Re: Suse 7.2

2001-11-03 Thread Douglas J Hunley

Keith Antoine babbled on about:
 On Sat,  3 Nov 2001 11:53, you wrote:
  Keith Antoine babbled on about:
   bpalogin -c /etc/bpalogin.conf
 
  copy /etc/rc.d/skeleton to /etc/rc.d/bplogin
  put this command into /etc/rc.d/bplogin in the start) section

 Sorry but I am as thick as two bricks when it comes to scripts, however I
 do NOT Have a /etc/rc.d/bpalogin, I do have a /etc/bpalogin.conf. Also
 isn't rc.d just a simlink to init.d ? If I were to copy the skelton to
 bpalogin wouldn't that just overwrite the bpalogin script?

 Thjis is the bpalogin script that is in /etc/bpalogin.conf
 ---


 # Default debug level is 1.  Values range from 0-2 with 0 being silent
 # All information goes to the syslog.
 debuglevel 1

 # The user name you have for your BPA account
 username **

 # Your BPA password
 password ***

 # The default auth server is dce-server You can override this value, but
 # you would only do this if you have not set your default domain correctly
 # in your /etc/resolv.conf
 #authserver dce-server

 # You can override the default domain if you have your
 # resolv.conf set to not include the BPA domains.
 #authdomain vic.bigpond.net.au

 # The loginprog will be executed whenever BPALogin connects successfully
 # you could have it run a script to start a firewall, etc.  The first
 # parm to the program will be the port number
 #connectedprog  /etc/rc.d/rc.masq
 #disconnectedprog  /etc/rc.d/rc.masq

 # If you want to bind BPALogin to a specific address rather than all
 # sockets, you can do that here.
 #localaddress 10.1.2.0

 # You can now define the listen port instead of a random port
 # This will help with firewalls.
 #localport 5050

 # Logging can be sent to syslog or sysout.
 #logging sysout

 # Set the minimum heartbeat interval.  This can protect against
 # DoS attacks.
 minheartbeatinterval 60

  then cd rc3.d
  ln -s ../bplogin S100bplogin
  cd ../rc5.d
  ln -s ../bplogin S100bplogin
 
  that should cause it to be run whenever you enter runlevel 3 or 5

I'm leaving to visit the folks, but if you can wait till late Sunday, early 
Monday, I can give you a script and all the steps necessary to implement it
-- 
Douglas J Hunley (doug at hunley.homeip.net) - Linux User #174778
Admin: http://linux.nf  Admin: http://hunley.homeip.net

In 1665 Issac Newton became discouraged when he fell up a flight of
stairs.
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Re: Suse 7.2

2001-11-03 Thread Keith Antoine

On Sun, 4 Nov 2001 00:30, you wrote:

 I'm leaving to visit the folks, but if you can wait till late Sunday, early
 Monday, I can give you a script and all the steps necessary to implement it

Yes of course I can, nothing is ever that important to me nowadays g

-- 
Keith Antoine, 18 Arkana St, The Gap, Queensland 4061 Australia PH:61733002161
Retired Geriatric, Sometime Electronics Engineer, Knowall, Brain in storage

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RE: Suse 7.2

2001-11-02 Thread kbb0927

Keith,

Look in /etc/init.d for boot.local and you should be able to edit that
file.

Regards,

Keith B.

Keith Antoine [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

I am unable to start my internet login with Suse. I used to use a small 
startup in /etc/rc.local which does not exist in Suse. I have to type it in 
each time after login to get onto the net. So where is the startup for Suse 
progs tried in /etc a link to rc.d and boot.local but that does not work.
-- 
Keith Antoine, 18 Arkana St, The Gap, Queensland 4061 Australia PH:61733002161
Retired Geriatric, Sometime Electronics Engineer, Knowall, Brain in storage

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Re: Suse 7.2

2001-11-02 Thread Keith Antoine

On Sat, 3 Nov 2001 01:44, you wrote:
 Keith,

 Look in /etc/init.d for boot.local and you should be able to edit that
 file.

 Regards,

 Keith B.

No it does not work. I have a program that starts up a login to my cable isp, 
telstra, in linux, which is unsupported by them (what else).
I have to type this in, in a treminal and sued in: 
bpalogin -c /etc/bpalogin.conf
When I enter this in /etc/init.d/boot.local it does not connect on boot up, I 
have also tried the full path;
/usr/sbin/bpalogin -c /etc/bpalogin.conf and that also does not work

In Caldera and Mandrake I used to put in, in /etc/rc.d/rc.local
/etc/rc.d/init.d/bpalogin start
This ofcourse will not do for Suse, damd well wish for a standard basic
underlying OS layout. 

