ged it also, but I'm curious if it really is required.
--
Stuart Jansen <[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://buscaluz.org/ AIM:StuartMJansen>
When in doubt, use brute force. -- Ken Thompson, co-creator of Unix
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tp://buscaluz.org/rpms/
I only have access to a FC1 system at the moment, but I expect you
should be able to rebuild the src.rpm on an FC2 system without any
trouble.
--
Stuart Jansen <[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://buscaluz.org/ AIM:StuartMJansen>
When in doubt, use brute force. -- Ken Thompson, c
ock, up-to-date FC1.
--
Stuart Jansen <[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://buscaluz.org/ AIM:StuartMJansen>
"DON'T PANIC"
-The Pragmatic Programmer, Andrew Hunt & David Thomas
-The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Douglas Adams :wq
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ource is sent.
If no certificate is provided, or the certificate doesn't map to a known
user account, the access denied redirect is overridden to send the user
to a normal login page. Login from this page is handled like any other
login.
Does this sound reasonable? Is the a better way that
On Wed, 2004-01-07 at 20:06, Geoffrey Young wrote:
> Stuart Jansen wrote:
> > I'm using Apache 2.0.48, mod_perl 1.99_12, and Apache::AuthCookie to
> > create a custom authentication scheme. I've noticed that while apache
> > normally logs the $REMOTE_USER, it do
olution?
I've only been using mod_perl about a week, but I'm loving it so far.
Amazing stuff.
--
Stuart Jansen <[EMAIL PROTECTED], AIM:StuartMJansen>
âThe programmer, like the poet, works only slightly removed from pure
thought-stuff. He builds his castles in the air, from air, c