What type of Internet connection? DSL, Cable, T1? if DSL, are you using
PPPoE? If connected via Ethernet - what brand NIC are you using?
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
-BEGIN
mission in there?
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.2.1 (MingW32)
Comment: Signed and/or encpryted for everyone
x is brought up which is leaving your machine
open/vulnerable for a brief time.
Unless the script creates a dynamic firewall each time it runs, there's no
real reason to circumvent Red Hat's tools. They're there for a good reason. :-)
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROT
RH7.2.
This one frustrated me for about a day.
/etc/httpd/conf.d/php.conf - you'll find it plain as day. I had to dig
through the source code to figure out where the directive was coming
from, then finally did a grep -r on /etc until it showed up.
I'm assuming you already modified your ph
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Simpson, Doug wrote:
| Hey,
| I would be more than happy to "clear out my box" if you tell me how.
|
Unless you're [EMAIL PROTECTED], I wouldn't worry about it.
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Ad
ous if I were to grab the SRPM's from RH 8.0, if
I could turn the machine into a Red Hat 8.0ish Itanium box? I guess RH 7.2's
KDE 2.x and Gnome 1.x Environments are already feeling dated after being on
RH 7.3/8.0 for a while.
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Simpson, Doug wrote:
| Yeah, I am getting these too.
Looks like someone is over quota - but left themselves subscribed. Can we
just kick the guy for now and let him resub when/if he clears out his box?
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL
h you plug in. Makes the
computer think a keyboard/mouse is always attached. You then plug your
keyboard/mouse into the "box" when you need to admin the box.
Or.. just leave a spare keyboard/mouse plugged in.
Or.. you could connect the server to a KVM.
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE
hen sink and you're sometimes right
back where you started.
As far as quotas, I believe leaving that alone would be harmless since it's
called within the initial init script. As long as they're off, you're okay.
Good luck!
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
, lower than 2.3.9.
| What's the correct version of xinetd that should be installed? previous
| 2.3.9 or newer 2.3.7?
2.3.7 seems to be the concensus. Higher != better in all cases.
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key:
;,
| does my CPU only run at 75 MHz?
| CPU: Intel Pentium 75 - 200 stepping 0c
That's a range The same chip can be ID'd as a 75 through 200 mhz Pentium
(w/o MMX).
Ahh, the good 'ol days.
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP
need to modify the spec file first
to adjust dependencies or compile/build options, or to modify the source.
HTH,
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Ve
Closest thing I could think of would be portsentry but that's for port
scans. It has the ability to iptable (whichever command you desire)
offending users upon a positive trigger.
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key:
er Red Hat 7.3.
rpmfind.net will only show him RPMS which may not be specific to his
distribution.
Or - you could get down and dirty and compile it yourself - however you
lose the benefits of having it RPM packaged.
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator -
y'll set you straight. Or better yet, pick up a
Linux bible or such book - they're great too.
Would be nice if Red Hat and others would include by default for root a
"motd" that displayed as root reading:
**WARNING** You've logged in as root. Any command you run is do
you specified your MUA. (Evolution, MUTT, Pine, kmail,
Mozilla, etc.)
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.2.1 (MingW32)
Comment: Signed
ading :-)
Disable it in your BIOS if it's a problem. Otherwise enjoy.
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.2.1 (MingW32)
Comment: Sig
seperate daemon?
Are listen/accept bound to go through libtcpwrap? Do you have a services
line for your MUD/port in /etc/services?
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
-BEGIN PGP
| after boot-up. If we run single processor kernel everything is fine.
| We can't recall ever having seen linux freeze up like this before. Any
| thoughts?
Again - this is a hyperthreading issue. Disable it in the BIOS and you
should be fine.
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROT
(I believe
it's an option now).
Worth a shot if you can't disable it in the BIOS config.
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version
dells as well). With it
enabled, the OS can see 2x the processors as really installed.
Otherwise you may need to verify that you've got the latest ROMPAQ's
applied to ensure this isn't a BIOS reporting problem.
My best shot,
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
, whereas Red Hat's
utilities look for Version 2 quota files/support. You'll need to compile
the tools for the proper support for whichever version you'll be using.
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED] (from home)
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Key: https://mail.me
hongky Michael wrote:
> yes, i am fscking you all!!!
>
> sweat!perfect!!
Wow, you need to try ext3 on for size. ;-)
If you want off this list, simply go here:
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=unsubscribe
Otherwise, cut off access from your pr0n seeking little brother :-)
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Rick Johnson wrote:
| Ashley M. Kirchner wrote:
|
|> How can I have Apache restart without asking every time for the
|> pass phrase
|> for its certificate? At the moment, it fails automatic startup if and
|> when the
|> server re
to remove the password from your private key. While this
isn't the best thing to do unless only root can read the key, it does
prevent the prompt.
