be right for these
   other lists.)  But what about just bouncing from/sender/reply-to
   fields with @localhost, or with any unqualified hostname?

 * Our receiving mailers (mine's Sendmail) probably shouldn't be doing
   that transformation for mail coming from off the local machine.
   Perhaps sticking in "@INVALID" or "@NOFQDN" would be better.

Given the wide variety of mail configurations out there, would it be
at all practical to make the popular Debian mailers difficult to
configure to send email without FQDNs in the headers to internet hosts
at large, while still presumably allowing smarthost forwarding with
unqualified names?  Not impossible, if someone really insists on it
and knows why it's the wrong thing to do; just difficult.  I suspect
Kevin wasn't intentionally trolling for accusations of email forgery
when he set up his mail client.

Given that my mail server is an old NetBSD box, and I don't use Exim
or Evolution, I'm probably not the best person to submit bug reports
or enhancement requests against these programs asking for such
changes, 'cuz I can't verify all of them in a Debian mail system or
verify when they've been fixed.  But if someone else wants to, feel
free

Ken


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Violación de contenido SMTP

2003-09-04 Thread Administrador_correo
Buen Día.
El filtro de correo de SMTP de nuestra institución, ha detectado, un mensaje de correo 
enviado por usted, el cual no está permitido, de acuerdo a las políticas de seguridad, 
y ha sido eliminado. Si el mensaje corresponde a relaciones laborales con nuestra 
entidad, por favor comuniquese con el destinatario.

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Subject: Re: Thank you!

Matching Subject: re: thank you!



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route function of actiontec 1524, please help

2003-09-04 Thread eric
Dear [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I had actiontec 1524 dsl modem, firmware 1.60.50.0.51, with one pc 
(wtih linux, redhat 9) with one static ip, I want to broadcast webserver 
by above
but when I type in my (static ip) in my browser, it show the modem 
configuration page, not my apache test page which I suppose to see.

  do you have any way to get arround that by not upgrading firmware? 
or  have linux upgrading firmware for above mentioned dsl modem?

  or would you please point me to some related article about routeing 
that can make me broadcast my webserver inside this dsl-modem to outside 
world(internet).

  I visiting you from a link in google search.

looking for your reply
sincere eric


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Re: ..trundling OT; Traction (was Re: OT: Debian Mailinglist server slow?)

2003-09-04 Thread Ron Johnson
On Thu, 2003-09-04 at 05:19, Paul Johnson wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
> 
> On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 01:56:57AM +0200, Arnt Karlsen wrote:
> > ..an invitation?  I'll pass.  ;-)
> > http://www.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,30100-12759012,00.html
> 
> Wait, wait, wait...is that a bobby with a Kalishnikov in that picture?

An AK-x  H&K, probably.

-- 
-
Ron Johnson, Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Jefferson, LA USA

"The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment 
by men of zeal, well-meaning, but without understanding."
Justice Louis Brandeis, dissenting, Olmstead v US (1928)


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Re: problem with mutt and imap

2003-09-04 Thread Dan Hunt
* David J. Weller-Fahy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2003-09-04 08:02]:
> * Dan Hunt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2003-09-03 20:32]:
> > * David J. Weller-Fahy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2003-09-03 21:10]:
> > > * Dan Hunt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2003-09-03 18:22]:
> > > > * Grzesiek Sedek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2003-09-03 18:43]:
> > > > > I'm getting this weird error when trying to connect to imap server:
> > > > >
> > > > > gnutls_handshake: A TLS packet with unexpected length was received
> > > >
> > > > Hey! I am having the same problem with a new installation, and a
> > > > Red-Hat server. Right now I am running Sid and it used to work when I
> > > > had Woody.
> > > >
> > > > What version of mutt are you using?
> > > 
> > > I've just duplicated that by removing my IMAPd SSL certificate
> > > (imapd.pem with courier-imap) and attempting to connect to my imapd
> > > server.  Are you sure you've created a self-signed certificate?
> > > 
> > > Oh, and I'm using mutt 1.5.4i on Debian testing.
> > > 
> > > Regards,
> > > -- 
> > > dave [ please don't CC me ]
> > >
> >
> > I'm just having this problem with one mail server, as a user I am
> > using IMAP to connect to my ISP provided mailbox with no problems. I
> > just enter c to change and type in each time
> > imap://username:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
> 
> Gotcha.
> 
> > However Mutt 1.5.4i (2003-03-19) is not connecting to my work address.
> > At this domain I am a user, who cannot connect using mutt, yet. Rather
> > than using the provided IMP webmail, I set up Mozilla to use imap and
> > it works well.
> 
> So, the problem is with one imap server that is not under your control,
> correct?  What IMAP options are you using in your .muttrc?
> 
> I'm assuming (from the context) that they're running a non-ssl secured
> IMAP server and are advertising STARTTLS, right?  If so, you may want to
> try putting the following in your .muttrc:
> 
> #v+
> set ssl_starttls=no
> #v-
> 
> And try to connect.  Just a WAG, but it might help.
> 
>
Great guess, fixed that right up. 

Kind regards
Dan Hunt


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Re: Traction (was Re: OT: Debian Mailinglist server slow?)

2003-09-04 Thread Arnt Karlsen
On Thu, 04 Sep 2003 11:51:03 -0400, 
David Z Maze <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

> Paul Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 
> > If you have a Windows box laying around, Microsoft Train Sim has
> > several scenarios running with power set up like this as well if you
> > wanted to try your hand at it.  Controls are synched between all
> > power units automatically (iRL and in the game).
> 
> ObDebian: I don't suppose anybody knows of anyone having put effort
> into writing a free MSTS engine?  On principle, it doesn't sound very
> hard, and there are lots of free-beer data files available online, but
> 3D game programming isn't entirely my thing.  I also know there's a
> Magic Microsoft Image Format that's used for surface textures on
> things.

..check out http://simgear.org/ and http://flightgear.org/ for ideas.  
These sites has their own mail lists theat can be used instead of 
trundling off topic here.  ;-)

-- 
..med vennlig hilsen = with Kind Regards from Arnt... ;-)
...with a number of polar bear hunters in his ancestry...
  Scenarios always come in sets of three: 
  best case, worst case, and just in case.


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