[newbie] (OT) I wonder ...

2000-03-13 Thread Tom Berger

... which OS runs Microsoft's servers:

http://www.netcraft.com/whats/?host=www.microsoft.com&Examine=Wait..

Sorry, couldn't determine what the server was for host
www.microsoft.com on port 80.

Tried some other big sites - nobody hides the OS they're running. Just MS.
Makes you think...

Nevermind

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] Booting Another Mandrake

2000-03-13 Thread Tom Berger


On 13-Mar-2000 Lane Lester wrote:
> As I described in another thread, I lost access to Mandrake by some of my
> fiddling.
> As a "safety net" I've installed a second Mandrake on my computer, and I'd
> like to have access to it from lilo. The second install has /boot in a
> separate partition at hda6 and the rest of the filesystem at hda7. I added
> the following to fstab:
> /dev/hda6 /mnt/mandrake2boot ext2 defaults 0 0
> /dev/hda7 /mnt/mandrake2 ext2 defaults 0 0
> 
> I also added the following stanza to lilo.conf:
> image = /mnt/mandrake2boot/vmlinuz-2.2.14-15mdk
>   label = m2
>   vga = normal
>   append = "mem=124M"
>   root = /dev/hdb7
>   read-only
> 
> But I get a kernel panic when I try to boot to this new Mandrake. Do you see
> a problem with the above?

One? ;-)

1) You try to boot a kernel via a partition you don't mount (/dev/hda6)

2) You point to an image relating to *the currently running* system. Even if
you manage to mount /dev/hda6 as root, you'll get a kernel panic. Why? Because
LiLo looks for an image on /mnt/mandrake2boot... etc and there will be none,
since for the system you now try to start, the image is in /mandrake2boot...
for this is the root system you've specified. (Linux is fun, isn't it? ;-)

3) The values are wrong (not 0 0 but 1 1 for boot and 1 2 for data)

4) Sorry, but your lilo.conf entry doesn't make any sense at all to me: 'root'
must point to the partition where the kernel is located. This is /dev/hda6 not
/dev/hdb7

5) I further assume you forgot to rerun 
lilo
after making changes to lilo.conf, because LiLo would have refused this
configuration.

So how to do it? I haven't tried it myself but maybe you find something
following these jots (I advise you to have a working boot diskette at hand...):

- every system needs a working LiLo of its own.

- Since there can only be one version of LiLo in the Master Boot Record, you
have to write the second to a diskette or the master sector of the root device.
You can't boot the second system, but that's no prob, use 

chroot /mnt

This does a 'change root', so that /mnt is now /. Run 'mkbootdisk' (you'll need
a floppy). This diskette will allow you to boot the second system. Type 'exit'
to get out of chroot mode.

- If you install the second lilo-boot sector into the master sector of the root
partition, you can start the second system via the first LiLo.
Don't use the 'image' flag but the 'other' flag and point it to the partition
where the second LiLo is installed to.

Let me know if you get it worked out!!

Happy playing ;-)

tom


(assuming you already have a lilo.conf for the second system
> -- 
> Lane
>  
> Lane Lester / Madison County, Georgia USA
> Using Linux to get where I want to go...

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: [newbie] how do i make WindowMaker open a new window, maximi

2000-03-13 Thread Tom Berger


On 13-Mar-2000 Ryan Drafall wrote:
> Tom Berger wrote:
> 
>> On 11-Mar-2000 Ryan Drafall wrote:
>> >
>> > Hello,
>> >
>> > The subject pretty much says it all.  Whenever I open a new window,
>> > whatever the program may be, it always opens in a window that is
>> > off-center on the screen.  How do I make it automatically maximize?
>> > Thanks for your help.
>> >
>> > --
>> >
>> > Ryan Drafall
>> >   gAIM S/N: Twygg1
>> >  Linux 2.2.14-15mdk
>> >
>> >
>> >
>>
>> This depends on the app you are starting, if you are starting the program
>> anew
>> or open another window (e.g. a new Netscape window).
>> Tell me which apps you mean and I will try to give you an example, if it's
>> possible (it is in many cases, but requires some fiddling about).
>>
>> tom
>>
>> --
>> "No fun, no gain"
>> Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
>> http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> Thanks for responding to my question.  First of all, whenever I start
> Netscape (in
> a new process), it NEVER opens in a maximized window.  Also, when I'm in
> Netscape
> and let's say I right-click on a link and choose OPEN IN NEW WINDOW, the new
> window that gets created also NEVER opens maximized.  It gets really annoying
> after a while.  I also notice that all the other programs in WindowMaker do
> the
> same thing...that is, opening in an UNmaximized window.  Thanks for your
> help.
> Ryan.

You can set this (I think!) via entries in the .Xdefaults file in your
home directory. This requires quite some man-page reading and fiddling about.

It's a bit different with Netscape, though. An entry in .Xdefaults like this:

Netscape.Navigator.geometry: =1024x768-0-0

will open every Navigator window at 1024x768. If that is your current screen
resolution, this will be fullscreen. If you use another screen resolution,
change this.

If you've made the changes, save the file and run

xrdb -merge ./Xdefaults

This loads the XResources data anew. Restart Netscape to see if it works.

More Netscape Xressources are at 

http://www.linux.com/tuneup/database.phtml/X11/Netscape/000112.html

Conventional X programs like xterm usually take command line parameters like
'-geometry'. Read the man pages.

Happy playing ;-)

tom

P.S.: More Netscape hacks are at
http://www.mandrakeuser.org/connect/cbrowse2.html

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: Fwd: RE: [newbie] imwheel: not working

2000-03-13 Thread Tom Berger


On 13-Mar-2000 Nicholas Imfeld wrote:
> 
> 
> --  Forwarded Message  --
> Subject: RE: [newbie] imwheel: not working
> Date: Sun, 12 Mar 2000 20:34:39 -0500
> From: Nicholas Imfeld <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> 
> 
> On Sun, 12 Mar 2000, you wrote:
>> On 12-Mar-2000 Claus Atzenbeck wrote:
>> > I was reading the installation guide for imwheel; I did everything
>> > what I've been told, but my wheel is still not working.
>> > 
>> > Here is my pointer section of /etc/X11/XF86Config:
>> > 
>> > Section "Pointer"
>> >Protocol "PS/2"
>> >Device "/dev/psaux"
>> >Resolution 100
>> >Buttons 3
>> >ZAxisMapping 4 5 EndSection
>> > EndSection
>> > 
>> > I was starting "imwheel -k" after I was restarting the X server.
>> > I have a Fujitsu 3 button wheel mouse.
>> > 
>> > Does anyone know how to get the wheel working?
>> > 
>> > Thanks a lot for your help!
>> > 
>> > Regards,
>> > Claus.
>> 
>> Mine works :-P *grin*. You forgot to adjust the Protocol:
>> 
>> Section "Pointer"
>> Protocol"IMPS/2"
>> Device  "/dev/mouse"
>> ZAxismapping 4 5
>> 
>> You might also have to copy /etc/X11/imwheelrc to your home directory and
>> rename it to '.imwheelrc'.
>> 
>> tom
>> 
>> -- 
>> "No fun, no gain"
>> Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
>> http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> I've tried many different things myself in attempts to get the mouse wheel 
> working.  But whenever I change the protocol from PS/2 to IMPS/2 then I shut
> down and restart X my mouse flips out and the cursor flys to the upper right
> hand corner of the screen.  Any thoughts on how to get it to work.  
> 
> -- 
> Nic
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> ---
> 
> -- 
> Nic
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Brand of mouse? Brand of graphics card? 

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] Hmmm

2000-03-13 Thread Tom Berger


On 13-Mar-2000 Wayne wrote:
> Sorry guys.
> 
> Further to my last, I have cheked the ownership of my device (hdd1) under
> my /dev directory and have found that it is owned by me (wapether) and not
> by root, yet root owns all of the directories on it and I cannot change
> the attributes as root or myself.  HELP!
> 
> Wayne


Are you talking about directories on a Windos partition? You can't change their
permissions since Windos has no idea what permissions are. Try the umask entry
suggested by a previous poster.

Regards

tom
 
> 
> 
> Wayne Petherick
> Criminology Department
> Bond University
> 
> ************

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] Keyboard stops working in Netscape

2000-03-13 Thread Tom Berger


On 13-Mar-2000 Michelle Schneider wrote:
> I am using Mandrake 7.0.  When I use netscape for a while my keyboard stops
> working in netscape.  It still works for other programs, but not for
> netscape. 
> I have to close netscape and restart for it to work.  It makes it impossible
> to
> search for things or fill out forms.
> 
> Any suggestions?
> 
>  -- 
> Michelle
> 
> "Just because kittens are born in the hearth oven, that doesn't make
> them muffins."  Kahlan Amnell in _Temple of the Winds_ by Terry Goodkind.

Do you get this error at a certain point (e.g. choosing from drop-down menus)?
That's when I get it. What I usually do is to 'shade' Netscape (double click on
upper application bar) and then double click again to unshade the Netscape
window. Guess that's JAANB (just another annoying Netscape bug).

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] Can't stop X

2000-03-13 Thread Tom Berger


On 12-Mar-2000 Art Richardson wrote:
> Hi
>   I installed Mandrake 7.0 in a dual boot machine. It installed
beautifully,
> almost  everything works except for my 3Com 3c509 isa PnP nic. However, what
> I am trying to figure out is how I exit from KDE and just run from the bash
> shell. Please tell me how to turn it off
> Many thanks
> Art

ALT-CTRL-F2, ALT-CTRL-F3 etc. Actually X just runs on one console but you have
6 of them.
To boot into console mode, type
linux init 3
at the boot prompt.

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] Windows 2000 Source Code

2000-03-13 Thread Tom Berger

Good one! Thanks!

tom


On 13-Mar-2000 Mike Perry wrote:
> I know this is off topic, but couldn't resist it :-)
> 
> 
> 
> For SW engineers eyes only.
> 
> Windows 2000 Source Code
> 
>  So the secret is disclosed here ...
> 
>  /* Source Code to Windows 2000 */
> 
>  #include "win31.h"
>  #include "win95.h"
>  #include "win98.h"
>  #include "workst~1.h"
>  #include "evenmore.h"
>  #include "oldstuff.h"
>  #include "billrulz.h"
>  #include "monopoly.h"
>  #define INSTALL = HARD
> 
>  char make_prog_look_big[160];
> 
> void main()
> {
> 
>   while(!CRASHED)
>   {
> 
>   display_copyright_message();
>   display_bill_rules_message();
>   do_nothing_loop();
>   if (first_time_installation)
>   {
> 
>   make_50_megabyte_swapfile();
>   do_nothing_loop();
>   totally_screw_up_HPFS_file_system();
>   search_and_destroy_the_rest_of_OS/2();
>   make_futile_attempt_to_damage_Linux();
>   disable_Netscape();
>   disable_RealPlayer();
>   disable_Lotus_Products();
>   hang_system();
>   }
> 
>   write_something(anything);
>   display_copyright_message();
>   do_nothing_loop();
>   do_some_stuff();
> 
>   if (still_not_crashed)
>   {
>   display_copyright_message();
>   do_nothing_loop();
>   basically_run_windows_3.1();
>   do_nothing_loop();
>   do_nothing_loop();
>   }
>   }
> 
>   if (detect_cache())
>   disable_cache();
> 
>   if (fast_cpu())
>   {
>   set_wait_states(lots);
>   set_mouse(speed, very_slow);
>   set_mouse(action, jumpy);
>   set_mouse(reaction, sometimes);
>   }
> 
>   /* printf("Welcome to Windows 3.1"); */
>   /* printf("Welcome to Windows 3.11"); */
>   /* printf("Welcome to Windows 95"); */
>   /* printf("Welcome to Windows NT 3.0"); */
>   /* printf("Welcome to Windows 98"); */
>   /* printf("Welcome to Windows NT 4.0"); */
>   printf("Welcome to Windows 2000");
> 
>   if (system_ok())
>   crash(to_dos_prompt)
>   else
>   system_memory = open("a:\swp0001.swp", O_CREATE);
> 
>   while(something)
>   {
>   sleep(5);
>   get_user_input();
>   sleep(5);
>   act_on_user_input();
>   sleep(5);
>   }
>   create_general_protection_fault();
> }
> 
> Michael Perry.
> R&D. Dep. Netafim Magal.
> <<<>>>

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] Crystal Chipset & NetGear irq(?) conflict

2000-03-13 Thread Tom Berger


On 13-Mar-2000 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Finally figured out the root of my sound problem.
> Apparently my Netgear PCI (jumperless) NIC and my Crystal Sound onboard sound
> card use the same irq/DMA/IO.  
> 
> I reformated last night, used sndconfig to set my sound at diff irq/dma/io's.
> Then turned on the nic.  Had sound and internet.
> 
> Rebooted today to do some windows stuff.  Came back to linux and no sound.  
> Well, almost none - I get a slight click when a sound should play.
> 
> Any ideas?
> 
> Ty C. Mixon
> F.T.C. Enterprises
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> ICQ 26147713

Looks like Windos messes around with the settings. Have you tried to tell
Windos to use the same settings as in Linux?