Toward the middle of this page:
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key:
early
as pricey as other commercial solutions and you can take heart that it's
been hardened for you.
Too bad it's based on (I think) Debian and not Red Hat :-P
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail
fangled state-of-the-art Pentium (TM) PC dealybobs).
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED] (from home)
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
--
redhat-list mailing list
unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=unsubscribe
https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list
rked okay (do a Google search),
however their performance was lackluster to say the least. The best
performing (and most expensive) was Reflections X. So in the end, you'll
get what you pay for.
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED] (from home)
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medat
. These changes are relevant to Red Hat 7.2 and earlier. 7.3 and
8.0 already had the newer descriptions. Otherwise, they're identical (as
long as you've left them default and disabled). You can do an mv
.rpmsave to if that is the case for you or just leave them
be.
-Rick
--
Rick Johnso
e" theres a lot of mails in the queue how can i process
| it manually? TIA Toto
sendmail -q will run the queue manually.
sendmail -qv will do it w/ verbosity.
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https:/
ever you desire to be your max
users. Note going w/ the worker model will use considerably less
memory/resources and is highly recommended if applicable to your situation.
Reference the following PDF file for more info on Improving Apache's
performance (only a piece, but it's the info I neede
via cpan. Unless you want to spend the
time fixing their spec file so you can build it via RPM to be "up to date",
it's just easier. Worst case is that up2date will overwrite it one fine
night and you'll need to reinstall the latest via cpan again.
HTH,
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnso
cable first, then
replace w/ known good drive, then controller/mobo. Do all drives get the
same error, just that one drive, or both drives on one channel?
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp
ine, I'd advise you to consider multiple servers
w/ load balancing.
Hope this helps,
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.2
uming it's in rc.local) with a "&" to put it in the
background.
Example:
/path/to/your/program &
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE---
ll want to start (of course after backing up your
data on those partitions :-) )
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.2.1 (MingW32)
Comment: Sig
mount -t udf /dev/cdrom /mnt/cdrom
should do the trick.
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED] (from home)
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
--
redhat-list mailing list
unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=unsubscribe
https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list
xtensions to the
php.conf so they too would be processed. They included file filters for
php4, php3, and phps.
Just a thought,
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED] (from home)
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
--
redhat-list m
review the /etc/php.ini file since now the tags it
allows have changed (i.e. short tags and ASP style tags are off by default).
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
-BEGIN PGP SIGN
doc-2.4.18-14 kernel-source-2.4.18-14
> kernel-debug-2.4.18-4 kernel-uml-2.4.18-14 Thanks, Dominic
Grab Athlon where you can, then i686, then i386 for the remaining
packages.
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED] (from home)
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Ke
eed to grab the tar.gz source code
for the kernel driver and follow the directions for that. Other versions the
RPMs should work fine.
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATU
connected as Master.
|
| What am I doing wrong ?
|
| Any pontiers would be thankfully
Try doing a grub-install to /dev/hdb so that both drives contain a boot sector.
HTH,
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https
will be to create a Red Hat 8.0 "everything" install to build
8.0 compatible i686 packages.
I'm sure this could easily be done for i586 or athlon platforms as well if
you have the time and ambition. Hope this helps others who had considered
the same task. To the rest - I do apologiz
), but something
> different...
Have you tried /dev/sda1 assuming that it too is "partitioned"?
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED] (from home)
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
--
redhat-list mailing li
an's web site and didn't see anything
there about it.
>
Evolution comes with Red Hat 8.0 - though it's only version 1.08 vs.
Ximian's 1.20. That means the packages should already be on the RH 8.0 CDs
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administ
r/local as well as needed.
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.2.1 (MingW32)
Comment: Signed and/or encpryted
Matthew Saltzman wrote:
> On Sun, 24 Nov 2002, Rick Johnson wrote:
> > Uh, no - out of the box - sitting at the console (/dev/tty1) - I
experience
> > the same problem. It sounds to me that Red Hat neglected a setting in
the
> > default profile.d scripts.
>
> Odd, I
| newsgroup that had he 1280x1024x16 setting. I wish 800x600x23 and
| 1024x748x24.
|
Care to post the equivelants? Do you have to have framebuffer support
compiled in?
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp
n outbox filter where as
Outlook Express makes it pretty easy. Evolution requires you to switch it
from the default local folders. Mozilla is pretty much preset to "Sent".