-- 
Keith Antoine, 18 Arkana St, The Gap, Queensland 4061 Australia PH:61733002161
Retired Geriatric, Sometime Electronics Engineer, Knowall, Brain in storage

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Re: Suse 7.2

2001-11-02 Thread Douglas J Hunley

Keith Antoine babbled on about:
 bpalogin -c /etc/bpalogin.conf

copy /etc/rc.d/skeleton to /etc/rc.d/bplogin
put this command into /etc/rc.d/bplogin in the start) section

then cd rc3.d
ln -s ../bplogin S100bplogin
cd ../rc5.d
ln -s ../bplogin S100bplogin

that should cause it to be run whenever you enter runlevel 3 or 5
-- 
Douglas J Hunley (doug at hunley.homeip.net) - Linux User #174778
Admin: http://linux.nf  Admin: http://hunley.homeip.net

PROGRAM - n. A magic spell cast over a computer allowing it to turn 
one's input into error messages.  v. tr.- To engage in a 
pastime similar to banging one's head against a wall, but 
with fewer opportunities for reward.
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Re: Suse 7.2

2001-11-02 Thread Keith Antoine

On Sat,  3 Nov 2001 11:53, you wrote:
 Keith Antoine babbled on about:
  bpalogin -c /etc/bpalogin.conf

 copy /etc/rc.d/skeleton to /etc/rc.d/bplogin
 put this command into /etc/rc.d/bplogin in the start) section

Sorry but I am as thick as two bricks when it comes to scripts, however I do 
NOT Have a /etc/rc.d/bpalogin, I do have a /etc/bpalogin.conf. Also isn't 
rc.d just a simlink to init.d ? If I were to copy the skelton to bpalogin 
wouldn't that just overwrite the bpalogin script? 

Thjis is the bpalogin script that is in /etc/bpalogin.conf
---

# Default debug level is 1.  Values range from 0-2 with 0 being silent
# All information goes to the syslog.
debuglevel 1

# The user name you have for your BPA account
username **

# Your BPA password
password ***

# The default auth server is dce-server You can override this value, but
# you would only do this if you have not set your default domain correctly
# in your /etc/resolv.conf
#authserver dce-server

# You can override the default domain if you have your
# resolv.conf set to not include the BPA domains.
#authdomain vic.bigpond.net.au
 
# The loginprog will be executed whenever BPALogin connects successfully
# you could have it run a script to start a firewall, etc.  The first
# parm to the program will be the port number
#connectedprog  /etc/rc.d/rc.masq
#disconnectedprog  /etc/rc.d/rc.masq
 
# If you want to bind BPALogin to a specific address rather than all
# sockets, you can do that here.
#localaddress 10.1.2.0
 
# You can now define the listen port instead of a random port
# This will help with firewalls.
#localport 5050
 
# Logging can be sent to syslog or sysout.
#logging sysout
 
# Set the minimum heartbeat interval.  This can protect against
# DoS attacks.
minheartbeatinterval 60


 then cd rc3.d
 ln -s ../bplogin S100bplogin
 cd ../rc5.d
 ln -s ../bplogin S100bplogin

 that should cause it to be run whenever you enter runlevel 3 or 5

-- 
Keith Antoine, 18 Arkana St, The Gap, Queensland 4061 Australia PH:61733002161
Retired Geriatric, Sometime Electronics Engineer, Knowall, Brain in storage

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Re: suse 7.2 7.3

2001-10-25 Thread burns

On October 24, 2001 04:14 pm, Keith Antoine wrote:

 No as I installed it on 3 other machines also I tried both the cd and dvd
 neither worked.

Is this by chance the 7.3 upgrade as opposed to a full install? (Perhaps I 
missed that). If so, according to the SuSE list there are known issues with 
it (there have been a number of threads discussing this).

Apparently, like Caldera, SuSE's upgrade install programs are invariably a 
challenge. Most of the seasoned SuSE users recommend getting the full 
version, backing up your data, then doing a full fresh install from scratch. 

Sad, really, that we have come so far over the past few years in Linux - we 
can run it as superclusters and in mainframes - but we can't seem to get 
consistently fool-proof OS upgrades.
-- 
burns
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Re: suse 7.2 7.3

2001-10-22 Thread Keith Antoine


Douglas J Hunley wrote:
  I've no idea what th problem here is, but I too am worried.  Yours
  sounds a lot like the system I have here I wanted to put 7.3 on when it
  shows up.
 
  When it does hang, can you look in the alternate TTY's to see what was
  happening when it froze?

 7.2 went on my Athlon 800 w/ 256Mb DDR no problems...

 was there anything in SuSE archives?

Well that tells me that its not the DDR ram, one down. Had no luck at the
archives as I also have had no luck getting Suse to answer me. Now does anyone
have suse up with one of the lastest athlons? Where is it checking when it 
does
the 'system check' and especially where is it at 50% ?

However since I wrote this and it bounced I have done the F2 text install:

It starts and completes a H/W detection, so thats fine. Searches for infofile 
and Braille display find both I guess as it does not complain.States tha H/W 
probing finished, starts YAST1 then initialises YAST2 checks system up to 40% 
then on screen comes:

sh: -c: line 1: unexpected EOF while looking for `'
sh: -c: line 2: syntax error. unexpected end of file

Now AFAIK this only occurs with script files; I am guessing that as 7.1 goes 
on fine, that something in a script file that has changed from version 7.1 is 
stuffing up.