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: [newbie] Can someone PLEASE do a ls -l /usr/bin/esd for me

2000-03-13 Thread Tom Berger


On 13-Mar-2000 Alex V Flinsch wrote:
> On Sun, 12 Mar 2000, you wrote:
>> > -rwxrw root audio is what I have 
>> 
>> And mpg123 works???  Id like to keep it like that, but I have to chmod
>> o+rx it, otherwise mpg123 gives me permission denied errors :\
> 
> leave it as 
> -rwxr-x---   1 root 81  31628 Dec  9 11:42 /usr/bin/esd
> 
> then execute "esd &"  as  root
> then try using mpg1234 as a user..
> 
> 
> -- 
> Alex
> (Go easy on me, I'm a COBOL programmer in real life)

Agreed. Put it into /etc/rc.d/rc.local. This way it will be executed on boot
with the right permissions. 
By the way: you *are* member of the audio group, aren't you? Check this in
/etc/group.

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: [newbie] starting kppp automatically

2000-03-13 Thread Tom Berger


On 13-Mar-2000 Gary K Stinnett Jr wrote:
> Tom Berger wrote:
> 
>> On 12-Mar-2000 Gary K Stinnett Jr wrote:
>> > I got perlseti running this weekend on my ML 7.02 box.  I use KPPP to
>> > dial into the internet.  Can anyone give me some info on how I can
>> > automatically connect to the internet so I can keep seti running all of
>> > the time.
>> >
>> > Thanks,
>> >
>> > Later
>> >
>> > Gary
>>
>> Create a new application icon in the Autostart folder. Supply this
>> commandline:
>>
>> kppp -c [accountname]
>>
>> That should do.
>>
>> tom
>>
>> --
>> "No fun, no gain"
>> Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
>> http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> Let me get this right.
> 1. Create a new icon under Autostart,  'I called it seti autostart kppp'
> 2. Under the Execute tab of properties for my new icon I should put 'kppp
> -c
> [accountname]'
> 
> I'm quite the newbie!  What does accountname stand for?  What should I put
> for
> accountname?


The name for the account you have given in kppp's Setup.


> Also, will this start kppp and dial into the internet when I complete a seti
> packet?


No. This will dial up as soon as you start KDE. What you want would involve
some heavy scripting. So if this isn't implemented in the program itself, you
are out of luck, I'm afraid. Have a look at the docs of the program if they
mention something like this.

tom

> Thanks,
> Gary
> 
> --
>  \\\|///
>  \ ~ ~ /
> (\ @ @ /)
> --oOOo-(_)-oOOo-
> 
> Name:Gary K Stinnett Jr
> Email:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Web: http://web.infoave.net/~gksjr
> 
>  ooO
> (   )--Ooo--
>  \ (  (   )
>   \_)  ) /
>   (_/

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: [newbie] Make question ?

2000-03-13 Thread Tom Berger


On 13-Mar-2000 -=qUeNCy95=- wrote:
>> How do I find out whether I have make installed ?
> 
> rpm -q make
>  
>> And if I don't have make, where can I get it and install
>> it...
> 
> Put your Mandrake CD in
> cd /mnt/cdrom/Mandrake/RPMS
> 
> as root type:
> rpm -Uvh make-some_version_number.rpm

or - if you are using LM 7-:

urpmi make

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] Compiling the Kernel

2000-03-13 Thread Tom Berger


On 13-Mar-2000 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>   Hey there, I'm having trouble compiling the kernel and I'm wondering if
> anybody can give me some input. Ok, here what I've done let me start by
> saying I'm running mandrake 6.1, and I'm trying to install linux kernel
> 2.2.14.
> 
>   I've managed to compile the kernel correctly (make mrproper;make
> menuconfig make bzImage;make dep;make modules;make modules_installs), then
> I managed to copy bzImage to /boot/vmlinux-2.2.14 and linked vmlinuz ( soft
> link ), then I updated lilo by adding a "test" addition to lilo with my new
> kernel. 
> 
>   I did all that but when I rebooted I get messages like System.map has
> incorrect kernel version, and Modules-info.map incorrect kernel version. So
> I think I have to update System.map and Modueles-info.map, but I have no
> idea how to do that the HOWTO's don't have anything about that in their,
> any ideas's.

You've forgotten to copy the new System.map from the Linux source directory to
/boot. This map gets generated with each new kernel compilation and therefore
you need it in /boot.

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] XFree86 4.0

2000-03-13 Thread Tom Berger


On 13-Mar-2000 sujee wrote:
> Is there any RPM that i can download to upgrade  to XFree86 4.0
> 
> 
> thanx in advance!!
> 
> 
> 
> Sujeevan


DON'T. There have been a lot of reports on instability and incompabilities. 
If you really must, check out www.rpmfind.net.

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: [newbie] iostream.h C++ development problems

2000-03-13 Thread Tom Berger


On 13-Mar-2000 -=qUeNCy95=- wrote:
>> I'm not an expert programmer, but isn't the header file you want
>> "iostream.h"
>> and not "streamio.h"? I could be wrong and all, but I've never seen streamio
>> and I can't find it on my system even though I installed everything even
>> remotely related to development.
> 
> That was a typo on my fault.  Im still getting an error about not finding
> file iostream.h, what RPM is this file in?  Can anyone else with Mandrake
> 7 compile simple c++ source?


$ locate iostream.h
/usr/include/g++-3/iostream.h
/usr/include/g++-3/stdiostream.h

$ rpm -qf /usr/include/g++-3/iostream.h
libstdc++-devel-2.95.2-3mdk

Maybe it's a $PATH problem?

tom

P.S.: To find a certain file in a set of RPMs:

for i in *.rpm ; do rpm -qpli $i | grep [filename] && echo $i ; done 


>> 
>> 
>> > When I installed Madrake 7, I chose my primary use would be developer.  It
>> > seemed to have installed all my libraries I need (I thought).  I compiled
>> > xmms, kxicq, and BitchX.
>> > 
>> > All 3 applications were written in C I believe.  However, I cannot compile
>> > any C++ programs.  Not even the simplest:
>> > 
>> > #include 
>> > int main() { cout << "hello world"; return 1; }
>> > 
>> > [quency95@xena quency95]$ gcc test.c
>> > test.c:1: streamio.h: No such file or directory
>> > 
>> > Ok so I dont have c++ libraries installed?
>> > 
>> > [quency95@xena quency95]$ rpm -q gcc-c++
>> > gcc-c++-2.95.2-3mdk
>> > [quency95@xena quency95]$ rpm -q libstdc++-devel 
>> > libstdc++-devel-2.95.2-3mdk
>> > [quency95@xena quency95]$ rpm -q libstdc++ 
>> > libstdc++-2.95.2-3mdk
>> > 
>> > 
>> > Should I be checking for anything else?
>> -- 
>> Anthony Huereca
>> http://m3000.1wh.com
>> Press any key to continue and any other key to quit
>> 

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] help

2000-03-12 Thread Tom Berger


On 12-Mar-2000 KompuKit wrote:
> I need to know...what "RCS" is...and how do I get it?
> I use Linux-Mandrake 7.02.  According to kpackage,
> I need to install rcs...for comanche to work.
> -- 
> -- 

revision control system

The rpm is

rcs-5.7-2mdk.i586.rpm

But don't ask me why comanche needs rcs...

tom

> <KompuKit=>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> ICQ# 7110071
> 
> HomePage:
> http://kwg.virtualave.net/kwg
> 
> Personal WebServer:
> http://kompukit.myip.org
> 
> (does not run 24/7)
> <KompuKit=>

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] Starting Things

2000-03-12 Thread Tom Berger


On 11-Mar-2000 Lane Lester wrote:
> This is a repeat try at getting some information:
> 
> How do you get things to start automatically in X? According to what I read
> in _Running Linux_, you put them in .xinitrc in your home directory, but that
> doesn't work for me. Here's my version; maybe there's something wrong with
> it:
>#!/bin/sh
> xscreensaver &
> exec icewm
> -- 
> Lane
>  
> Lane Lester / Madison County, Georgia USA
> Using Linux to get where I want to go...

Do you start the GUI automatically after booting or via 'startx'? If it's the
former, the file you need is .xsessionrc. 
Just a guess.

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] Anyone know how to mount a Windows 2000 volume?

2000-03-12 Thread Tom Berger


On 12-Mar-2000 KM Linux wrote:
> Hey gang:
> 
> Just upgraded to 7.0. Also updated my Windoze box to Windows 2000 (don't ask
> me
> why...)
> 
> Is there any way to mount the Windooohhhs volume in Linux now? It worked
> before
> I upgraded (of course) but the NTFS needs something special...I'm sure.
> 
> Any ideas?
> 
> Karekin

Yep, it's NTFS5 (or something like that). Look around maybe there's something
beta around for this.

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] How Does Mandrake Initialize?

2000-03-12 Thread Tom Berger


On 12-Mar-2000 Lane Lester wrote:
> I keep trying to do various things at startup, and almost none of them work!
> People tell me what to put in what files, but it doesn't have any effect!
> 
> I installed 7.0 with automatic startup of X, and now there seems to be no way
> to start at the console instead.
> 1. Typing "linux 3" at the lilo prompt doesn't do anything other than
> complain that it's not on the menu (I know that, I put "mx" and "mc" on the
> menu... but they both go to X, too.


It's 'linux init 3'


> 2. Changing inittab from id:5:initdefault: to id:3:initdefault:  doesn't do
> it, either.

Odd.
 
> I want to run some programs at startup, but no one seems to be able to help
> me do this.  For example, I want to run xscreensaver, but putting the
> following in either .Xsession or .xinitrc in my home directory has no effect:
>#!/bin/sh
> xscreensaver &
> exec icewm
> 
> I want to run ledcontrol before X starts, and someone suggested putting the
> command "ledd -d" in /etc/rc.d/rc.local, but that doesn't seem to work
> either.

What's this program meant to do?

tom

> -- 
> Lane
>  
> Lane Lester / Madison County, Georgia USA
> Using Linux to get where I want to go...

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] German "Umlaute" with MC

2000-03-12 Thread Tom Berger


On 12-Mar-2000 Rafael Haeusler wrote:
> Hello!
> 
> I've got the german "Umlaute" in Terminal unter Console and X. But if I
> start MidnightCommander it looks like another keyboard-map! 
> Haw can that be and be influenced ?
> If I quit MC I got me Umlaute back.
> strange thing .
> 
> Rafael

Options - Display bits - ISO 8859-1 - OK

If this doesn't work either, try 'Full 8 bits output'

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: [newbie] bz2?

