At the moment I'm on an RPi4 running Raspberry Pi OS. My laptop died
recently. I'm trying to figure out this OS works. Have to say, it's
been painful in many ways. One is that the RPI is slow... It will be a
little while before I get a replacement laptop, so I have to deal with this.
Altho
Puzzling over the use of ldconfig. As I understand it ldconfig can be
used to rebuild/locate all the shared libraries. It looks in ld.so.conf
for the directories to use. In my case ld.so.conf has one line in it:
"include /etc/ld.so.conf.d/*.conf"
I have 3 conf files in ld.so.conf.d.
libc.con
I fired up a Debian wheezy vm. It looks like there is a corresponding
kernel module. When I try your ip6tables command, it works, and autoloads
the necessary kernel modules.
root@debian:~# lsmod | grep LOG
root@debian:~# ip6tables -A INPUT -m limit --limit 3/min --limit-burst 10
-j LOG --log-prefix
ed.
>
> "ip6tables: No chain/target/match by that name."
>
> Problem is that every example I can find online makes this seem to "just
> work".
>
> Any suggestions?
>
> Curt-
> ___
> gnhlug-dis
defined.
"ip6tables: No chain/target/match by that name."
Problem is that every example I can find online makes this seem to "just work".
Any suggestions?
Curt-
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h
I renamed the Inbox fille and created a new Inbox. Thunderbird then
downloaded everything and now only gets new messages. I did look at the
popstate.dat file. Before it had a few "k" entires but was mostly "d".
It now has only "k" entries since Inbox was rebuilt.
This had been more of an issues
d to be read? Any suggestions?
Thunderbird uses this file to track your downloaded POP3 messages:
http://kb.mozillazine.org/Popstate.dat
There have been some bugs in the past that have left the popstate.dat file
empty or corrupted. A full disk lead to me hitting the problem. You could
a try.
-- Mike
Jerry Feldman wrote:
>On 07/12/2013 01:21 PM, Donald Leslie wrote:
>> I left it checked so I can read the email when I am not on my laptop.
>It
>> had worked fine that way until a few days ago.
>> The problem is only with Comcast. The gmail account does r
On 07/12/2013 01:21 PM, Donald Leslie wrote:
> I left it checked so I can read the email when I am not on my laptop. It
> had worked fine that way until a few days ago.
> The problem is only with Comcast. The gmail account does re-read already
> read email.
I don't think this i
I left it checked so I can read the email when I am not on my laptop. It
had worked fine that way until a few days ago.
The problem is only with Comcast. The gmail account does re-read already
read email.
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Go to Edit/Account Settings/@comcast.net/Server Settings
Make sure that "Leave messages on server" is NOT checked.
On 07/10/2013 06:10 PM, Donald Leslie wrote:
> I regularly attended the meetings in Nashua until I moved away in
> 2006. The mozilla community does not seem to respond to problems,
I regularly attended the meetings in Nashua until I moved away in 2006.
The mozilla community does not seem to respond to problems, so I thought
I would try here.
Recently thunderbird started re-reading my entire Comcast mail inbox
when looking for new mail. It does not happen with gmail. Comc
On Fri, Nov 5, 2010 at 7:16 AM, David Rysdam wrote:
> It's a subtle Tcl thing that's bitten me a million times, which is why
> I recognized it immediately.
At one time I was very good that tcl quoting and expanding/evaluating.
...but then found that Python was a better solution. ;-)
Cheers!
Ty
An agent or agents purporting to be Bruce Dawson said:
>
> On 11/04/2010 11:09 PM, Steven W. Orr wrote:
> > On 11/4/2010 11:41 AM, David Rysdam wrote:
> >> An agent or agents purporting to be Steven W. Orr said:
> >>> I have a stupid question in tcl that I'm just not getting. I'm hoping to
> >>>
On 11/04/2010 11:09 PM, Steven W. Orr wrote:
> On 11/4/2010 11:41 AM, David Rysdam wrote:
>> An agent or agents purporting to be Steven W. Orr said:
>>> I have a stupid question in tcl that I'm just not getting. I'm hoping to get
>>> lucky here.