Is this a reasonable assumption ??

-- 
-
To those who have been in harms way, to those that have made the
sacrifice in humanities name. At the going down of the sun and
in the morning I shall remember them. 
-
Keith Antoine aka skippy
18 Arkana St The Gap Queensland 4061 Australia PH 16 7 33002161
Retired Geriatric and Sometime Electronics Engineer : Knowall

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Re: suse 7.2 7.3

2001-10-22 Thread Collins Richey

On Tue, 23 Oct 2001 14:10:25 -0400 Keith Antoine
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 
 Douglas J Hunley wrote:
   I've no idea what th problem here is, but I too am worried. 
 Yours
   sounds a lot like the system I have here I wanted to put 7.3 on
 when it
   shows up.
  
   When it does hang, can you look in the alternate TTY's to see
 what was
   happening when it froze?
 
  7.2 went on my Athlon 800 w/ 256Mb DDR no problems...
 
  was there anything in SuSE archives?
 
 Well that tells me that its not the DDR ram, one down. Had no luck
 at the
 archives as I also have had no luck getting Suse to answer me. Now
 does anyone
 have suse up with one of the lastest athlons? Where is it checking
 when it 
 does
 the 'system check' and especially where is it at 50% ?
 
 However since I wrote this and it bounced I have done the F2 text
 install:
 
 It starts and completes a H/W detection, so thats fine. Searches for
 infofile 
 and Braille display find both I guess as it does not complain.States
 tha H/W 
 probing finished, starts YAST1 then initialises YAST2 checks system
 up to 40% 
 then on screen comes:
 
 sh: -c: line 1: unexpected EOF while looking for `'
 sh: -c: line 2: syntax error. unexpected end of file
 
 Now AFAIK this only occurs with script files; I am guessing that as
 7.1 goes 
 on fine, that something in a script file that has changed from
 version 7.1 is 
 stuffing up.
 
 Is this a reasonable assumption ??
 

Keith,

Is it possible your install media is fubared, ie you need a
replacement cdrom?

-- 
Collins Richey
Denver Area
gentoo_rc6 xfce+sylpheed
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Re: suse 7.2 7.3

2001-10-20 Thread Ted Ozolins

On October 20, 2001 01:04 am, you wrote:


 I have installed on other systems but the main difference being that I have
 a MB with ddr ram and an Athlon 1.4 bought just recently; 10 days ago,
 probably the C version. Does anyone know if this could be the answer and
 does 7.3 address this? This is just casting on dark waters and hope someone
 can help.
I have five machines here with W3.1 (just upgraded the server). I had 3.1 
balk on a couple of rhe machines, an AMD 750 Duron and an Intel P3-866. I 
keep a Mystique video card as a test card that I use whenever an install 
fails during hardware probing. In most cases the install continues flawlessly 
when I use the test card. Once I've completed the install I then (in run 
level 3) manually configure X to reflect the card I intend to use. The 
biggest culprit has been the ATI Rage Fury Pro. But once I've manually set 
things up all runs just fine.   
-- 
Ted Ozolins (VE7TVO)
Westbank, BC
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Re: SuSE 7.2 Pro

2001-07-06 Thread Ian Marchak

Douglas J. Hunley wrote:
 
 -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
 Hash: SHA1
 
 is up on http://hunley.homeip.net/iso

Which discs are *needed* and which are optional?
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Re: SuSE 7.2 Pro

2001-07-06 Thread Tony Alfrey

On Friday 06 July 2001 08:30 am, Ian Marchak wrote:
 Douglas J. Hunley wrote:
  -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
  Hash: SHA1
 
  is up on http://hunley.homeip.net/iso

 Which discs are *needed* and which are optional?

It depends which apps you want.  They have included everything 
including the kitchen sink.  When you run the graphical install on disk 
#1 and select the various apps you want (you can get really specific or 
select big blocks of stuff), the install proceeds, asking you for one 
CD after the other.  And because YaST seems to know which disks are in 
the machine, it might be a big pain to try and sort it out to make a 
kind-of one disk fits all iso.  

-- 
Tony Alfrey
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
I'd rather be sailing
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Re: Suse 7.2, my 2 cents

2001-07-03 Thread Zoki

At 18:30 01/07/2001 -0400, you wrote:

snip

If anyone is still reading, something crossed my mind for the SxS.  I 
wrote up three pages of 'quick hints for a really newbie' user of Linux 
for her to use and I was wondering if anyone has an interest in this for 
the SxS.  What I really would like is input from people as to things that 
are needed in such a document but perhaps I should put the 'outline' of 
what I put in mine first.  The doc would only cover using Linux, not the 
install or technical stuff and would probably be KDE oriented.

Any interest?


*** Count me in, but I'll need time to go through your previous posts about 
this subject and get my boxes running. I have been testing stuff a lot 
lately and have to get things straight here.

Cheers,
Zoran.

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