On Mon, 15 Sep 2003, at 10:35pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> ... but I can't verify this. Domains that don't exist are correctly
> returning NXDOMAIN on my systems, even after flushing the caches on my
> local nameservers.
>
> How did you determine this to be the case?
I was alerted to the prob
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
As others have suggested, rsync can keep two filesets synchronized, using
just the diffs. You could then backup the fileset at the main office. But
again, that depends on the size of your regular diffs.
I have to admin that's I've missed most of this thread, but if you
VeriSign has sunk to a new low.
As of a little while ago (it is around 7:45 PM US Eastern on Mon 15 Sep
2003 as I write this), VeriSign added a wildcard A record to the .COM and
.NET TLD DNS zones. The IP address returned is <64.94.110.11>, which reverses
to .
What that means in plain Eng
On 14 Sep 2003, at 11:45am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>> ... optimized for sending lots of data (many gigs) over a slow pipe (T1
>>> in this case) ...
>>
>> I suspect that is not reasonably possible.
>
> Actually, it *is*, but not in a very desirable manner. It seems that most
> of the IP/remo
On Mon, 15 Sep 2003, at 1:34pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Using Sendmail on linux 7.1. While adding several new email account
> users, do I need to add a directory in /home for each user?
Technically, no.
But, technically, "Linux 7.1" does not exist, and technically, Sendmail is
only used t
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On Mon, 15 Sep 2003 13:34:21 -0400
Jason Kern <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Using Sendmail on linux 7.1. While adding several new email account
> users, do I need to add a directory in /home for each user? Also, if
> they are using only the email ser
All,
Using Sendmail on linux 7.1. While adding several new email account
users, do I need to add a directory in /home for each user? Also, if
they are using only the email service, should they all be members of the
same group?
Thanks,
Jason Kern
KernBuilt
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