>>>
>>> I have a script in tcl/expect that spawns s
On 11/4/2010 11:41 AM, David Rysdam wrote:
> An agent or agents purporting to be Steven W. Orr said:
>> I have a stupid question in tcl that I'm just not getting. I'm hoping to get
>> lucky here.
>>
>> I have a script in tcl/expect that spawns su and needs to pass its arguments
>> to su.
>>
>> argv
An agent or agents purporting to be Steven W. Orr said:
> I have a stupid question in tcl that I'm just not getting. I'm hoping to get
> lucky here.
>
> I have a script in tcl/expect that spawns su and needs to pass its arguments
> to su.
>
> argv in tcl has the command line args. I lop off the
I have a stupid question in tcl that I'm just not getting. I'm hoping to get
lucky here.
I have a script in tcl/expect that spawns su and needs to pass its arguments
to su.
argv in tcl has the command line args. I lop off the first couple of args that
I need in my script via:
set user [lindex
The battery actually had a bulge in the case to the point where it cracked
-- although it didn't appear to leak anywhere. Must have dried out. New
battery through the intertubes for $16 with $12 shipping < $40 at Staples.
Greg Rundlett
___
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Thanks for all the responses. I'm going to both check the status with
apcupsd and likely replace the battery.
Greg Rundlett
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On Thu, Jul 1, 2010 at 6:22 PM, Steven W. Orr wrote:
> Pull the plug and see how long it lasts
It's best not to literally pull the plug out of the receptacle.
Doing so disconnects the earth ground. That can cause problems. Some
signal links can be perturbed by loss of ground, or change in
pot
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 06/30/10 09:09, quoth Tom Buskey:
>
>
> There's one called apcups that I've used also. You can run a server on
> one system with clients that will poll the server for status and
> shutdown. This is useful with several systems plugged into one UP
On Tue, Jun 29, 2010 at 10:01 PM, Ben Eisenbraun wrote:
>
> Last I looked, APC had Windows/Mac clients for checking/changing their
> settings, and I think there are some 3rd party linux/UNIX tools that will
> allow you to do it as well. Network UPS Tools (NUT) is one I have used in
> the past.
>
On Tue, Jun 29, 2010 at 9:33 PM, Greg Rundlett (freephile)
wrote:
> Within the past week, when the household thermostat kicks on or off the
> central A/C system, the PC shuts off instantaneously.
What happens if the electrical power supply to the UPS is
disconnected? (For example, flip the cir
On 06/29/2010 09:33 PM, Greg Rundlett (freephile) wrote:
> I have my Linux "Media Center", a Dell Studio Hybrid PC, 2 1TB Fantom
> external drives and a 25" lcd monitor plugged into an APC Backups Pro
> 500 UPS on the battery+surge protection side.
>
> Within the past week, when the household therm
On 6/29/2010 10:01 PM, Ben Eisenbraun wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 29, 2010 at 09:54:52PM -0400, Dan Jenkins wrote:
>>On 6/29/2010 9:33 PM, Greg Rundlett (freephile) wrote:
>>> Within the past week, when the household thermostat kicks on or off the
>>> central A/C system, the PC shuts off instantaneo
On Tue, Jun 29, 2010 at 09:54:52PM -0400, Dan Jenkins wrote:
> On 6/29/2010 9:33 PM, Greg Rundlett (freephile) wrote:
> > Within the past week, when the household thermostat kicks on or off the
> > central A/C system, the PC shuts off instantaneously.
>
> In my experience, that is usually a sign
On 6/29/2010 9:33 PM, Greg Rundlett (freephile) wrote:
> I have my Linux "Media Center", a Dell Studio Hybrid PC, 2 1TB Fantom
> external drives and a 25" lcd monitor plugged into an APC Backups Pro 500
> UPS on the battery+surge protection side.