2000-03-08 Thread Tom Berger


On 07-Mar-2000 Vidyut Luther wrote:
> there is a utility called bunzip2, use that to unzip it, . tar does
> recognize it, i forgot the switch though. but a simple:
> 
> bunzip2 jre.tar.bz2; tar xvf jre.tar


Guys,

Linux isn't easy, but it's not *that* complicated ;-). The command is

tar xyf [archivename]

i.e. just replace the 'z' with an 'y'.

(http://www.mandrakeuser.org/basics/bsource.html#Unpacking)

tom


> - Original Message -
> From: "Lane Lester" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Tuesday, March 07, 2000 4:03 PM
> Subject: [newbie] bz2?
> 
> 
>> I said:
>> > Well, since I don't do any programming, I just need a Java runtime
> called JRE.
>> > I'm downloading the one from blackdown as Richard suggested, so here's
> hoping.
>>
>> Hmm, the file came in as a .tar.bz2, and tar doesn't recognize it. I'm not
> sure I've ever encountered a .bz2 before.
>> --
>> Lane
>> 
>> Lane Lester / Madison County, Georgia USA
>> Using Linux to get where I want to go...
>>

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] ?

2000-03-08 Thread Tom Berger


On 07-Mar-2000 Nicholas Imfeld wrote:
> Does anyone know how to check and see what devices your hardware is assigned
> too?
>  -- 
> Nic
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]


less /proc/devices

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] question for the experts

2000-03-08 Thread Tom Berger


On 08-Mar-2000 Bill Kinsey wrote:
> I have a fairly simple question. I'm very new to linux, mandrake being my
> first dist. What reading resources would the experts recomend? I'm
> purchasing Linux for Dummies tomorrow but what else might be of assistance.

I found 'Running Linux' by Welsh et al. quite a good help. Have a look at 

http://www.mandrakeuser.org/resource/reslinux.html

for more.

Regards

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: [newbie] C++ Compiler Help

2000-03-08 Thread Tom Berger


On 08-Mar-2000 ChOPpY C. Chipper wrote:
> Hey, Another Problem When Compiling!
> 
> I Don't have The Library Files! Can Someone please tell me where to get
> them?  (ex. - missing iostream.h)
> 
> Thanks,
> Julien
 

http://www.mandrakeuser.org/basics/bsource.html

Should help you ;-).

tom


> - Original Message -
> From: Anthony Huereca <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Monday, March 06, 2000 7:44 PM
> Subject: Re: [newbie] C++ Compiler Help
> 
> 
>> Here's how I do it: g++ -o executable_name source_code.cpp
>>
>> That should compile it. I personally have that all set up into a script so
> it
>> takes less time to type. Put
>>
>> #!/bin/bash
>> g++ -o $1 $1.cpp; ./$1
>>
>> into a text file, like "compile", chmod it (chmod u+x compile), and move
> it
>> in your path, like /usr/local/bin. Then to compile a program you wrote,
> just
>> type "compile program_name" and it'll compile and run it automatically.
> And as
>> far as I know, all compilers work the same way.
>>
>> >
>> > hey, this is an easy question:
>> > How do I compile a program under g++
>> > I just can't figure it out
>> > lets say, I have a file called "test.cpp" under / the dir
>> > how would I compile it?
>> > when i try, it does not return anything on the command line
>> > and just makes a new command line, just like when i started!
>> > also, do all the compilers work the same way? ie - gcc, etc.
>> >
>> > Thanks,
>> > Julien
>>
>>
>> --
>> Anthony Huereca
>> http://m3000.1wh.com
>> Press any key to continue and any other key to quit
>>

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] jp106 keyboard

2000-03-08 Thread Tom Berger


On 08-Mar-2000 altay ozaygen wrote:
> yesterday night I installed mandrake 7.0 from a cd that I burnt my self.
> Before I was using redhat 6.1 but I
> preferred a complete KDE desktop and I switched to mandrake. My problem
> is that I am using a laptop with a jp106 keyboard but during the
> installation I couldn't find the japanese keyboard choice. In redhat it
> is possible to choose the japanese keyboard during the installation,
> what should I have to do to get a jp106 keyboard as a default in
> mandrake.
> thanks for your help.
> altay

Edit the file (as 'root')

/etc/sysconfig/keyboard

and change the KEYTABLE entry to

KEYTABLE=jp106

Run (as 'root')

/etc/rc.d/init.d/keytable restart

and test if it works.

Good luck ;-)

tom



-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: [newbie] sndconfig problems

2000-03-07 Thread Tom Berger


On 07-Mar-2000 Karekin Madteos wrote:
> 
> Tom:
> 
> Thanks.  modprobe sgalaxy.o gives me the same message...device or 
> resource busy.
> 
> A look at my /etc/conf.modules gives me the following:
> 
> 
> alias eth0 3c59x
> alias parport_lowlevel parport_pc
> pre-install pcmcia_core /etc/rc.d/init.d/pcmcia start
> alias sound sb
> pre-install sound insmod sound dmabuf=1
> options opl3 io=0x388
> alias midi awe_wave
> post-install awe_wave /bin/sfxload /etc/midi/GU11-ROM.SF2
> options sb io=0x260 irq=10 dma=1 dma16=0 mpu_io=0x300
> 
> Any ideas?
> 
> Karekin


Run

/sbin/fuser -v /dev/dsp

as 'root'.

What does that say?

Explanation:

"fuser displays the PIDs of processes using  the  specified
files  or file systems." (man fuser)

tom

> On Tue, 07 Mar 2000, Tom Berger wrote:
>> On 07-Mar-2000 Karekin Madteos wrote:
>> > Thanks Piero:
>> > 
>> > Unfortunately, I get the same error with PnP disabled. In addition I get a
>> > hardware conflict error at boot up. It iwll let me Esc and boot anyway but
>> > so
>> > vhange in the status of the original problem.
>> > 
>> > Any suggestions?
>> > 
>> > Karekin
>> 
>> 1) What does 
>> 
>> modprobe sgalaxy.o
>> 
>> say?
>> 
>> 2) Have a look at /etc/conf.modules, is there already an entry for 'sound'?
>> 
>> Regards
>> 
>> tom
>> 
>>  
>> > On Mon, 06 Mar 2000, Piero Caracciolo wrote:
>> >> At 13:19 05/03/00 -0500, you wrote:
>> >> >I finally got mandrake installed and everything seems ok except now I'm
>> >> >having minor hardware problems. I ran sndconfig to try to configure my
>> >> >SoundBlaster 16 but it detected my AZT PnP modem instead of the SB card.
>> >> >It
>> >> >then desplays the following error:
>> >> >
>> >> >/lib/modules/2.2.14-15mdk/sgalaxy. o: init_module: device resource busy.
>> >> >
>> >> >
>> >> >
>> >> 
>> >> May be what I'going to say is too naive: did you disable the PnP-system
>> >> feature in the Bios (as you should have done)? With me, this solved many
>> >> problems.
>> >> Piero Caracciolo
>> >> 54, rue de Bourgogne
>> >> 75007 Paris - France
>> 
>> -- 
>> "No fun, no gain"
>> Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
>> http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] Cannot ping gateway

2000-03-07 Thread Tom Berger


On 07-Mar-2000 Lief Erickson wrote:
> The problem:
> I can't ping my gateway address.
> 
> 
> The setup:
> I have Linux Mandrake 6.1 with two NICs:
>   eth0=3c595
>   eth1=3c900B
> 
> DSL connection in bridging mode - not PPP! The NICs are running. I have
> looked at netstat and route to try troubleshoot the problem, but everything
> appears to be in order. I can ping each NIC and the localhost (127.0.0.1). I
> have /etc/hosts and /etc/network configured.
> 
> Additional hint: Actually, it's more than just the gateway that I cannot
> ping, it's also any machine on my network.
> 
> 
> The question:
> What else can I do to diagnose what is wrong? Is there a checklist that I
> could use? If so, where? I assume that there are some settings somewhere
> that I missed.
> 
> -Lief Erickson
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]

What does 

route

and what does 

ifconfig

say?
Is this DSL thingy a static IP or dynamically assigned?

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] Newbie trouble

2000-03-07 Thread Tom Berger


On 07-Mar-2000 Êùíóôáíôßíïò ÐáõëÜêïò wrote:
> Greetings from Greece.
> I am really new to Linux . Imagine that I have just completed the
> Mandrake instalation . Well , you are going to laugh with my problem but
> maybe can also help(?)
> During the installation I chose no login or passwords and didn't add any
> users. It's just me at home!
> But after the boot sequence and all that command line screens , just
> before the enviroment is loaded , it prompts for login and password . I
> tried to leave the fields blank but with no result.
> Please if you could save me from this situation!!! (of course I don't
> know any line commands)
> Thanx for your time :-)

Login: root
Password: hit  key

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] ln4win Kernel for Panic

2000-03-07 Thread Tom Berger


On 07-Mar-2000 Dennis Yar wrote:
> Hello,
> 
> I am trying to install ln4win over WIN98 FAT32.
> 
> After install.bat I got to the kernel boot.
> 
> However I got the error 
> 
> Kernel pacnic : VFS: Unable to mountroot fs on 08:01.
> 
> Can anyone advise?
> 
> Thank you.
> 
> Dennis

Hum,

on which 'drive' do you have it installed? C:\?

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: [Re: [newbie] son of bitch virus spreader]

2000-03-07 Thread Tom Berger


On 06-Mar-2000 Emilio Correa wrote:
> Hi, I know that it is possible to install MDK 7.02 from Windows 9x as 
> well, if it solve your problem, and if you can take the installer from 
> windows (exist some soft to read an ext2 partition from windows).


'Explore2fs':
http://uranus.it.swin.edu.au/~jn/linux/Explore2fs.htm

tom


> Good luck!!
> 
> Date sent:4 Mar 00 10:16:37 EST
> From: Jaguar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject:  Re: [Re: [newbie] son of bitch virus spreader]
> Send reply to:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Send reply to:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
>> According to the virus description someone already posted...the virus sends
>> it's self using the infected persons address book...so it is unlikely this
>> person knew he was infected...and the virus posted its self to the
>> list...and
>> many of his address book contacts.  At least he warned the mail list when he
>> discovered what had happened.
>> That aside...here's my Linux content.
>> I have a 13 GB drive with a seprate /home partition, where I have stored the
>> 7.02 d/l (cable download and NO CD burner..:( )to upgrade my version from
>> 6.0
>> to 7.02, what procedure would I use to install from HD (/home).  For
>> whatever
>> reason my floppy is initialized during boot up, but fails to mount.  I have
>> tried to boot from ANY (DOS, Win9x, Linux) floppy but no go...my system will
>> support CD boot though.  Is it possible to boot from 6.0 CD and install 7.02
>> from HD?
>> TIA
>> Jaguar
>> 
>> 
>> "Michael" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> > Can FBI do something about this?  My computer club members sent to me
>> > multiple happy virus before.  Sometimes it resides in your hardware though
>> > you don't execute the file when you use Unix to open the mail.  It does
>> > the
>> > same even when you use Unix not Windows.  In Unix, the virus stays dormant
>> > until it gets chances to spread.  I just want to go right ahead and sue
>> this
>> > son of bitch.  How about class act???  Let's get some funds out to run
>> > Mandrade Org. from that son of bitch from hell.
>> > 
>> > - Original Message -
>> > From: Ferris, Chris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> > To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> > Sent: Thursday, March 02, 2000 4:14 AM
>> > Subject: RE: [newbie] C:\CoolProgs\Pretty Park.exe
>> > 
>> > 
>> > > What the heck is this and why are you sending it to the newbie mandrake
>> > > list???
>> > >
>> > > Chris
>> > >  -Original Message-
>> > > From: Xavier Fromant [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>> > > Sent: Wednesday, March 01, 2000 3:33 PM
>> > > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> > > Subject: [newbie] C:\CoolProgs\Pretty Park.exe
>> > >
>> > >  << File: Pretty Park.exe >> Test: Pretty Park.exe  :)
>> > >
>> > >Xavier Fromant
>> > >
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Get your own FREE, personal Netscape WebMail account today at
>> http://webmail.netscape.com.
>> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Emilio Correa
> e-mail:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> www.tuayuda.com.ar 
> (Informática/Listas de Correo)