Mostly depends on the client.
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, I
blem. It sounds to me that Red Hat neglected a setting in the
default profile.d scripts.
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
--
redhat-list mailing list
unsubscribe mailto:[EM
and -
no need to reinvent it (though each will eventually accomplish the same
thing, it makes more sense to do those "same" tasks from one spot vs. many).
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.c
e in the Red Hat updates trees for RH 7.0 and 7.1 as well.
Very annoying when you have to sync the whole tree.
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
--
redhat-list mailing list
unsubs
figure out why their CPU usage is near 100% all the
time :-)
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
--
redhat-list mailing list
unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=unsubscribe
https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list
d. Largely due to mirrors.kernel.org.
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
--
redhat-list mailing list
unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=unsubscribe
https://listman.redh
me,
though sometimes they come w/ a cost premium.
And to keep this Linux related - have you yanked a CPU to see if stability
improved within Linux?
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
w.rps2.net/rhil-guide.htm#Section%20III%20-%20How%20Do%20I%20Get%20Help
1. Please don't post in HTML.
2. Besides the huge anti-AMD rant - what's the question?
- -Rick
(who's AMD Linux machine is rock solid - same box was cr@p under Win2k)
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED
be implemented on a newer
redhat system as well since the tools for that are included.
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
--
redhat-list mailing list
unsubscribe mailto:[EM
docs
Only if you accept the default prefix.
If you use
"--with-layout=RedHat"
as I do when recompiling myself (keeps from breaking things if installing
over the RPM and using the same conf files), you'll end up right back in
/var/www/html
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [E
"Hidong Kim wrote:
> I just installed Apache 1.3.27 on a Red Hat 7.2 machine. The index page
> shows up saying that Apache is installed. Where exactly is this
> index.html? Thanks,
Try /var/www/html
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Meda
packages you want... *G*.
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.2.1 (MingW32)
Comment: Signed and/or encpryted f
file access?
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.2.1 (MingW32)
Comment: Signed and/or encpryted for everyone's prote
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Will Phipps wrote:
| Thanks for the help. I've already solved this problem. This post was
| sent two days ago. Not sure why it is posting now.
I've had the same thing where my posts from 2-3 days ago have reposted
MULTIPLE times.
think comparing the numbers - the fact is that SpamAssassin is rather CPU
intensive.
Have you considered offloading Spamd to another machine?
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
-B
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
MET wrote:
| What is the command for pseudo root and how do I use it?
|
| ~ Matthew
|
man sudo
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
-BEGIN PGP
our server to Red Hat 8.0 which includes
SpamAssassin as well as the updated procmail. I'm running my Mail Server on
a dual P///-550 machine and w/ SpamAssassin as standalone, my load average
was also in the 1.5-2.0 range. With spamd, it sits between .2 and .6.
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE
hange it to something else, but size 8
or lower will keep it nice and "small". Now if I could only get 132 columns
at the console w/o having to use a framebuffer resolution, I'd be really
happy.
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, I
No - you need to grab the source (or source RPM) and build it for Red Hat
8.0 (not as important w/ the GLX module, but very important w/ the Kernel
module).
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp
ld) for i686
under RH 7.3. Will "copy" the binary RPMS, rebuild machine for RH 8.0, and
then do the same. Didn't realize compiling the entire Red Hat tree
was such a time consuming process :-)
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (fro
inux out of the
picture. Granted this is a pricey (read to $) solution.
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
--
redhat-list mailing list
unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?
n the interest of
reminding those who offend would be in order.
Sorry for the confusion,
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
--
redhat-list mailing list
unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=unsubscribe
https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list
27;re getting 386 code with 686
optimizations (if I'm reading the man pages correctly). For most of us,
that's probably good 'nuff. Red Hat has built specific i686 packages for
those libraries that benefit most from the changes. For 8.0, that includes
the kernels, glibc, and openssl
d deal with it personally.
Thanks,
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
- Original Message -
From: "Joel Webb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
dmail -t -i"
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
- Original Message -
From: "Joel Webb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, N
orld of "reformatters and reinstallers when
something just doesn't work quite right" admins)
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
--
redhat-list mailing list
unsubscribe mailto
Mike Burger asked:
> Silly question time...why not just install teh PHP rpms?
>
Because the default RPMs don't have mhash support compiled in. Why is that?
Because Red Hat doesn't ship with libmhash - can't link to something they
don't include.
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE
quot; machine under RH 7.3 so I can build an
updated i686 tree for that release as well (if I get the time).
Glad it worked for you, sorry for the novel!