>
> Within the past week, when the household therm
I have my Linux "Media Center", a Dell Studio Hybrid PC, 2 1TB Fantom
external drives and a 25" lcd monitor plugged into an APC Backups Pro 500
UPS on the battery+surge protection side.
Within the past week, when the household thermostat kicks on or off the
central A/C system, the PC shuts off ins
gnhlug-discuss-boun...@mail.gnhlug.org wrote on 05/10/2010 11:15:28 AM:
> gnhlug-discuss-boun...@mail.gnhlug.org wrote on 05/10/2010 10:21:50 AM:
>
> > Fellow list members, I've got a linux linking problem, which has me
> > stumped. Since I've been coding mos
gnhlug-discuss-boun...@mail.gnhlug.org wrote on 05/10/2010 10:21:50 AM:
> Fellow list members, I've got a linux linking problem, which has me
> stumped. Since I've been coding mostly in python, lately, my 'C' brain
> has atrophied...
>
> I've got a C (u
Try running your compile command with -v so it announces what it's
doing and then use readelf & grep to verify that the symbol in
question is defined/resolved in the objects you expect.
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htt
Fellow list members, I've got a linux linking problem, which has me
stumped. Since I've been coding mostly in python, lately, my 'C' brain
has atrophied...
I've got a C (umm actually C++) program that won't link to some ATLAS
libraries which I recently comp
Lloyd Kvam wrote:
> On Thu, 2010-04-15 at 10:38 -0400, Dan Coutu wrote:
>
>> I would really rather not have to rebuild the entire openfire db from
>> scratch, adding about 40 user accounts with preserved passwords and so
>> forth.
>>
>> Does anyone have ideas how I can fix this without losing da
On Thu, 2010-04-15 at 10:38 -0400, Dan Coutu wrote:
> I would really rather not have to rebuild the entire openfire db from
> scratch, adding about 40 user accounts with preserved passwords and so
> forth.
>
> Does anyone have ideas how I can fix this without losing data?
mysqldump [table_one] [
I've spent a couple hours trying to track down a solution to this.
Perhaps one of you knows of a solution or at least can point me at some
new information that would help resolve it.
I have an openfire IM server running on RHEL 5. Apparently due to a
MySQL bug I have a problem with a key
On Wed, Mar 31, 2010 at 10:34 PM, James R. Van Zandt wrote:
>
> Bill McGonigle writes:
>> I don't have experience with that particular card, but in general you
>> should be able to do:
>>
>> mplayer /dev/video0
>>
>> or for your 500:
>>
>> mplayer /dev/video1
>>
>> To see if the
Bill McGonigle writes:
> I don't have experience with that particular card, but in general you
> should be able to do:
>
> mplayer /dev/video0
>
> or for your 500:
>
> mplayer /dev/video1
>
> To see if the hardware and module are working. I have a 500 and it's
> given me no
I don't have experience with that particular card, but in general you
should be able to do:
mplayer /dev/video0
or for your 500:
mplayer /dev/video1
To see if the hardware and module are working. I have a 500 and it's
given me no end of headaches, but for everything else besides the
/
I apologize in advance for the long email, but I want to put all the
evidence in one place.
I have bought an Hauppauge HVR-2250 dual tuner card so I could
continue to record the programs Comcast is moving from analog to
digital. However, I'm having trouble setting it up, and now my old
PVR-500 i
On 10/01/2009 08:06 PM, Ben Scott wrote:
> [1] The front panel says "Comcast", but the top of the case still has
> a giant "SMC" molded into the plastic.
Same model here. After turning off all of its 'features', it seems to
work well.
The only trick was changing the management interface to run o
how the Linksys router gets
it's time/date data. I thought NTP was supposed to use one of the
"official" time servers but that can't be right for this particular
model router.