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: [newbie] [Newbie] lilo install problem

2000-03-07 Thread Tom Berger


On 06-Mar-2000 Emilio Correa wrote:
> Hi, May be you should probe to install lilo in the MBR (Master Boot 
> Record) unless you didn't do it before. 
> Good luck


No, that won't help. The problem is this: due to BIOS restrictions, LiLo can
only access the kernel, if it lies on a partition within the first 1024 cyl. of
a HD. I've posted an explanation and possible solutions on this page:

http://www.mandrakeuser.org/install/iboot.html

Regards

tom


> From: "Bill Kinsey" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To:   <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Date sent:Fri, 3 Mar 2000 16:17:39 -0500
> Send reply to:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject:  [newbie] [Newbie] lilo install problem
> 
>> I just got Mandrake from linux central and tried to install and was
>> instantly amazed at the new look. I have a problem though. I'm installing
>> mandrake on a 2 gb partition of my 27 gb hard drive. I get an error message
>> saying x cylinder is greater than 1024 when it gets to the part where lilo
>> is to be installed. I tried the boot disk option but it boots too slow. can
>> someone help me out.. TIA
>> 
>> Bill Kinsey
>> 
>> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Emilio Correa
> e-mail:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> www.tuayuda.com.ar 
> (Informática/Listas de Correo)

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] kde themes - last question for the night!

2000-03-07 Thread Tom Berger


On 07-Mar-2000 bosco wrote:
> Greetings all,
> 
> I have this problem. I have Mandrake 7.0 and run the stock KDE that came
> with it. When I apply new themes,  alot ( read most ) don't seem to
> function properly. For instance almost all of them don't change the
> "start bar" at the bottom of the screen. I look at the screenshots to
> make sure they look different in this particular theme and they do.
> However, when I apply the change on my system it does not. I thought
> maybe there was a apply/don't apply somewhere in the settings, but I
> have all of those marked in the Theme Manager... Please help, themes are
> a big reason I love Linux.. :)
> 
> 
> bosco()
> [LiquidQuake]
> www.liquidquake.com
> Assistant Coder & Resident Crackhead
> 
> " I don't know everything, but careful, I may claim to! "


Well, I don't know that much about KDE (Window Maker all the way ;-)), but did
you try to restart the X server via 'logout' after applying the theme? Maybe
that helps...

Regards

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] Re: Adding Second Floppy Drive

2000-03-07 Thread Tom Berger


On 07-Mar-2000 rassoc wrote:
> Thanks for answering my call for help so quickly!
> 
> ls -alk /dev/f*
> gave me a whole screen of information including the following:
> 
> brw 1   root   floppy   2, 0   May 5 1998   /dev/fd0
> brw 1   root   floppy   2, 1   May 5 1998   /dev/fd1
> 
> So both drives are there but trying to use both of them is driving me
> nuts.
> 
> My fstab file is:
> 
> /dev/hda1 /ext2 defaults 1 1
> /dev/hdb6 swap swap defaults 0 0
> /mnt/floppy /mnt/floppy supermount fs=vfat, dev=/dev/fd0 0 0
> none /proc proc defaults 0 0
> none /dev/pts devpts mode=0620 0 0
> /mnt/cdrom /mnt/cdrom supermount fs=iso9660, dev=/dev/cdrom 0 0
> 
> 
> 
> mtab file is:
> 
> /dev/hda1 / ext2 rw 0 0
> none /proc proc rw 0 0
> /mnt/floppy /mnt/floppy supermount rw, fs=vfat, dev=/dev/fd0 0 0
> none /dev/pts devpts rw, mode=0620 0 0
> /mnt/cdrom /mnt/cdrom supermount rw, fs=iso9660, dev=/dev/cdrom
> 
> 
> 
> I tried to mount the second floppy by using "mount /dev/fd1" but got the
> error message "Mount: can't find /dev/fd1 in /etc/fstab or /etc/mtab".


The command is:

mount /dev/fd1 -t auto /mnt/floppy

(i.e.: mount [device name] -t [partition format type, 'auto' should work]
[mount point]

Your command would only work, if the mount point would already been defined in
/etc/fstab.


> I tried to add a second
> /mnt/floppy /mnt/floppy supermount fs=vfat, dev=/dev/fd1 0 0
> to the fstab file but when I rebooted the system it hangs on "Unmounting
> File Systems" and after forcing a hard boot it hangs right after
> "Remounting Root File System in Read-Write Mode [OK]".


Sure it would: you have defined *one* mount point (/mnt/floppy) for *two*
different devices, /dev/fd0 and /dev/fd1. 

Just create a new directory in /mnt (e.g. mkdir /mnt/floppy2) and change the
fstab entry accordingly.


> I'm now re-installing 7.0...


This is Linux, we don't reinstall... ;-)

 
> Any suggestions?
> 
> Thanks!!!
> 
> Lori Rothermel


Regards

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] X Server Crash

2000-03-07 Thread Tom Berger


On 07-Mar-2000 Victor Richardson wrote:
> I've been trying to get through X not working and finally had to do an
> ftp upgrade from the pub/linux/mandrake/current to reload the packages.
> Now when I do a "startx" the server attempts to run, then crashes. It
> recognizes my S3 Trio 3D chipset, but says there is no mode definition
> for "800 x 600":
> 
>> SVGA: There is no mode definition named "800 x 600"
>> SVGA: Removing mode "800 x 600" from list of valid modes
>> SVGA: There is no mode definition named "600 x 400"
>>
>> Fatal server error:
>> No valid modes found.
>>
>> When reporting a problem related to a server crash, please send the full
>> server
>> output, not just the last message.
>>
>> X connection to :0.0 broken (explicit kill or server shutdown).
>>
> 
> My questions are; 1) How do I send the entire server output and who to?,
> 2)Any suggestions on how to fix this?
> 
> I've done the upgrade thing a few times with no luck. When I try
> "XF86Setup", it says "XF86Setup: command not found". Did the package not
> install and is there a way I can check? Or, is this just a problem with
> the S3 Trio 3D video? The system is an IBM Netfinity 3000 (PII 350, 128
> meg, 4 meg video, 9.1 gig SCSI -2) with a custom server install ftp'd
>>from the /linux/current directory.
> 
> Sorry for so many questions, but I hope there is a simple answer.
> 
> Victor
> 

No, XF86Setup isn't installed by default, since the X server configuration
stuff is usually done during configuration. The package is:

XFree86-XF86Setup-3.3.6-4mdk.i586.rpm

Personally, I like the Xconfigurator better:

Xconfigurator-4.2.10-3mdk.i586.rpm

Install either of those and run them as 'root'. If you are a masochist, you can
also try the old xf86config console program right now ;-).

Regards

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] Connecting to ISP Problems

2000-03-07 Thread Tom Berger


On 07-Mar-2000 rassoc wrote:
> Guess I was lucky because I had very little trouble getting my modem to
> work with 7.0 but my luck ran out when I tried to connect to my ISP. I'm
> using pppd. My ISP's tech support supplied all the setup parameters
> needed but that is as far as they would help. When I called to ask for
> help with this question I was told that I could use LINUX if I "had to"
> but they would not support it in any way.
> 
> I connect, I logon to the network and then the error message pops up
> stating that... "The ppd daemon died unexpectedly!".
> 
> The log file lists:
> 
> pppd 2.3.10 started by root uid0
> using interface ppp0
> connect ppp0 <---> /dev/cua1
> lcp: timeout sending config-requests
> 
> "The remote system does not seem to answer to configuration request.
> Contact your provider."
> 
> Any suggestions?
> 
> 
> Thanks!!!
> 
> 
> Lori Rothermel

Add

noauth

to /etc/ppp/options

If you are using kppp, enter this in the 'pppd' options field (since kppp
doesn't read 'options')

Regards

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: [newbie] Red Hat partition examples?

2000-03-07 Thread Tom Berger


On 07-Mar-2000 Bill Mote wrote:
> Ask the partition question to a dozen people and you're likely to get *3*
> dozen answers.  I wish someone would set a standard by which we could all
> survive.  I like the ease of having /, /boot, /home and swap which are the
> default partitions created by Mandrake, but I've often longed for a more
> granular scheme.  I want to break out all the system partitions so that I
> can mount them read-only --> only the critical ones that shouldn't get
> written to on a daily basis.  I want the flexibility to install applications
> and not worry about space.  /home and /var I'd like to have separate.  /var
> holds a *lot* of stuff.  It's the print spool, mail spool, log receptacle,
> etc.  I've seen systems unable to boot (in my older days ) just
> because a bad process filled /var/log/messages =)
> 
> Bill Mote

Well,

you can't have both ;-). Either you use a very granular partitioning scheme, or
you have the flexibility to expand. There is one solution, though: Get
Partition Magic or convince someone who has it to copy you its 'Rescue'
diskette (this diskette is all you'll need, the rest is fluff). 'PM' allows you
to virtually change *everything* in your partition table: move, resize etc. and
it works with Windos and Linux partitions. I've been using it for years now and
it has never failed me.

Regards

tom
 

> - Original Message -
> From: "Lothar Mandrake" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Tuesday, March 07, 2000 4:11 AM
> Subject: [newbie] Red Hat partition examples?
> 
> 
>> >From: "Potts, Ross" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> >You will be wasting a lot of space.  / only needs about 50 MB.  I sent
> this
>> >out
>> >last week.  Try to find a Red Hat 5.0 install book and look up its
>> >examples.
>>
>>  I have been searching extensively at the Red Hat site to try to find
>> the examples you mention, but I have been unable to find them.  I don't
> know
>> how to get hold of the paper version.  At the library it's been
> pre-ordered
>> for at least a year on, nobody I know has it, and I don't have the money
> to
>> buy it.
>>
>>  If somebody on this list has that book, perhaps he or she could post
>> those examples?  This would be very appreciated.  Thank you.
>>
>>   Ian
>> __
>> Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
>>
>>

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: [newbie] sndconfig problems

2000-03-07 Thread Tom Berger


On 07-Mar-2000 Karekin Madteos wrote:
> Thanks Piero:
> 
> Unfortunately, I get the same error with PnP disabled. In addition I get a
> hardware conflict error at boot up. It iwll let me Esc and boot anyway but so
> vhange in the status of the original problem.
> 
> Any suggestions?
> 
> Karekin

1) What does 

modprobe sgalaxy.o

say?

2) Have a look at /etc/conf.modules, is there already an entry for 'sound'?

