Hmmm. I just installed the latest version of GNOME off of the cooker,
and all was working fine for a while, until GNOME crashed once. Then,
when I came back, both the top and bottom bars were gone! Now, it's a
rather crippled version of GNOME. How can I get back the bars??
-peter :)
--
peter aar
Steve Howes wrote:
>
> On Sat, 19 Aug 2000 19:25:33 -0500 it was written:
>
> > Hmmm. I just installed the latest version of GNOME off of the cooker,
> > and all was working fine for a while, until GNOME crashed once. Then,
> > when I came back, both the top and bottom bars were gone! Now, it's
Well, that last problem was a cinch. This one might be a little
trickier. Ever since I reinstalled my 7.1 system with High security, I
cannot seem to be able to telnet or ssh into my machine remotely (or
even locally, using "telnet/ssh localhost"!), every time starting the
connection, then saying
"Stephen F. Bosch" wrote:
>
> Peter M Aarestad wrote:
> >
> > Well, that last problem was a cinch. This one might be a little
> > trickier. Ever since I reinstalled my 7.1 system with High security, I
> > cannot seem to be able to telnet or ssh into
"Stephen F. Bosch" wrote:
>
> Hi, Peter:
>
> Well, I see you don't have an entry to ssh in /etc/inetd.conf; You have
> telnet, but I am curious - do you have the telnet daemon installed? On
> most installs it is not installed by default. I had to install telnetd
> on all the Mandrake machines I'
John Aldrich wrote:
>
> On Sun, 20 Aug 2000, you wrote:
> > Ok... I do have telnet installed as /usr/sbin/in.telnetd (it initially
> > makes a telnet connection, then closes it before the login: prompt). I
> > added the ssh line to inetd.conf, and restarted inetd. Still no dice...
> >
> Do an "rp
Ellick Chan wrote:
> Try enabling the verbose modes on the sshd and ssh itself, I believe the
> flag was -v, then analyze those logs. They can tell you a lot.
[pma@paarestad pma]$ ssh -v localhost
SSH Version OpenSSH_2.1.1, protocol versions 1.5/2.0.
Compiled with SSL (0x0090581f).
debug: Reading
"Stephen F. Bosch" wrote:
> I still think there is a problem with the wrapper. That "connection" you
> see can be deceiving - inetd will always "pick up the phone" - but if
> there is no daemon to pass the call to, it drops.
>
> Do you have the telnetd rpm?
>
I do have telnet-server installed:
Asheesh Laroia wrote:
>
> Check for "telnetd", not telnet-server.
>
> Telnet-server is part of every install; I think it contains programs like
> login!
>
> telnetd, on the other hand, contains in.telnetd.
>
> So check for it!
I checked for "telnetd", and I do not have it. But on rpmfind.net,
"Stephen F. Bosch" wrote:
>
> Is your tcp wrapper present? (/usr/sbin/tcpd)
[pma@paarestad pma]$ whereis tcpd
tcpd: /usr/sbin/tcpd /usr/local/sbin/tcpd /usr/man/man8/tcpd.8.bz2
[pma@paarestad pma]$
Looks like it is.
> What do your logs say when you attempt to log in? (try a telnet
> localhost
Peter M Aarestad wrote:
> ssh stream tcp nowait root/usr/sbin/tcpd
> /usr/local/sbin/sshd -i
(P.S.: I promise it is on one line :)
-peter
--
peter aarestad :-)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.aarestad.net
peace, love, happiness, Christ, music, etc...
"The world really d
Stephen Carville wrote:
>
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> On Sun, 20 Aug 2000, Peter M Aarestad wrote:
>
> - - Ellick Chan wrote:
> - - > Try enabling the verbose modes on the sshd and ssh itself, I believe the
> - - > flag was -v, then
Pierre Fortin wrote:
> Since I'm in the process of setting ssh too, here's what I found...
>
> Installed as per http://www.linuxsecurity.com/tips/tip-20.html
>
> ssh localhost fails as above
> ssh `hostname`asks if you want to continue, say yes
> and enter password
>
>
All seems to be well now! I commented out that line from inetd.conf,
restarted inetd, and voila, success. Another problem that actually I
caused when trying to fix was this line from sshd_config:
ListenAddress 0.0.0.0
I initially thought this should be my machine address, but then another
email
Now, this is weird. I'm trying to compile a program (yudit, in
particular) that has
#include
in one of its header files. Pretty normal header file for C++, right?
Well, g++ chokes back that it can't find it! I tried a simple "hello
world" program using iostream.h in the same way, and it wouldn'
jarmo wrote:
>
> Hello Peter
>
> Strugled with same matter earlier...found that I had to install
> libstdc++-devel rpm and in that rpm there is g++ which
> install to /usr/include and voila' there you are.
>
> jarmo
Yep - that did it! Thanks.
-peter
--
peter aarestad :-)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
ht
Sarang Lakare wrote:
>
> if you had searched on this list you would have found the problem!!.. you
> also need to installed mandrake_desk??? rpm...
>
> -sarang
Unfortunately, I have installed the mandrake_desk rpm, but the problem
persists (in fact, I had installed it to begin with!)...
-peter
"peter aarestad :-)" wrote:
>
> Klar Brian D Contr MSG/SWS wrote:
> >
> > >From what I have read on this issue, you need to also get the rpm for
> > mandrake desk or something like that.
>
> Yah - I installed that one, too - in fact, the problem was there even
> after I installed it! I thought i
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