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Harlan Stenn said the following on 08/05/11 21:58:
> - Start ntd as early as possible
> - - "ntpd -g ..." is better than "ntpdate ... ; ntpd ..."
> - Wait before starting time-sensitive services
> - - As last as possible in the boot sequence, run 'ntp
Stan Hoeppner wrote:
> On 5/8/2011 7:36 AM, Jose Celestino wrote:
>> On Dom, 2011-05-08 at 11:07 +0100, Spyros Tsiolis wrote:
>>> OK,
>>>
>>> So what you people say is :
>>>
>>> 1. Run "ntpdate" during startup only once
>>> 2. After that, keep time with ntpd
>>>
>>> Right ?
>>>
>>
>> Right, that e
Stan Hoeppner wrote:
> On 5/8/2011 5:07 AM, Spyros Tsiolis wrote:
>>
>> OK,
>>
>> So what you people say is :
>>
>> 1. Run "ntpdate" during startup only once
>> 2. After that, keep time with ntpd
>>
>> Right ?
>
> When running ntpd don't run ntpdate at startup, or any time. Use one
> or the othe
On Mon, May 9, 2011 11:51 am, Mark Sapiro wrote:
> Voytek Eymont wrote:
>> I thought it was 3.6x, I installed off market abt one week ago
> If you got it a week ago from the market, it's probably 3.604.
thanks, 3.605
--
Voytek
Spyros wrote
> OK,
>
> So what you people say is :
>
> 1. Run "ntpdate" during startup only once
> 2. After that, keep time with ntpd
>
> Right ?
https://support.ntp.org/bin/view/Support/StartingNTP4 says:
- Start ntd as early as possible
- - "ntpd -g ..." is better than "ntpdate ... ; ntpd .
On 5/8/2011 5:21 AM, Kamil Jońca wrote:
Stan Hoeppner writes:
On 5/6/2011 3:07 PM, Kamil Jońca wrote:
I have some archive mails in gzipped mboxes. I could use them with
dovecot 1.x without problems.
But recently I have installed dovecot 2.0.12, and they are slow. very
slow.
Creating index f
On Sun, 8 May 2011, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
On 5/8/2011 5:07 AM, Spyros Tsiolis wrote:
So, if you're talking about a guest running inside a virtual machine
then the setup is entirely different, and may vary depending on your
underlying hypervisor and other factors.
Certainly I run ntpd on all m
On 5/8/2011 7:36 AM, Jose Celestino wrote:
On Dom, 2011-05-08 at 11:07 +0100, Spyros Tsiolis wrote:
OK,
So what you people say is :
1. Run "ntpdate" during startup only once
2. After that, keep time with ntpd
Right ?
Right, that ensures that time is correct (ntpdate run at startup) and
tha
There are two rather clear issues with the state of authentication
failure delays. First, the delay length isn't what was (presumably)
intended. Second, there is a new way of doing failure delays in Dovecot
2 which was added *in addition to* the old method, rather than replacing
it. As a result del
On 5/8/2011 5:07 AM, Spyros Tsiolis wrote:
OK,
So what you people say is :
1. Run "ntpdate" during startup only once
2. After that, keep time with ntpd
Right ?
When running ntpd don't run ntpdate at startup, or any time. Use one or
the other, not both (if you incorrectly use both, ntpdate
On 5/8/2011 5:07 AM, Spyros Tsiolis wrote:
OK,
So what you people say is :
1. Run "ntpdate" during startup only once
2. After that, keep time with ntpd
Right ?
Yes, or run ntpd with the -g option.You don't want to use
the -x option (as some might have suggested) as that can cause
ntpd
On 11:59 AM, Voytek Eymont wrote:
>
> On Sun, May 8, 2011 12:03 pm, Voytek Eymont wrote:
>
>> SSL: Connection secure.
>> IMAP Server: Maximum number of connections from user+IP exceeded
>> (mail_max_userip_connections)
>
> so if I have Squirell logged in all the time, plus K-9 running, plus
> oc
Thanks for your response.
Regarding the ports, I was referring to the services. Which I verified they
are running. What would cause the scripts to run but do nothing?
service managesieve-login {
inet_listener sieve {
port = 4190
}
inet_listener sieve_deprecated {
port = 2000
}
the LD
hi all
in wich section most mail_max_lock_timeout be set up?
Thanks.
On Dom, 2011-05-08 at 11:07 +0100, Spyros Tsiolis wrote:
> OK,
>
> So what you people say is :
>
> 1. Run "ntpdate" during startup only once
> 2. After that, keep time with ntpd
>
> Right ?
>
Right, that ensures that time is correct (ntpdate run at startup) and
that it is kept correct without
On Sun, May 08, 2011 at 06:45:01AM -0400, Jerry wrote:
> On Sun, 8 May 2011 11:07:04 +0100 (BST)
> Spyros Tsiolis articulated:
>
> > So what you people say is :
> >
> > 1. Run "ntpdate" during startup only once
> > 2. After that, keep time with ntpd
>
> As I posted earlier using the technique I
On Sun, 8 May 2011 11:07:04 +0100 (BST)
Spyros Tsiolis articulated:
> So what you people say is :
>
> 1. Run "ntpdate" during startup only once
> 2. After that, keep time with ntpd
As I posted earlier using the technique I showed, on a FreeBSD system,
there would be absolutely no reason to do s
Stan Hoeppner writes:
> On 5/6/2011 3:07 PM, Kamil Jońca wrote:
>>
>> I have some archive mails in gzipped mboxes. I could use them with
>> dovecot 1.x without problems.
>> But recently I have installed dovecot 2.0.12, and they are slow. very
>> slow.
>>
>> Creating index files takes about 10 min
OK,
So what you people say is :
1. Run "ntpdate" during startup only once
2. After that, keep time with ntpd
Right ?
Regards,
spyros
"I merely function as a channel that filters
music through the chaos of noise"
- Vangelis
Hi all,
Similar to someone who posted here yesterday, I am having trouble getting
sieve filters working.
I have installed pigeonhole. I can create, edit, and save scripts from both
the Thunderbird sieve extension as well as the Roundcube sieve plugin via
managesieve running on port 4190. The .si
hello
You might include ( -I /usr/.../somewhere/include/dovecot )
Dovecot2 include files at compilation
Le 08/05/2011 03:39, Peter Bell a écrit :
I'm attempting to build Pigeonhole 0.2.3 for use with my Dovecot 2.0.12
installation on Slackware.
I've downloaded the sources and unzipped into a f
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