Himanshu Arora wrote:
As a system administrator i want to get the information what users are
doing. Checking their .bash_history is not a reliable thing as they can
make changes in this file very easily. Is their any command or any other
way to get the information from the root side.
You can
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Jim Hayward wrote:
| Shez, what was I thinking. :-P Forget I said that. Just logout and
| login back in.
BTW: The use of PGP/GnuPG in an public mailinglist isn't helpfully when
your public key is not available on key servers.
Jens
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Kevin Passey wrote:
I've messed up some permissions somewhere on my system.
Can somebody advise me on resetting them using RPM.
rpm --setperms package
or for all installed RPMs
for package in `rpm -qa --queryformat %{NAME}\n`; do
rpm --setperms $package
done
HTH
Jens
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redhat-list mailing
#snmpwalk -v1 localhost -c community
results in
snmpwalk: Failure in sendto (Permission denied)
It seems like your snmpd is not running or is not listening on the
internal interface (lo). Please try service snmpd status or ps ax |
grep snmpd. You should get something like this:
# ps ax | grep
The only thing that I dislike about Postgres is the case-sensitivity of
data in the database, if anybody knows how to turn it off let me know.
You can use select statements like this:
select * from abc where upper(xyz) = 'SEARCH';
select * from abc where xyz ~* 'search';
POSIX Regular
is that: by default my security level (of the firewal) is hight, but when i
change the value to no security or median security it doesnt change (he ask
me if i want to change the config i select ok, but when i open it again it
level is again high)
try (as root): service iptables restart