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medat
ts BEFORE the network is brought
up - so you're good to go.
in /etc/rc.d/rc3.d you have the following:
S08iptables
S10network
That brings up iptables first :-)
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com
was copied form backup cdrom Thanks in advance Hernan
Does it have r-x permission for the user running it (i.e. root)?
Do you have the magic header? i.e. #!/bin/bash or #!/usr/bin/perl5 (examples
only) ?
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc
. Use whichever your comfortable with,
though understand that IPTABLES is much more powerful.
Hope this (vaguely) answers the question.
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
-BEGIN PGP SI
inux-gnu (which points to i386)
It's tempting to try this on an older system to see if there's a noticable
performance increase. If anyone else does/has - post the performance
increases to the list - many of us would like to know if it's worth the effort.
Hope this helps,
- -Rick
- --
ou
didn't just reinvent Red Hat's wheel :-)
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Public Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.2.1 (MingW32)
Comment: Signed or encpryted f
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Rigler, S C (Steve) wrote:
| So I submit this way:
|
| sh-2.05b$ rpm -q redhat-release
| redhat-release-8.0-8
Of course - that only works if some joker didn't uninstall that RPM :-)
- -Rick
- --
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linu
On Tue, 2002-11-19 at 06:33, Brunner, Brian T. wrote:
> uname -a
>
> man uname
This shows the kernel version, but not the distribution version.
/etc/redhat-release usually contains what he wants to know - simply cat that.
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED] (from home)
ny of us here.
HTH,
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED] (from home)
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
--
redhat-list mailing list
unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=unsubscribe
https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list
're set.
Alternatively, rerun xconfigurator - however this may change other
settings which may be undesirable in the end. It is, however, "easier".
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED] (from home)
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.c
nd send a message to the original user that the email has
> been intercepted
>
> Tasks i & ii would be ok
>
Check out Anomy Sanitizer at http://mailtools.anomy.net/ - Allows the
inclusion of a virus scanner as well. It will satisfy req's 1 and 2.
-Rick
--
Rick
, and I
> will try a gcc 3.2 kernel out, and see.
> js
You may want to consider grabbing 2.4.20-rc2 which contains the patch to
the recently discovered DoS vulnerability - otherwise try the stock Red
Hat 2.4.18-18.8.0 kernels for now which also contains the patch.
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [E
Uninstall the RPM's w/ rpm -e - there's a script that will remove the
entries when the rpm is uninstalled.
If you're using custom kernels, then use vi or pico or something like that
to make the changes.
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Med
No problems for me yet on an RH 7.3 athlon 2.4.18-18 (or 17) kernel or on
8.0 on the same kernel versions. One is an Ultra/100 (7.3) and the other is
an Ultra/66 (8.0) controller.
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https
If the logic below is correct - the reason the spamassassin rule works is
because you're not writing to a spool, but filtering (piping) to a program.
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.co
e
>
rpm -e
For instance (RH 8.0)
First rpm -qa | grep kernel to get a list of all kernel packages installed.
rpm -e kernel-2.4.18-17.8.0
rpm -e kernel-2.4.18-14
Add lines for source, doc, smp, etc. if it applies.
Keep only the latest version if you're sure the previous ones work ok
rocmailrc properly calls it, applies the spam scores, and then injects
> the message back.
>
> None of the pure procmail recipes have any effect.
I'm going on a limb here - but aren't folder specific recipes only
appropriate in /home//.procmailrc? Otherwise ~/mail/spam would need to
Wolfgang Pfeiffer wrote:
> .. already tried this?
>
> :0:
> * ^Subject:.*Test.*
> spam
The trailing .* is unnecessary since procmail automatically assumes .* after
your regex string.
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
Any Dmesg dumps or notable entries in /var/log/messages?
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
- Original Message -
From: "SarahTF" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMA
ing "DROPPRIVS=yes"
Not relevant to your search, but why assign this later and not at the top of
your recipe? Spamassassin loves to be the user so it can process user base
rules as well.
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
--
redhat-list mailing list
unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=unsubscribe
https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list
r /16 is the size
of a class B block. RFC1918 states that the 172.16.0.0/12 "block is a set of
16 contiguous class B network numbers".
Hope this clarifies.
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc. (from home)
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/r
FYI: The procmail FAQ states that it's case *insensitive* by default.
-Rick
--
Rick Johnson, RHCE - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux/WAN Administrator - Medata, Inc.
PGP Key: https://mail.medata.com/pgp/rjohnson.asc
--
redhat-list mailing list
unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=unsubsc
101 - 197 of 197 matches
Mail list logo