A couple of years ago I recall Netgear having their wrist slapped
because they sold a b
esn't help that X.509 is a nightmare, too. It
> will probabbly be cheaper to just buy a real VPN box than spend the
> time and effort in figuring it all out -- especially since we're not
> even sure that's the problem.
When I started using x.509 certificates with ope
On Thu, Oct 1, 2009 at 7:48 PM, Lloyd Kvam wrote:
> I've seen DSL modems with 2 modes of behavior:
> * bridge mode ...
> * NAT/router ...
>
> I don't know if the cable modems offer similar capabilities.
It's a bit different in cable-modem-land. DSL is typically running
some kind of P
On Thu, 2009-10-01 at 18:50 -0400, Hewitt_Tech wrote:
> Thanks for the help guys. I fixed it by setting up the cable modem as
> I was describing. I changed the Linksys router to get it's WAN address
> dynamically. I then re-configured the cable modem to create a DMZ
> which only has one computer (i
one
> is your LinkSys using?
>
> If it's PSK (pre-shared keys, also called a "shared secret"), you
> have to enter the same password into both devices. There will be no
> clock time element involved. So that isn't the problem. (I think.)
>
> If it'
s PSK (pre-shared keys, also called a "shared secret"), you
have to enter the same password into both devices. There will be no
clock time element involved. So that isn't the problem. (I think.)
If it's X.509 certificates, you either register the device with a
Certific
his. They only seem to allow the user to set
the time zone.
> (3) Set up a DHCP reservation on the WAN side for the LinkSys box,
> and give an NTP server in the DHCP options, in the hope that time is
> actually the problem, and the LinkSys box will listen.
The Comcast cable modem can do NAT (
router is setup to use a dynamic address, it has the correct date and
> time. When it's set up with a static address the status page says
> "time
> unavailable". I think this might be part of the problem. If the
> router
> doesn't know the time (perhaps the clo
ay to set the clock manually (no time server).
(3) Set up a DHCP reservation on the WAN side for the LinkSys box,
and give an NTP server in the DHCP options, in the hope that time is
actually the problem, and the LinkSys box will listen.
Beyond that, you're at the mercy of the vendor.
I recently was relating on the list how a client was having a problem
with their Linksys BEFSX41 router and the solution was that Linksys
RMA'd the router. They apparently have removed the BEFSX41 model from
their active product list so they sent me a BEFVP41 v2 model. I received
it yest
Thomas Charron wrote:
> On Sun, Nov 30, 2008 at 9:01 PM, Dan Coutu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> This is a RHEL server running postfix.
>>
>> Sending email to the server from my cell phone is giving an error and I
>> don't understand why. I'm hoping that someone here can shed light on it
>> fo
On Sun, Nov 30, 2008 at 9:01 PM, Dan Coutu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> This is a RHEL server running postfix.
>
> Sending email to the server from my cell phone is giving an error and I
> don't understand why. I'm hoping that someone here can shed light on it
> for me.
Sending email from your p
Dan Coutu wrote:
> This is a RHEL server running postfix.
>
> Sending email to the server from my cell phone is giving an error and I
> don't understand why. I'm hoping that someone here can shed light on it
> for me.
>
> Here's the mail log entries that show
Dan Coutu writes:
> This is a RHEL server running postfix.
>
> Sending email to the server from my cell phone is giving an error and I
> don't understand why. I'm hoping that someone here can shed light on it
> for me.
>
> Here's the mail log entries that sh
This is a RHEL server running postfix.
Sending email to the server from my cell phone is giving an error and I
don't understand why. I'm hoping that someone here can shed light on it
for me.
Here's the mail log entries that show the problem:
Dec 1 01:55:27 ec2-75-101-156-5
I've been seeing a strange problem common to a bunch of servers.
The servers need to nfs mount storage on boot but half of the time the
mount fails with "server not available" but right after I can mount the
storage manually.