Regards

tom

 
> On Mon, 06 Mar 2000, Piero Caracciolo wrote:
>> At 13:19 05/03/00 -0500, you wrote:
>> >I finally got mandrake installed and everything seems ok except now I'm
>> >having minor hardware problems. I ran sndconfig to try to configure my
>> >SoundBlaster 16 but it detected my AZT PnP modem instead of the SB card. It
>> >then desplays the following error:
>> >
>> >/lib/modules/2.2.14-15mdk/sgalaxy. o: init_module: device resource busy.
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> 
>> May be what I'going to say is too naive: did you disable the PnP-system
>> feature in the Bios (as you should have done)? With me, this solved many
>> problems.
>> Piero Caracciolo
>> 54, rue de Bourgogne
>> 75007 Paris - France

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] Partition Sizes

2000-03-07 Thread Tom Berger


On 07-Mar-2000 Potts, Ross wrote:
> I pulled the following off the Red Hat site.  It's based off of a 1.6 GIG HD
> and
> I'm guessing a 32M memory.  If they say use that much for /, I'm not gonna
> argue(they built the distro):
> 
> The Server-Class Installation


This threat is about a single user system, isn't it? I *should* pay better
attention ;-). Never mind...


> A server-class installation is most appropriate for you if you'd like your
> system to function as a Linux-based server, and you don't want to heavily
> customize your system configuration. 
> What Does It Do?
> If you choose not to partition manually, a server-class installation removes
> ALL
> existing partitions on ALL installed hard drives, so choose this installation
> class only if you're sure you have nothing you want saved! When the
> installation
> is complete, you'll find the following partitions: 
> A 64MB swap partition. 


Take more. 100MB


> A 256MB partition (mounted as /). 


Pardon? Me: 

df /
FilesystemSize  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/hda8  76M   36M   36M  50% /

As you can see, my / is just 76 MB large and is just about 50% filled...


> A partition of at least 512MB (mounted as /usr). 


Definitely more. Make that at least 1 Gb. This is where the huge chunk of things
go (libraries, binaries, docs)


> A partition of at least 512MB (mounted as /home). 


Ridiculous. On a single user system 200 MB are *plenty*. Mine /home currently
fills 85 MB *and* there's running a web server from it.


> A 256MB partition (mounted as /var). 


Depends. if you are going to build huge databases, you might need that much.
Mine is 150 MB with 125 MB free.


>   Intel: A 16MB partition (mounted as /boot) in which the Linux kernel and
> related files are kept. 
>   Alpha: A 2MB partition (mounted as /dos) in which the MILO boot loader
> is kept. 
> This approach to disk partitioning results in a reasonably flexible
> filesystem
> configuration for most server-class tasks. 
>   Please Note: You will need approximately 1.6GB of free disk space in
> order to perform a server-class installation. 

Regards

tom

BTW: Partitioning isn't all that important. Most people are happy with the
/home - / duo or even are only using /. Partitioning makes backups easier and
may reduce damage in case of severe system errors. Last is quite unusual and
nowadays backup software is clever enough to sort it out on its own.

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] lexmark

2000-03-06 Thread Tom Berger


On 06-Mar-2000 Pittman, Merle wrote:
> Anyone get a lexmark printer working with Mandrake??
> 
> I can't even get it to work in text mode.  I know the kernel doesn't support
> the drivers for lexmark, but I was wondering if anyone found a work-around.
> 
> thanks
> 
> 
> Merle Pittman
> TEL: (709) 724-7598
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> ---


http://www.picante.com/~gtaylor/pht/printer_list.cgi?make=Lexmark&format=summary

Sorry for being picky, but I'm saying it anyway ;-):

the kernel enables print*ing* support
prin*ter* support is done by a program called ghostscript

On the above mentioned page (The Unix Printer Compability Database), you will
see:

a) if your printer is supported
b) which ghostscript driver supports your printer

There is quite a number of Lexmark printers which is rated 'perfectly' :-).

Regards

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



RE: [newbie] Explain this if you can

2000-03-06 Thread Tom Berger


On 06-Mar-2000 Oliver Marshall wrote:
> I installed Mandrake using the recommended option, and basically went with
> the defaults.It all worked ok, but i couldnt telnet into the unix box from
> anywhere on the network.


That's because M doesn't install the telnet *server* in 'Recommended'. Why?
Because they don't want to have x thousand boxen out there with open telnet
ports... You just have to install the telnet-server rpm. And you have to telnet
in as a normal user. 'root'-logins don't work (security).
(http://www.mandrakeuser.org/troubles/tquick2.html#telnet)


> A client of mine told me to try re-installing it as a SERVER option, and
> that this would help. Now that i have done this, I dont get X up when I
> boot. Rather than the login window with a penguin, i get a plain white box
> with username and password. If i log on, I get two console windows come up.
> Thats it, no icons, taskbar, menus, clock, just two console windows. I cant
> use CTL ESC to change tasks.
> 
> Any Ideas ?


This is because the 'server' option defaults to a higher MSEC security level
(MdkUserGuide, 7). In this level nobody is allowed to connect to X, since this
would pose a major security risk on servers (which don't need X anyway). You
have to enable this. 

But I think it might be easier when you change the security level via 

init.sh 2

executed as root. This will set your system to a lower security level and -
hopefully ;-) - alllow you to run X again. Maybe you have to reboot - I don't
know.

 
> I thought I told it to reboot into X when it loads, and have indeed tried to
> reinstall it once more with the same results.
> 
> Olly

Hope that explained it ;-)

Regards

tom

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: [newbie] boot to console

2000-03-06 Thread Tom Berger


On 06-Mar-2000 Audrey Beck wrote:
> Edit the messages log file in /tmp/log (or something close to that)


On lilo boot prompt: 

linux init 3

This will boot the machine into console mode.
Then hit SHIFT+PageUp to scroll upwards (or use 'dmesg | less' as already
suggested.

Regards

tom


 
> Piero Caracciolo wrote:
>> 
>> At 18:43 05/03/00 -0500, you wrote:
>> >dmesg | more
>> >
>> >Harald Wolf wrote:
>> >
>> >
>> >>
>> >> Hi,
>> >>
>> >> how can a review the error messages that my new selfcreated kernel
>> >> produces on startup ?
>> >> or
>> >> how avoid start up xdm automatically after boot so i can step back with
>> >> "Shift-Up" to see the exact errormessages ?
>> >
>> >
>> This actually what I usually do. But you don't get ALL boot messages. How
>> to get the other ones?
>> Piero Caracciolo
>> 54, rue de Bourgogne
>> 75007 Paris - France

-- 
"No fun, no gain"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



[newbie] MUO News

1999-12-23 Thread Tom Berger

News from MandrakeUser.Org, Your Mandrake-Linux Knowledgebase!

Hi there!

I've made following additions and updates:

Added 'Distribution Update', explaining what to consider before performing
an update, where to get it and how to do it.

These files contain updated information:

Section Basics, Second RPM page (Thanks, Leon!)
Section Connectivity, Cable Modems
Section Connectivity, First PPP page (Thanks, JR!)
Section Hardware, First Titbits page (Thanks, Ralf, Mikel and Philip!)
Section Hardware, Resources page
Section Other Resources, Linux page (Thanks, Pipit!)
 
Visit http://www.mandrakeuser.org and enjoy! ;-)

Best wishes

tom, MUO webslave, [EMAIL PROTECTED]



What is MandrakeUser.Org?

Launched in September 1999, MandrakeUser.Org (MUO) strives to become the
premier self-help resource for users of the Linux-Mandrake distribution.
Currently MUO covers more than 50 pages in 9 different sections, a busy
message board and a downloadable offline edition. A translation into French
is in the works.

MUO can be viewed with any browser and conforms to the HTML4.0 standard.

Contributions are strongly encouraged! ;-)

http://www.mandrakeuser.org


-- 
"The OS *is* the game!"
Thomas 'tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (home), [EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.mandrakeuser.org, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
UMS: +49-(0)89-1488-208756 phone: +49-(0)30-45809013



Re: [newbie] Making KDE run faster

1999-03-31 Thread Tom Berger

On Tue, 30 Mar 1999, you wrote: / Am Tue, 30 Mar 1999 schrieben Sie:
> Hello,
> 
> I just installing (and start using) Mandrake 5.3. However, I feel
> that KDE access my HD a lot, and it's slow (compared to Windoze 95).
> Is it normal, or is there a way to speed it up?
> 

That's not unusual, I am afraid :-(. X itself is a memory hog (about 15
MB runtime size) and sure KDE doesn't improve this.


 > My system is:
> - Pentium 133
> - 32 MB RAM
> - Quantum Fireball 6.4 GB (Linux Native and Swap are here)
> - Conner CFS850A (slave, not mounted in Linux)
> I use the command
> hdparm -t -T /dev/hda
> to check for HD performance. I forgot the result, but it's quite
> fast.
> 
> BTW, is there a utility similar to MCLK (DOS utility to overclock
> graphic card) for Linux? I run KDE with 1024 x 768 x 16bpp with
> S3 ViRGE, and in its default clock speed, it's slow.
> 

Hm. I'd recommend a system memory upgrade which will surely give you the
best bang for the buck.

.. > Thanks in advance,
> Irsan SPS

You are welcome

tom

--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] Memory>64mb

1999-03-30 Thread Tom Berger

On Tue, 30 Mar 1999, you wrote: / Am Tue, 30 Mar 1999 schrieben Sie:
> Hmm, two conflicting answers?  I wonder?  Thanks for the help.
> Jeanette
> 

Steve is right, you do not have to change *anything*.
This is from my /proc/meminfo:

total:used:free:  shared: buffers:  cached:
Mem:  130842624 127668224  3174400 54300672 34869248 45584384
Swap: 1320837120 132083712
MemTotal:127776 kB
MemFree:   3100 kB
MemShared:53028 kB
Buffers:  34052 kB
Cached:   44516 kB
SwapTotal:   128988 kB
SwapFree:128988 kB 

tom

--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] this is how to upgrade to kernel 2.2.4

1999-03-29 Thread Tom Berger

On Tue, 30 Mar 1999 01:51:37 +0800, you wrote:

>Tom Berger wrote:
>> 
>> Hi!
>> I just compiled my 2.2.4 kernel (bleeding edge, woah! ;-)).
>> 
>[great concise 20step-I-shit-you-not instructions snipped]
>
>Sorry to burst your bubble, Tom...but 2.2.5 is out...
>Care to have another go at your 20step? :)

Just thought someone'd propose this as I read the announcement
yesterday...;-). Looks like I just can't keep up with the kernel
team
Anyway once you did get a grip of the basic principle it shouldn't be
too difficult to figure out that on your own. If not you have plenty
of other files to mess around with *grin* (I just practiced that and
wrecked my Mandrake so I had actually to reinstall it (Me? Backups?
Pah! ;-). 
IMO I think 2.5 isn't worth it unless you do some NFS or heavy
networking stuff. Me, I will wait till the next major release of
Mandrake and mess otherwise...

tom



[newbie] alt.os.linux.mandrake now on library.airnews.net

1999-03-29 Thread Tom Berger

Hi there!
Today I successfully newgrouped alt.os.linux.mandrake on the servers
of airnews.net.
Please allow two weeks for propagation amongst servers world-wide. If
this group will not pop up on your servers after this period, ask your
newsadmins _politely_ ;-) to add this group to your server.
Please spread the good news.

tom



Re: [newbie] While were talking about bootdisks

1999-03-29 Thread Tom Berger

On Mon, 29 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Mon, 29 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> I make a boot disk by using rdev and then simply coping the kernel to
> the floppy. Here is the steps:
> Tell the kernel your root partition with rdev "location of kernel"
> "location of root partition"
> example- rdev /boot/vmlinuz2.0.36 /dev/fd0
> Copy the kenel to a floppy with cp /boot/vmlinuz2.0.36 /dev/fd0
>Now just boot from the floppy.
> 

Hm. I may be terribly wrong here, but this looks like if you are doing the
same thing twice...


> I have a question about doing it this way? ..Yes I know I suggested it :)  
>   When I try to mount this floppy it will not mount. It says the file 
> system is not correct and I have tried several. I use fdformat 
> /dev/fd0H1440 to format the floppy. When I copy the kernel to it it
> asks if I want to overwrite /dev/fd0 (I say yes). Why does it ask
> this? 

