Perhaps you can use sudo for your normal user and setup the sudoers file for only the
privleges you want your normal users to have.
HTH,
Darryl
On Fri, Feb 06, 2004 at 11:30:38AM -, Edd Barrett wrote:
> Hi all,
> I have been using freebsd for my web/database/music server for a while and
> i
As many of you know KDE 3.2 was released today. I am trying to upgrade to that.
While using the construct tool, "make", and any of the targets mentioned in the
README, I get the following error.
"../../gar.conf.mk", line 66: Need an operator
"../../gar.conf.mk", line 74: Need an operator
"../..
As many of you know KDE 3.2 was released today. I am trying to upgrade to that.
While using the construct tool, "make", and any of the targets mentioned in the
README, I get the following error.
"../../gar.conf.mk", line 66: Need an operator
"../../gar.conf.mk", line 74: Need an operator
"../..
You can also use tcpdump to try and figure it out.
If you log tcpdump to the console it will fly by giving your traffic, so perform a
little capture and dump it into a file.
HTH,
Darryl
On Fri, Jan 16, 2004 at 01:26:06PM -0500, Jason Stewart wrote:
> On 16/01/04 04:09 +0800, meimi wrote:
> > H
You can also try using host
host 123.45.67.89
On Fri, Jan 16, 2004 at 01:18:35PM -0500, Jerry McAllister wrote:
> >
> > > Sure. just nslookup xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx and if it comes back
> > > with a good/authoritive hostname it should be OK.
> > >
> > > Try man nslookup for more possibili