I took the mount out of fstab and wrote a delay
On Sun, Aug 3, 2008 at 9:08 AM, Greg Rundlett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Though the page doesn't explain what would happen if you tried. Presumably
>> the BIOS updater would prohibit the upgrade. So if it now works, that
>> implies that Dell fixed the updater to do what it needs to do.
>>
I'm a
/edocs/systems/ins5100/en/i5100-om.pdf
You're looking at a support forum, and finding some information from
people who managed to get it to work. The problem with that is that
the spec's say what you're trying to do *won't work*. So according to
all the authoritative informatio
een message, no audible beeps or anything.
I'm not that familiar with how to troubleshoot this problem. Is there
anything that I can try aside from returning the memory? I do not
have another system to test the memory in. Based on the fact that I
have the proper BIOS installed and that the memory
On Fri, Jul 11, 2008 at 11:30 AM, Hewitt_Tech <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> One of my colleagues ran into a Comcast throttling problem while
> doing an rsync at a different location. He said the rsync ran at full speed
> for about 30 seconds and then basically dropped to ab
er Monday. I don't believe the internal router
> > has any bearing on the problem because the customer noticed the problem
> > when there was no internal router in place (we bypassed it as a
> > workaround). I'm not sure if there is any kind of tool that can be used
&
On Fri, 2008-07-11 at 11:30 -0400, Hewitt_Tech wrote:
> Mark Greene wrote:
> >
> >
> > On Thu, Jul 10, 2008 at 7:36 PM, Alex Hewitt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:
> >
> > I have clients with an interesting n
Mark Greene wrote:
>
>
> On Thu, Jul 10, 2008 at 7:36 PM, Alex Hewitt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:
>
> I have clients with an interesting network problem. One location in
> Bedford New Hampshire using a fractionated T1 has
On Thu, Jul 10, 2008 at 7:36 PM, Alex Hewitt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> I have clients with an interesting network problem. One location in
> Bedford New Hampshire using a fractionated T1 has routinely been
> transmitting studies to an office in Nashua New Hampshire. There
Alex Hewitt wrote:
> I have clients with an interesting network problem. One location in
> Bedford New Hampshire using a fractionated T1 has routinely been
> transmitting studies to an office in Nashua New Hampshire. There have
> been no problems with this for at least 18 months. Howe
On Thu, 2008-07-10 at 19:36 -0400, Alex Hewitt wrote:
> I have clients with an interesting network problem. One location in
> Bedford New Hampshire using a fractionated T1 has routinely been
> transmitting studies to an office in Nashua New Hampshire. There have
> been no problems w
I have clients with an interesting network problem. One location in
Bedford New Hampshire using a fractionated T1 has routinely been
transmitting studies to an office in Nashua New Hampshire. There have
been no problems with this for at least 18 months. However recently
(about a week ago), the
On Fri, Apr 18, 2008 at 1:54 AM, Bill McGonigle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Yeah? I've seen benchmarks with postfix spanking sendmail on
> performance, and exim handing it right to postfix.
I've seen benchmarks that say just about anything. Even when
they're not designed to produce a certai
On Apr 14, 2008, at 20:18, Paul Lussier wrote:
> Sendmail is still (and probably will be for as long as Eric Allman is
> alive/maintaining it) the work-horse of the internet. If I need speed
> and throughput, I'd still choose sendmail. If I need massive
> scalability, I'll choose sendmail. If I
"Steven W. Orr" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Sunday, Apr 13th 2008 at 08:13 -, quoth Ben Scott:
>
> Why would you ever want to do that? Sendmail has more flexibility.
This has been answered, however, I just wanted to add my .02 drachma:
Just because something has more flexibility is not
On Mon, 2008-04-14 at 11:55 -0400, Tom Buskey wrote:
>
>
> On Mon, Apr 14, 2008 at 11:34 AM, Ben Scott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 14, 2008 at 10:59 AM, Tom Buskey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
> > Sendmail has a long history of security problems.