Most possibly you created a raw diskimage. There is no filesystem on the
disk. Therefore it can't be mounted. This makes sense since a extfs2
formatted floppy disk is only some 1.3 MB or even less. So if you insist
on using an fs on a floppy disk use a primitive (and therefore small) one
like FAT or Minixfs (the latter indeed often used for Unix boot disks). 

> Thanks,
> Aaron Winters
> Electronic Imaging Manager
> Garner Printing
> http://camalott.com/~garner

tom

--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] Trademark

1999-03-29 Thread Tom Berger

On Mon, 29 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Mon, 29 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> G'day Tom
> 
> Who owns this trademark.
> 
> 
> God (tm)
> 
> 

That's a very fine question indeed. Ownership has been and is still most
violently disputed amongst many groups and individuals. Looks like an
entity often nicknamed as The Devil has a good share in it...

Nevermind. This would be a topic for an entirely different list...

Regards

tom 

--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] I have a problem with KDE

1999-03-29 Thread Tom Berger

On Mon, 29 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Mon, 29 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> Hi all,
> 
> I keep getting this box that comes up and says this:
> 
> It is titled: KFM Information
> and it says: A new KDE version has been installed. The template files may 
> have changed.
> Would you like to install the new ones?
> and then a Yes box and a No box.
> 
> I keep answering No, but my user account is inoperable.  Nothing is working 
> when I go to the terminal and press the box, nothing happens.  When I go to 
> the K box and go to Internet, and then Kppp, nothing happens.  What do you 
> think is wrong?
> 

Just say 'yes'. ;-) KDE won't work without its templates, since they
provide the link between icons and programs.

> Now, if I go to root, everything works.
> 
> Any ideas?
> 
> Linda Hatch

tom

--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



RE: [newbie] To all you using Outlook (Express)...

1999-03-28 Thread Tom Berger

On Son, 28 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Son, 28 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:

> [snip] 
> No. For some of us that are at work we don't have this choice. So Again for 
> those of us that are at work we are stuck with what we have.
> 

I said 'or'. I know that not everyone is free to use what they like...

>  1st: actually remark that it's Outlook, who, against all standards and
> laws of human logic, puts quoted messages *after* replies.>
> 
> This is By Default. Anyone can turn those off without a problem. It is in 
> the Options.
> 

I did not know, for I am not familiar with Outlook Express...

[snip]
> 
> And while I am at it: Please don't post the complete mail chain you are
>  referring to. Skip the parts which are not relevant and mark them with
>  [snip]>
> 
> The problem there is that what if someone wants to answer the question but 
> wants to see the entire chain. They could be new hence the name NEWBIE and 
> would like to learn something.
> 

Hm. Point taken.

> 
> <(This means you, William ;-). One reply line and 65 lines quotes (I
>   counted them!)...)>
> 
> WHY? Why did you sit there and count them? If you didn't like it then why 
> take the time to count it?  Also, Why put the person(s) you are referring 
> to name(s) in the message. This isn't a flame room or a name room. We are 
> here to help one and other. You wouldn't like it if someone did this to you 
> so why do it to someone else? Doesn't make sense to me. I do agree with you 
> on some points but others I can see we don't see eye to eye. Then again 
> that is my opinion. We all know "Opinions are like A**H***S, Everyone has 
> one."   :)
> 

Oh, I just thought this one would go astray :-(. I didn't mean that
seriously (see the smiley?). No I didn't actually count them. 
Sorry for being an asshole...

 > 
> James J. Capone

Apologies

tom


--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



[newbie] To all you using Outlook (Express)...

1999-03-28 Thread Tom Berger

Could you please, please, PLEASE either:

- leave a blank line below your message
or:
- put a dot line below it (like . or  or _)
or (preferably):
- use a decent mail client?

Your mails are a pain to read, because one has to 
1st: actually remark that it's Outlook, who, against all standards and
laws of human logic, puts quoted messages *after* replies. 
2nd: actually *find* your reply lines
3rd: scrolling down to see what they are referring to.

And while I am at it: Please don't post the complete mail chain you are
refering to. Skip the parts which are not relevant and mark them with
> [snip]
(This means you, William ;-). One reply line and 65 lines quotes (I
counted them!)...)

tom

 --
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] Where is ppp-compress?

1999-03-28 Thread Tom Berger

On Sam, 27 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Sam, 27 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:

> [snip] 
> Edit /etc/conf.modules and put:
> 
> alias ppp-compress-21 bsd_comp
> alias ppp-compress-24 ppp_deflate
> alias ppp-compress-1  off # This is predictor-1, not yet
> supported
> [snip]

Thanks a lot. Would you please point me to your source of information ;)? 

> 
> -- 
> Steve Philp
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]

tom

--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



[newbie] OT: The truth about Pentium III ;-)

1999-03-28 Thread Tom Berger

Go:
http://www.userfriendly.org/cartoons/archives/99mar/19990328.html

tom

--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] Telnet

1999-03-26 Thread Tom Berger

On Sam, 27 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Sam, 27 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> >%_I wanted to know if any of you know how to change the "welcoming message" that 
>appears when someone telnets to my system. It currently lists my version name.  Not 
>only would I like to get rid of that, but be able to add my own text in its place. 
>Any information on how to do this will be appreaciated.
> 
> Thanks in advance.
> 


Content-Type: text/html; name="unnamed"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
Content-Description: 


Please do not send HTML, thank you.

Well, I doesn't know about telnet, but login screen messages are usually
displayed via /etc/motd, which is just a plain file where you can put
messages in (Message Of The Day). Try it.

tom

--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] Netscape 4.5 stable?

1999-03-26 Thread Tom Berger

On Fre, 26 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Fre, 26 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> Aaron Lynch wrote:
> 
> > all my redhat netscape problems were fixed automaigically by installing
> 
> > the 4.5 rpm from contrib.redhat.com
> 
> Hi Aaron,
> I was wondering, is NS Comm4.5 worth downloading? I heard many tales of
> high instability on Linux. How well does it work for you? (and what about
> 4.51?)
> 

4.5 is crap. Choked on every second site. 4.08 seems to be the most stable
so far, BYMMV. 


 > Cheers.
> 
> --
> Kuraiken - Apprentice Codecaster
> --

tom

--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



[newbie] Any Questions about Supported Hardware? Use this one!

1999-03-26 Thread Tom Berger

Hi!
If you want to know if your hardware is supported by Linux, go
http://cdb.suse.de/cdb/E/
This is a query frontend for a searchable database which lists some 2500
components and the current state of support for them in Linux.


 --
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] Partitions?

1999-03-26 Thread Tom Berger

On Fre, 26 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Fre, 26 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> Hi
> I'm somewhat confused about how to write or name the partitions that I will
> set up during install. Here is the way that I think they should be written.
> Let me know if I'm wrong. I also have a 3.2G IDE drive to install Linux to I
> have listed the MB value that I think I should set these to.
> 
> swap partition name "swap"   set at 127MB
> root partition name "/"   set at 300MB
> /usr partition name "/usr"  set at 900MB
> /home partition name "/home set at 100MB
> 
> Also I have partition magic can I set these partitions up in PM before
> starting the installation process?
> 
You don't have to. It's just as easy to do it during the install. But if
you want, you can.
Anyway I would propose a slightly different table:
swap 127MB 
root   100MB (my / is only 80MB and there are still more than 30MB free)
opt100MB (KDE installs by default in there)
usr900MB
home 200MB (since this is where your personal files are)

 > Thanks:

You are welcome

tom

--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] "alt.os.linux.mandrake" - wow! ;-)

1999-03-26 Thread Tom Berger

On Fre, 26 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Fre, 26 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> Tom,
> 
> I tried earlier today to post an approval at dejanews.  Never could
> get it to work!  I just used the link to news:alt.config and found the
> proposal and posted a reply to the one dissenting vote I saw.  Well,
> it's just like Michael said earlier, there's one in every crowd!
> 
> I really would prefer the newsgroup.  You had a wonderful idea, and I
> hope it happens!
> 
> Thanks again,
> 
> Scarlett
> 

Scarlett,
one dissenting voice in a group like alt.config is really nothing to worry
about. I've been through that procedure before and expected much heavier
flak. But maybe we ain't seen nothing yet...
In fact, you do not really *vote* in alt.config, since creating a
newsgroup in the alt-hierarchy does not depend on votes like in the rest
of Usenet. Creating a newsgroup there is a much more involved process
which takes at least six weeks to accomplish. 
Posting a proposal to alt.config and having it discussed just makes it
more probable that newsadmins will accept the group on their servers. But
more on that later.

Thanks a lot for your kind words

tom

 --
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] upgrade kde?

1999-03-25 Thread Tom Berger

On Don, 25 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Don, 25 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> I'm just started to learn linux by installing (after redhat 5.2) a
> mandrake 5.3 taken from a cd bundled with a magazine. It is well
> working, and literally I enjoy linux/mandrake.
> But I saw the cd installed "kde 1.1-0.1 alpha 1rh5x", which is rather
> old, I think. 

Well, th 0.1 alpha stuff only relates to the version of the .rpm package,
*not* KDE itself. Mandrake's default version is KDE 1.1-0.3finalrh5x. If
you have no problems installing and running KDE, stick to your version.

> So,I downloaded  both "kde-installer-1.1-5rh5x.i386.rpm"
> and "kde-1.1-rh5x-i386-rpms-complete-set.tar" ( a BIG army of bytes to
> download!). Reading "notes on the kde-1.1 rpm packages for red hat
> linux", I saw the upgrading is not a trivial task, there are some others
> actions (as I understood) to do before and after doing the
> "install-kde-1.1", and I doubt I'm able to carry out all the operations
> risklessly...
> So, now I'm waiting in front to the keyboard ready to start the
> install/upgrade only if someone could  tell me: "yes Massimo, do it, it
> is only needed to run the "install-kde.1.1" script and you are on the
> fly".
> Can someone tell me that ?
> 

Where do you downloaded the set from? Please note that Mandrake uses
adjusted versions of some KDE packages (at least 'base'). Installing the
Redhat version will actually threaten to *break* KDE in Mandrake.
So don't do that then.

 > --
> 
> ->Massimo Corinaldesi

tom


--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



[newbie] "alt.os.linux.mandrake" - wow! ;-)

1999-03-25 Thread Tom Berger

Hi!
Well, I just checked alt.config. I am really impressed ;-). 
Everyone who haven't already posted a approving reply to my proposal of
"alt.os.linux.mandrake" in news:alt.config is still invited to do so.

tom

 --
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] KDE -high res & color??-

1999-03-25 Thread Tom Berger

On Don, 25 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Don, 25 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> I've had the same problem but managed to modify my configuration files using
> pico to force my own video modes (but 1152 X 964 which my Matrox Millenium
> II does support still doesn't work...)
> 

Yep, there seems to be something odd about this resolution. Did you try
running xf86config for configuration. I know it's a command line app, but
I've gotten the best results so far using that one. It's easy to use. 


> Anyways, whip open a terminal and go to your /usr/X11R6/lib/X11
>directory (I  
> think that's right, I'll double check a little later).
>Open up the file 
> XFS86.conf in pico or emacs. Again, I'm sorry if the
>file name is incorrect, 
> I haven't done this in a while.

It's /etc/X11/XF86Config.

>[snip]
> Does anyone know how to set the default colour depth?
> 

>From my XF86Config:

Section "Screen"
[...]
Subsection "Display"
Depth   16
Modes   "1280x1024"
    [etc.]



tom

[one mother of a snip]

--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] Installing:

1999-03-25 Thread Tom Berger

On Don, 25 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Don, 25 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> Hi:
> I changed the BIOS setting so that my system would boot from my CD-ROM E:
> drive.  

