Sorry, no help on the Compaq, just an idea on how to bypass pressing the
"F1". Maybe you can set your BIOS to boot ignoring all errors or whatever.
I had a similar problem on an older 486 but it had the ability to boot
through selectable errors in the BIOS, like no keyboard, whatever.
It
Sorry, no help on the Compaq, just an idea on how to bypass pressing the
F1. Maybe you can set your BIOS to boot ignoring all errors or whatever.
I had a similar problem on an older 486 but it had the ability to boot
through selectable errors in the BIOS, like no keyboard, whatever.
It didn't
crond likes full pathnames is my first thought. Thats likely why it works
from the command line and not crond.
Tom
Any ideas why the following won't actually send email when run from cron:
#!/usr/bin/perl
#
open(SENDMAIL,"|sendmail $recipient");
print SENDMAIL "From: WVFD EMS Dispatch
Hubs go poof far less often than PCs running Linux.
I have to whole heartedly agree with Russell on this. I have been running a
handful of el cheapo 4 and 8 port hubs here for years and the only failure
in thousands of hours of use was loseing a BNC port on 2 from a lightning
strike on the
crond likes full pathnames is my first thought. Thats likely why it works
from the command line and not crond.
Tom
Any ideas why the following won't actually send email when run from cron:
#!/usr/bin/perl
#
open(SENDMAIL,|sendmail $recipient);
print SENDMAIL From: WVFD EMS Dispatch [EMAIL
List;
Well, I have not totally figured out how this is happening. What I do know
is that /etc/inittab gets altered when the /etc/init.d/pcmcia script is
run.
After a bit of looking around in that file, I realized my skill is not
refined enough to see what mechanism actually alters it. But it
Jeremy and Russell;
Thanks for more pieces of the puzzle. The offending code is actually in
/etc/pcmcia/serial.
the chattr +i /etc/inittab command nuked the behaviour but I'll edit that
script to fix it when I get to the console on the laptop
The relevant lines in /etc/pcmcia/serial:
List;
Here is a weird one I can't seem to find the cause of. Perhaps it is inane,
harmless, etc but it is annoying. I get these respawning too fast errors to
the console. They go away when I comment out the
S:12345:respawn:/sbin/getty ttyS3 line and init q it. Until a reboot that
is.
Truncated
List;
Here is a weird one I can't seem to find the cause of. Perhaps it is inane,
harmless, etc but it is annoying. I get these respawning too fast errors to
the console. They go away when I comment out the
S:12345:respawn:/sbin/getty ttyS3 line and init q it. Until a reboot that
is.
Truncated
Well, as I stated down a ways in the original post inittab gets overwritten
on every reboot.
Therein lies the rub.
Tried that... Been there..
Thanks anyway and sorry for the confusion.
Tom
the inittab entry you are looking at is attempting to take control of
the modem. From what I read here,
List;
In regards to /etc/inittab being altered to spawn a getty on ttyS3 on
reboot.
See earlier posts for more detail
Tried the egrep -r (through the entire filesystem) and ttyS3 shows up in
/dev/mem, /dev/core, /dev/kmem/, /etc/inittab and in /var/run/stab, some
docs,/usr/include/asm/serial.h
..
A search around failed to turn up an obvious whois server, either as part
of Debian or even just source code - did I miss something?
..
Neale;
I am not sure if this is what you are looking for, but I modified the
finger gateway cgi script to do a web based whois from cgi-bin on the
webserver.
Hi all,
attempting to do dist-upgradem, afte downloading 130mb I get the
following error
Need to get 0B/130MB of archives. After unpacking 100MB will be used.
Do you want to continue? [Y/n]
E: Internal Error, Couldn't configure a pre-depend
Can someone shed some light on this??
Thanks
Is this what you need?
mail:~# /usr/sbin/rdate time.nist.gov
Sat Apr 8 16:02:16 2000
is how I sync my clock(s). Actually I sync one that way and the rest sync
off of that one.
I am in the Midwest in the USA CDT and system time gets synced with that
command.
I just realized noone else tossed
I use webalizer with crond and a script that calls seperate config files
for each domain.
Like this:
webalizer -c domain.a.conf
webalizer -c domain.b.conf
webalizer -c domain.c.conf
and so on.
Then use custom configs for each domain. I will note each domain needs its
own logfile but you
Orhan C;
Just a note to say you should take this message and stick it where it will
cause the most discomfort.
This list is not here for you to use as a SPAM conduit.
List;
My apologies for the extra bandwidth and chunk of your time this takes but
this is not what we need on this list, IMHO.
I've recently got my modem to dial into my ISP using minicom, but when
I try to use pppd all I can do is dial in and send my username and
password, which is accepted but then I get disconnected. I get the
following error message on my xconsole:
pppd[xxx] error: Receive serial link is not 8-bit
That sounds very possible, the network at home is masqueraded by a
little 486 router I have setup, (ipchains). and the workstation at work has
a real IP. It'd be great if you could dig out that info and let me know.
Nick;
Here is my /etc/ppp/ip-up.d/00ipmasq which I use on my ppp
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