>
>the 1st internet worm in 1988 was enabled because of the root access
>backdoor written into Sendmail.
If I remember correctly, that "back door" was only available when
Sendmail was run in debug mode. I seem to remember this because a
friend of mine, Henry "no relation" Hall, was going to join us
On Mon, Apr 14, 2008 at 11:34 AM, Ben Scott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 14, 2008 at 10:59 AM, Tom Buskey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Sendmail has a long history of security problems.
>
> I have to point out that the above statement would be equally true
> if one wrote "Unix" inst
On Mon, Apr 14, 2008 at 10:59 AM, Tom Buskey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Sendmail has a long history of security problems.
I have to point out that the above statement would be equally true
if one wrote "Unix" instead of "Sendmail". (This is not a snide
remark, although it may qualify as "subt
On Sun, Apr 13, 2008 at 2:34 PM, Steven W. Orr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sunday, Apr 13th 2008 at 08:13 -, quoth Ben Scott:
>
> =>On Sat, Apr 12, 2008 at 3:24 PM, Coleman Kane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> => Anyone want to give a presentation on switching from Sendmail to
> =>Postfix?
On Sun, 2008-04-13 at 18:23 -0400, Shawn O'Shea wrote:
>
>
> On Sun, Apr 13, 2008 at 8:13 AM, Ben Scott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
> On Sat, Apr 12, 2008 at 3:24 PM, Coleman Kane
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > A more helpful suggestion is that you may want to set the
.
For instance, Shawn O'Shea just pointed out that you can dynamically
define new transports for postfix, and then address this problem by
setting up a "lameservers" transport that behaves in the
5-rcpts-per-message manner using configuration options that are much
more lexically unders
On Sun, Apr 13, 2008 at 2:34 PM, Steven W. Orr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Anyone want to give a presentation on switching from Sendmail to
>> Postfix?
>
> Why would you ever want to do that?
Primarily: Cleaner, easier configuration. I find it costs me more
to learn a new feature in Sendmail
On Sun, Apr 13, 2008 at 8:13 AM, Ben Scott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sat, Apr 12, 2008 at 3:24 PM, Coleman Kane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > A more helpful suggestion is that you may want to set the
> > default_destination_recipient_limit in /etc/postfix/main.cf ... to 5.
>
> I don't k
On Sunday, Apr 13th 2008 at 08:13 -, quoth Ben Scott:
=>On Sat, Apr 12, 2008 at 3:24 PM, Coleman Kane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
=>> A more helpful suggestion is that you may want to set the
=>> default_destination_recipient_limit in /etc/postfix/main.cf ... to 5.
=>
=> I don't know much o
On Saturday, Apr 12th 2008 at 22:53 -, quoth Paul Lussier:
=>Coleman Kane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
=>
=>> A more helpful suggestion is that you may want to set the
=>> default_destination_recipient_limit in /etc/postfix/main.cf (or wherever
=>> main.cf is located on your particular install)
On Sat, Apr 12, 2008 at 3:24 PM, Coleman Kane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> A more helpful suggestion is that you may want to set the
> default_destination_recipient_limit in /etc/postfix/main.cf ... to 5.
I don't know much of anything about Postfix, but I'm guessing that
will impact all desti
On Apr 10, 2008, at 12:58, Steven W. Orr wrote:
> It seems they now
> have a limit of 5 recipients per envelope.
Are you getting special treatment? I'm not finding info on this in
web searches. I haven't experimented either.