Did you enter 'E:' or 'CDROM' in your BIOS setup? 'E:' won't work. 

>Booted up with the mandrake disk in the drive and I saw the light
> come on but for some reason it still installed win 98.  Any help on this?
>

If it's not a wrong BIOS setting, it's a question of timing. May take some
time to figure out at which point of time the CD should be inserted.  
  
> Also I have Partition Magic.  It is included with a program called boot
> magic.  Has anyone used this? Can it be used instead of LILO? Are there
> problems with using it?
> 

You *can* use that, but I'd prefer LiLo. It's much easier to handle and
you may configure it from within Linux. Also if you run into troubles with
LiLo you are much more likely to receive help, because 80% of all Linux
users use it and it's covered in various docs.

 > Thanks
> David:

You're welcome

tom

--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] Netscape can not load libXpm.so.4

1999-03-24 Thread Tom Berger

On Don, 25 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Don, 25 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> didn't work, even by forcing the link. The messafe reads:
> netscape-statMotif:can't load library libXpm.so.4
> 
> I have tried upgrading NS to 4.51 without any change.
> 
> Help, please!
> 
> --
> Keith
> 

Hm,
that's indeed somewhat mysterious if you use the Mandrake versions. Try
4.08. I use it. That one *must* load ;-). You don't miss anything. 4.5
sucks because of its flaky Java implementation and is prone to crash on a
regular basis.
If that won't work either contact me directly, we'll have to do some
digging then...

tom

 --
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] Netscape can not load libXpm.so.4

1999-03-24 Thread Tom Berger

On Mit, 24 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Mit, 24 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> I can't run Netscape and get the following error message:
> 
> Netscape can not load libXpm.so.4
> 
> in my X11R6/lib folder is libXpm.so.4.10
> 
> do i need the X pixmap libraries so.4? 
> 
> suggestions, please?
> 
> big TIA, folks!
> 

Try this in your X11R6/lib folder (must be root for this):

ln -s libXpm.so.4.10 libXpm.so.4

This will create a symbolic link and should work.

tom
--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] PC Card question

1999-03-24 Thread Tom Berger

On Mit, 24 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Mit, 24 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> Does anyone know if pc card to SCSI adapters, 
> specifically Adaptec adapters, are supported by Mandrake?
> Also, if they are not supported directly, is there a 
> driver available anywhere that is suitable for this 
> application.  I would like to get a SCSI Sparq drive 
> working in Linux on my notebook but I really don't want 
> to spend any money on new equipment that will only work 
> in Win 95/98.
> 
> Thanks in advance for any help.
> 
> Jim

Hi Jim,
there should really be no problem with Adaptec Cards. You might check this
at
http://cdb.suse.de/cdb/E/
which provides an excellent database of all hardware supported by Linux.

tom

 --
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



[newbie] "alt.os.linux.mandrake" - step 2. Please read.

1999-03-24 Thread Tom Berger

Hi!
I have posted the proposal for a new newsgroup called
alt.os.linux.mandrake to alt.config at 20.00 hours UTC (approx. 14.00
EST).
This message should appear on all newsservers worldwide during the next 48
hours.
Now it's your turn: aim your news readers (or browsers via dejanews
(www.dejanews.com) at it. Go to alt.config and post a reply to this
proposal saying that you are interested in the creation of this group. The
more of you do this the better. This will provide me with the necessary
backup when I am sending the 'newgroup' message (which will happen at
April 2nd).

tom 

 --
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] Autostart KDE

1999-03-24 Thread Tom Berger

Well,
I still not quite comprehend on which kind of device you intend to run
Linux and KDE, but anyway:
- there must be only one account ('root')
- this account must not have a password (just enter passwd and press
return twice)
NOTE: You may do that if it suits your needs, but you are *strongly*
discouraged. Running Linux without a password isn't a good idea, running
it permanently as root certainly is a very bad one. 
Dixit et salvam animam meam.

tom

--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] Not another Kernel????!!!!!!!

1999-03-24 Thread Tom Berger

On Mit, 24 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Mit, 24 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:

>[snip] 
> well I'm afraid yes... The new packages should be cleaner than the
> last ones, thanks to the community feedback and to Chmouel Boudjnah
> from Mandrakesoft! :)
> 
> Greets,
> 
>   Gael.
> 

Hm, I didn't have problems with the old ones at all...I guess that if you
don't have had troubles with them, you don't need the new ones (at last I
am not going through that monster download again before 2.2.5)

tom 


--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] Your comments... (REEPER)

1999-03-23 Thread Tom Berger

On Die, 23 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Die, 23 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> On Tue, 23 Mar 1999, you wrote:

>[snip] 
> Agree that or a IRc room .

Hi!
Why not both? IMO IRC alone wouldn't be that good: there are people here
that actually pay for *every* minute they are connected (yep, me too :(

tom 


 --
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] Your comments... (Scarlett)

1999-03-23 Thread Tom Berger

On Die, 23 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Die, 23 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:

Hi Scarlett (no, no cheap puns :))

> Hi, Tom,
> 
> I think it's a great idea.  My inbox is getting somewhat unmanageable,

Hm. If you would use Kmail instead of Outlook Express there would be
an easy way to avoid this... ;-)
Just set up a folder called 'mandrake' and apply a filter on incoming
mail, which would automatically put all mailings from this list in this
folder. 

>[snip]
> When the news server goes down, all the previous messages are gone
> forever!  I know there are other ways to access these newsgroups, but
> I don't know what they are or how to use them, except through AOL.  If
> you do create a new newsgroup, please tell us how to get to it other
> than through our local ISP's news server.
> 

There are several Web-to-Usenet gateways that let you browse newsgroups
with your preferred browser. As far as I know they are even free. There is
one at hotbot (www.hotbot.com/usenet) and of course there's dejanews
(www.dejanews.com) but there surely are lots of others out there. I would
suggest dejanews. They provide an excellent service.

> Thanks,
> 
> Scarlett

tom

--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] kernel-2.2.3-4 trouble

1999-03-23 Thread Tom Berger

On Die, 23 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Die, 23 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> Hello to all, bare with me I am new to the list.
> 
> I have recently installed Festen 5.3 and have installed it with no
> problem.  I downloaded the kernel updates from the main ftp site in rpm
> form.  All of them install until I get to the "kernel-headers" rpm and it
> will not install.  The odd thing is that it gives no failed dependencies,
> it just says "error: kernel-headers cannot be installed".  I have even
> tried to do a force install (rpm -i --force)...  Any ideas??  All
> suggestions are appreciated.
> 
> Mitch
>[snip] 

Maybe your header-package got damaged.
Add the -vv option (i.e. rpm -ivv etc.). This will turn on debugging mode,
which will tell you more.

tom 

--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] Steven ????

1999-03-23 Thread Tom Berger

On Die, 23 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Die, 23 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> I was wondering the same thing...maybe he's actually a very sophisticated 
>ultra-enhanced AI
> answer-bot? One of those super secret projects we're not supposed to know about?  ;-)
> 
> [snip]

Yeah,
I definitely need one of those. Are you for hire, Steve? *grin*

Nevermind

tom 

--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] Ready to Start: (booting)

1999-03-23 Thread Tom Berger

On Die, 23 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Die, 23 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> Remi..i too am a newbietrying to install Linux...I bought it off e-bay
> and had no manual with it...my question is how do I set my cd rom drivers
> for use under dos to do an install??? I am using sytem commander.
> 
>[snip]

Hi Shane,
you may boot directly from the CD. You have to change your BIOS boot
settings for this:
- press the 'delete' key during the start-up of your computer.
- go for 'BIOS Features Setup'
- change 'Boot Sequence', so that CDROM is first.
- save to CMOS (press key F10), confirm.
Your machine will reboot. Insert the CDROM while memory check. This is
actually the tricky part: if your CD drive is too slow or to fast, BIOS
may not find the CDs boot sector, if so, try again ;-).

tom

--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



[newbie] Your comments please: "alt.os.linux.mandrake"?

1999-03-23 Thread Tom Berger

Hi!
Well I don't know about you but I think this mailing list is getting
somewhat crowded.
Therefore I wrote a proposal for news:alt.config to suggest a new
newsgroup named "alt.os.linux.mandrake".
I will post this proposal to news:alt.config if you think such a newsgroup
would be a good idea.

Your opinions, please!

tom


--
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum." (Finagle's Law)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam. 'nuff said.



Re: [newbie] Steven ????

1999-03-23 Thread Tom Berger

On Die, 23 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Die, 23 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> Do you ever sleep. I noticed you are the answer man. Just wondering if you sleep at 
>all. Thanks
> 
> James
> 

He is inspired by the Ghost of Linux ;-). Well, I am also impressed by his
performance. Good job!

Regards

tom



 > Webmaster http://www.angelfire.com/biz2/Linux  Stable Version
1.01 > http://linuxchoice.freeservers.com  Still under construction. But
coming along good. V1.02b > 
> "Even Common People can Attain Uncommon Results!"
--
"int EIOIO   Computer bought the farm" (GNU Errormessage)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam.



Re: [newbie] probs floppy booting

1999-03-23 Thread Tom Berger

On Mon, 22 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Mon, 22 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> Jan-Maarten Geertman wrote:
> [snip]
> 
> That sounds more like it's a copy of the installation boot disk.  
> 
> Are you able to boot into Linux currently?  If so, try this:
> 
>   mkbootdisk --device /dev/fd0 
> 
> That should auto-magically create a working boot disk for you.
> 
> Lemme know how it works.
> 

If he built a custom kernel he may also do a
/usr/src/linux/make zdisk
This will ensure he gets the right version.

tom

-- 
> Steve Philp
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
"int EIOIO   Computer bought the farm" (GNU Errormessage)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam



Re: [newbie] WinKeys in KDE - GOT IT !!!

1999-03-23 Thread Tom Berger

On Die, 23 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Die, 23 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> Cool! It works! Is there a way to set up Win-E to bring up a browser window
> and get Win-M to minimize?
> 
> [snip ;-)]

Hi Walker!

No I am afraid not :(. There doesn't seem to be an interface for
something like this yet. Maybe you should contact the kfm-guy (David
Faure,  [EMAIL PROTECTED]) and ask him about this.
So far, you might only place a shortcut to kfm in your 'autostart' folder.

Regards

tom


 --
"int EIOIO   Computer bought the farm" (GNU Errormessage)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam



Re: [newbie] Auto KDE Start...

1999-03-23 Thread Tom Berger

On Die, 23 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Die, 23 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> Can't seem to find that one...can you say exactly where in the linuxconf tree
> it is?
> 

It's Settings - Start Mode (or similar, I use the
German version. It's the group beneath 'file systems') - Mode - Boot Mode
Configuration (or similar). The switch is called 'default operation mode',
which can either be set to Graphic & Network or Text mode & Network.
BTW, someone should really write a KDE interface for this. Ugly!

tom


--
"int EIOIO   Computer bought the farm" (GNU Errormessage)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam.



Re: [newbie] Auto KDE Start...

1999-03-22 Thread Tom Berger

On Mon, 22 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Mon, 22 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> Hey everybody, I am currently working on a mp3 car sterio system for my
> car.  The first vital thing I was wondering about is if there was a way for
> linux to auto logon as root for instance and go into x-windows...or in my
> case, KDE.  I know there has got to be a way to do it, I'm just oblivious
> to it.  Please help me out on this, I have to figure it out, or I will be
> forced to use winbloz as my mp3 player...gah.
>[snipped]

Easiest way is to fire up 'linuxconf' as root. There is a tab like
'standard startup' that can be switched between 'console' and 'X'.

tom 

--
"int EIOIO   Computer bought the farm" (GNU Errormessage)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam.



