On May 28, 2008, at 11:26 AM, Chris Heiner wrote:
Version 4.5, there all fairly new.
In 4.5, ipchains is no longer used; iptables is used instead.
The changes you make (using the iptables command) are made in the
kernel's memory. To save the changes to /etc/sysconfig/iptables, use
the "s
On Wed, 2008-05-21 at 13:47 -0500, Michael wrote:
Just curious, maybe some old timers could help me out. I am working
with
a company that is migrating 20 years of Mainframe Software Development
to Unix, HPUX. How much harder would it be to go to Linux, Centos
Linux?
Probably not hard at all
On May 14, 2008, at 3:48 PM, Doug Tucker wrote:
...all but dead...I run a usenet server here, had 3 logins last
month...user base is over 4000...
Usenet is almost dead but e-mail lists abound (you are using one).
Same concepts.
smime.p7s
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On May 14, 2008, at 3:15 PM, Doug Tucker wrote:
Humor turned off for a minute, completely and honestly, can someone
explain to me *why* this is the etiquette here? In every fashion, I
find it sooo much harder to follow. Does it date back to some dead
text
based mail client that actually mad
On May 9, 2008, at 7:49 AM, gopinath wrote:
I have defined
search localhost in /etc/resolv.conf
cat /etc/resolv.conf
search localhost
i did not define any nameserver ip address in this file
i have given the gw ip from where the internet can be reached
no dns is running in gateway.
no dns ser
needs to know about host.domain.com, somehow.)
A simple way (without any changes on the Exchange Server side) is to,
on the Centos host, add a .forward file in the user's home directory;
the contents would be the e-mail address you want the mail forwarded to.
Scott Nelson
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