> MAILER_DEFINITIONS
> Mesmtp_mailer_maxmsgs_5,P=[I
On Sat, 2008-04-12 at 22:53 -0400, Paul Lussier wrote:
> Coleman Kane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > A more helpful suggestion is that you may want to set the
> > default_destination_recipient_limit in /etc/postfix/main.cf (or wherever
> > main.cf is located on your particular install) to 5. Ad
Coleman Kane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> A more helpful suggestion is that you may want to set the
> default_destination_recipient_limit in /etc/postfix/main.cf (or wherever
> main.cf is located on your particular install) to 5. Adding (or
> changing) the following line in the file should do:
>
On Fri, 2008-04-11 at 10:40 -0400, Derek Atkins wrote:
> Paul Lussier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > "Steven W. Orr" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >
> >> Add this to the end of your sendmail.mc
> >
> > Anyone know what the postfix fix is?
>
> Yeah. Install sendmail. ;)
>
> > Seeya,
> > Paul
Paul Lussier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> "Steven W. Orr" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> Add this to the end of your sendmail.mc
>
> Anyone know what the postfix fix is?
Yeah. Install sendmail. ;)
> Seeya,
> Paul
-derek
--
Derek Atkins, SB '93 MIT EE, SM '95 MIT Media Laboratory
"Steven W. Orr" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Add this to the end of your sendmail.mc
Anyone know what the postfix fix is?
--
Seeya,
Paul
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On Thu, Apr 10, 2008 at 5:42 PM, Thomas Charron <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 10, 2008 at 5:09 PM, Deepan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi All,
> > I am able to connect to Mysql via command line
> > using mysql client. I am also able to connect to
> >
> > '/tmp/mysql.sock'
On Thu, Apr 10, 2008 at 5:09 PM, Deepan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi All,
> I am able to connect to Mysql via command line
> using mysql client. I am also able to connect to
> mysql via php if I run those php programs via
> command line. However when I hit those php pages
> via the browser
This often happens when you have a user configured only for localhost
connections. Coming from the command line, the user will generally appear
to originate from localhost. Coming from a PHP or CGI app the user will
generally appear to come from the hostname.
I'd start by checking the users tabl
Deepan wrote:
> Hi All,
> I am able to connect to Mysql via command line
> using mysql client. I am also able to connect to
> mysql via php if I run those php programs via
> command line. However when I hit those php pages
> via the browser it throws the error Can't connect
> to local MySQL server
Hi All,
I am able to connect to Mysql via command line
using mysql client. I am also able to connect to
mysql via php if I run those php programs via
command line. However when I hit those php pages
via the browser it throws the error Can't connect
to local MySQL server through socket
'/tmp/mysql.s
> and as the French say "Eez beeg fat accomplishmente".
Extra points for Steven...
It took me until I ran it thru google's language tools to get the joke.
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On Thursday, Apr 10th 2008 at 13:35 -, quoth Ben Scott:
=>On Thu, Apr 10, 2008 at 12:58 PM, Steven W. Orr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
=>> I run a list and all the mail to yahoo is backing up. It seems they now
=>> have a limit of 5 recipients per envelope.
=>
=> That violates RFC-821, I'm pre
On Thu, Apr 10, 2008 at 12:58 PM, Steven W. Orr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I run a list and all the mail to yahoo is backing up. It seems they now
> have a limit of 5 recipients per envelope.
That violates RFC-821, I'm pretty sure. I seem to recall it
requires implementations support at leas
I run a list and all the mail to yahoo is backing up. It seems they now
have a limit of 5 recipients per envelope. Can someone tell me how to
change my sendmail mc file to fix this?
TIA
--
Time flies like the wind. Fruit flies like a banana. Stranger things have .0.
happened but none stranger
On Feb 5, 2008 6:39 PM, Bill McGonigle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have to admit to not really understanding the output of `lsusb -v`
> but I didn't see how to tie a device to a part number, however
The output of "lsusb" -- and "lspci", too -- is based on the ID
numbers reported by the va
On Feb 3, 2008, at 23:26, Ben Scott wrote:
> If the devices are identical in model, you're likely SOL: The USB
> standard doesn't require a unique ID (e.g., hardware address, serial
> number), so there's no sure way to tell identical models apart. You
> might be able to finagle something with p
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