Re: [newbie] commands (again)

1999-03-22 Thread Tom Berger

On Mon, 22 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Mon, 22 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> Is there a good book or website that has a list of linux commands to help me
> get started using linux.  I am familiar with windows and dos but only been
> with linux for about a week.
> 
> 
> The Bushman
> Always Learning

Doh,
I forget the most important of it all:
'Linux in a Nutshell' by Jessica Perry Hekman, from O'Reilly, 2nd edition.
Certainly a top buy: has all the most important stuff (shell, vi etc), is
very handy and neatly organized. There isn't a day I don't have a look in
this one.

tom


 --
"int EIOIO   Computer bought the farm" (GNU Errormessage)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam.



Re: [newbie] commands

1999-03-22 Thread Tom Berger

On Mon, 22 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Mon, 22 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> Is there a good book or website that has a list of linux commands to help me
> get started using linux.  I am familiar with windows and dos but only been
> with linux for about a week.
> 
> 
> The Bushman
> Always Learning

The DOS/Win to Linux HOWTO might suit you. If you've installed the
howto.rpm, you will find it in /usr/doc/HOWTO.

tom

--
"int EIOIO   Computer bought the farm" (GNU Errormessage)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam.



[newbie] WinKeys in KDE - GOT IT !!!

1999-03-21 Thread Tom Berger

Woah,
I am such a frood ;-).

Ok. Here is how it works:

1) Go to /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/xinit/
2) Open a terminal.
3) Become root
4) Create a new file named .Xmodmap (exactly, do not forget the dot!)
5) In this file, write:
keycode 115 = F21
keycode 116 = F22
keycode 117 = F23
and save.
6) Restart X
7) Go Menu - Settings - Keybindings (or whatever this is called in English,
it's the tab with the key) - Global Settings
8) Go for a test: choose empty entry, choose 'userdefined', press your
favourite WinKey, save, close, test, et voila - it works...

Any donations are welcome ;-). Since I guess nobody is interested how I
found out, I skip that part...

Regards

tom



--
"int EIOIO   Computer bought the farm" (GNU Errormessage)
Thomas 'Tom' Berger, [EMAIL PROTECTED] No UCE. No spam.



Re: [newbie] dvorak keyboard/file manager/cut and paste

1999-03-21 Thread Tom Berger

On Son, 21 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Son, 21 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> Tom Berger wrote:

> [snipped]
> Wow, I really ended up going around my thumb to get to my a*hole on that
> one, didn't I?!  My apologies.
> 

Nevermind ;-) And thanx a lot for that wonderful phrase of yours *grin*.

> -- 
> Steve Philp
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]

tom



[newbie] Using Win95-Buttons in X -> URLs

1999-03-21 Thread Tom Berger

Go to http://www.linuxgazette.com/issue29/lg_tips29.html#ehliar. This should
work with KDE, too.
There also seems to be a program for KDE and WinKeys at
http://unet.univie.ac.at/~a8603365/xwinkeys.tar.gz
Imwheel will add support for WinKeys soon:
http://solaris1.mysolution.com/~jcatki/imwheel/
BTW, the mentioned thread was on de.alt.comp.kde not on comp.windows.x.kde. But
it looks like Dejanews does not have it anymore :(. As far as I remember, it
had something to do with xmodmap. 
The WinKeys have following mappings:
(from left to right): 
keycode 115
keycode 116
keycode 117
You have to create a file called .xmodmaprc in your home directory and map
these keys to functions and then make sure X uses these modifications on
startup. Read the man-page, which comes with some illuminating examples ;-).
There is also the Keyboard-and-Console-HOWTO.

Regards

tom



Re: [newbie] Mandrake and Redhat

1999-03-21 Thread Tom Berger

On Don, 21 Jan 1999, you wrote: / Am Don, 21 Jan 1999 schrieben Sie:
> why does it say on the webpage that Redhat 5.3 (I think Redhat is
> talking about 6.0!) will never be released?

Which page are you referring to? IMO there has been some trouble due to
Mandrakes version numbers: 5.3 is based on RH 5.2. Maybe some people got this
wrong by thinking there is actually a RH release like 5.3. 
There is not. Current release of RH is 5.9 (beta-6.0), which has (surprise,
surprise) KDE 1.1 in it. Looks like they want to deliver at least *one* stable
desktop environment, since GNOME's so-called "1.0" is said to be even less
stable than KDE beta 3 was...
Just my 2 cent.

tom



Re: [newbie] video card

1999-03-21 Thread Tom Berger

On Son, 21 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Son, 21 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> >%_Hello all,
> weel here goes first i started with a diamondspeedstar a50 agp video card now i have 
>a video excell 3d pro 740 can someone plz help me with the video setup. i cant get x 
>to start at all.
> 
> thanks,
> ndk
> 


Content-Type: text/html; name="unnamed"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
Content-Description: 


Please do not send HTML. Thank you!

Do you have a manual for that card? If so, can specify the chipset?
Are you sure about the card's name? Never heard of that one before.
Further: what means doesn't 'start at all'? Do you get any error messages?
Do you have a file like .Xerrors in your home directory? What does it say?
Do 'less /var/log/messages'. Are there any video related error messages?

Regards

tom



Re: [newbie] dvorak keyboard/file manager/cut and paste

1999-03-21 Thread Tom Berger

On Son, 21 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Son, 21 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> walker logan hagius wrote:
>[snip]
>
> 
> Hmmm... After playing with it for about 15 minutes, I'm really getting
> the impression that KDE sucks alot more than I'd ever imagined.  I had
> tried to put another copy of 'Home Directory' onto the panel, then
> modify the execute string to use the root directory instead of my home
> directory.  It looks like kfm wants to be able to put some files into
> the directory and since I don't have permissions to do that, it fails.
> 

Pardon? Desktop -> *right click* -> New URL. New URL -> *right click* ->
properties -> URL: /
And you are set. Clicking this icon opens kfm at /. 
BTW: For this kind of questions comp.windows.x.kde would be a much better place
to ask...


>[snip]
> 
> -- 
> Steve Philp
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]

tom



Re: [newbie] Setup for Linux on a Dual Drive Computer

1999-03-21 Thread Tom Berger

On Son, 21 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Son, 21 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> Hello All,
> 
>Ok here is the Thing. I am going to purchase a new Hard 
> drive for my system sometime this week. When I get it I am going to run 
> Linux on the old one I have. I have a Compaq Presario 2240 with a 2.1 gig 
> drive. Right now I have it partitions so the Linux Mandrake uses 1.1 gigs 
> of space and Win95 uses the other 1 gig. Well I am running out of space on 
> the drive. I am going to be getting a 4 gig drive that I am going to have 
> Win95 on (I have a Wife and 2 kids, They don't understand Linux YET) So 
> what I am going to do is run Linux on the 2.1 gig drive. I think Mandrake 
> will like the extra space don't you?? :)  What I need to know is how I am 
> to set it up. Will Disk Druid and the Setup see the other HD, and Beable to 
> modify the MBR for LILO/LEELO ???
> 

Let's see if I got this straight:
you want to wipe your old MS-installation from your drive and assign the place
to Linux. Then you want to install MS on a new HD. You want to start Linux and
MS via LiLo. Right?
Ok. You have but one problem: you can't resize existing Linux partitions with a
Linux program. You will need Partition Magic 4.0 for this (excellent buy
anyway, so get it ;-)).
Proposed procedure:
1.) Delete old MS installation and resize Linux partitions with the P.M. disk.
2.) Install MS on the designed disk. This disk should be the master drive for
this task (i.e. the first on the IDE-bus 1).
3.) Switch the HDs: Linux drive again master, MS drive now slave on the same
IDE bus.
4.) edit /etc/lilo.conf. add:
other = /dev/hdb1
table = /dev/hdb
label = win
5.) run /sbin/lilo
6.) reboot. You should now be able to run MS from the lilo prompt by typing
"win".

Note: You may possibly do one or more steps with disk druid or linuxconfig. I
don't know, I never use them ;-).

For more information, read the Linux+Win95 mini-HOWTO and the LILO mini-HOWTO
(should be in /usr/doc/HOWTO, if you've installed the howto.rpm).

Regards

tom

>[snip]
> "Even Common People Can Attain Uncommon Results!"

Especially true for working at computers ;-)



[newbie] no umlauts in man-pages in kvt and help after kernel upgrade

1999-03-21 Thread Tom Berger

Hi there!
I upgraded my Mandrake 5.3 to 2.2.3 just some days ago. Went very fine for me
(thanks to the Mandrake guys, BTW).
Only trouble is that kvt and help do not show umlauts (that is ö, ä, etc) and
sharp s (ß) anymore, when processing german man-pages. *Everything* else works
fine, i.e I can enter umlauts and they show up with less. Also no problem
with them on a pure terminal. 
Since there is no problem with that on the console, this seems to have
something to do with KDE and not with groff or less in general.
My settings: 
- system 
/etc/sysconfig/i18n:
[...]
SYSFONT=cp850-8x16
SYSTERM=linux-lat  
/etc/profile:
[...]
LC_TYPE=ISO-8859-1
LESSCHARSET=latin1
[...]
- KDE:
kvt: iso-8859-1, font: fixed
help: times/courier
First default language is German, second English.

Any ideas?

Thanx

tom



Re: [newbie] dvorak keyboard/file manager/cut and paste

1999-03-21 Thread Tom Berger

On Son, 21 Mär 1999, you wrote: / Am Son, 21 Mär 1999 schrieben Sie:
> [snipped]
> First: How do I get KDE to use a Dvorak keyboard layout? It works fine at the
> command prompt before I start X, but not in anything in KDE, including kvt
> windows. I use the Dvorak keyboard almost exclusively and I really can't switch
> to Linux unless I can get it to work all the time. This is one place where Red
> Hat 5.2 is better than Mandrake 5.3--it works in X as well as the command
> prompt.

Some Nicholas Leipe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> recently asked this at the kde-user
mailing list. Maybe you should contact him, if he has got a solution for this
already. 


> Second: How can I get the kfm to work more like the Win9x Explorer? I know that
> may be heresy, but I'm used to some luxuries like being able to hit Win-E to
> open an Explorer window at the root dir (and I'm sure I'm not the only one). I
> would love to be able to do the same sort of thing in KDE. Failing a keyboard
> shortcut, I would like to be able to put it on the toolbar so one click will
> open a window of the root dir. The other part is that I would like to have the
> tree and long views open by default. I went into the configuration and didn't
> see an obvious way to set that up.

There is an app called kexplorer which mimicks the behaviour of that MS one
quite good.  You can get it at:
ftp://ftp.kde.org/pub/kde/unstable/apps/multimedia/cdrom/kexplorer-0.1.tar.gz
As for the key bindings, I remember there was a thread recently on
comp.windows.x.kde. Maybe a search on dejanews (www.dejanews.com) will wield
some results.


 > Third: How do I copy/cut and paste between apps? I have been mostly
using KDE 
> apps for everything because open windows are saved between
sessions, even after 
> a rare crash (I LOVE that!!!) but sometimes I want to
use Netscape and I want to 
> copy a URL from the KDE browser to Netscape. I
copy it, and it shows up on the 
> clipboard list but it won't paste into Netscape 

It does: mark the URL in kfm with your mouse and then click with the middle
mouse button in the 'go to'-panel of Netscape.

>[snip]
> All in all, I think Linux Mandrake is incredible...the stability
> and versatility are awesome. KDE takes the concept behind Win98 and takes it
> to a higher level. Thank you to everyone involved, and thank you in advance to
> anybody that can answer my questions or at least tell me where to look!
> 

Same here ;-)

> --walker.

tom