Go into your router and look at the arp table, find out the MAC address of
the machine and then trace it through your switch fabric until you find it
-- Jeff d'Ambly
Network Engineer
http://www.monster.com
Stay the patient course.
Of little worth is your ire.
Hello,
I need some help with the following messages that had been appeared in my
CacheFlow access log file.
200.xxx.xxx.xxxTCP_ERR_MISS/301 162 GET
http://www/scripts/..%%35c../winnt/system32/cmd.exe?/c+dir - DIRECT/- -
200.xxx.xxx.xxx TCP_ERR_MISS/301 162 GET
Hi,
I was wondering if this was normal. When you open Gnome Help Brower
using RedHat 7.1, and type ghelp:/root, or any other directory that is rwx
restricted under any other program, you can see the directory, as well as
any other that you may wish to see, or open any files that you wish to
On Wed, 19 Sep 2001, Dustin Puryear spewed into the ether:
I don't think that's true anymore. More and more people are jumping on
the Linux bandwagon the same way people jumped on the NT bandwagon. I
definately feel that the average competence level for Linux
administrators is going to
Dear Mr Durga Prasad,
Give a try here,
http://www.thawte.com/certs/personal/contents.html
Thawte Certification offers free personal certificates for signing and
encrypting e-mail, these certificates are recognized and trusted by the
majority of mail clients in use today on the Internet.
Looks like a roving profile is set. That directory structure is one I
usually see in the user's profile directory. Perhaps (I'm not fully up to
speed with win2k yet) the profile data is being stored in the documents and
settings dir now.
HTH
-Original Message-
From: Birl [mailto:[EMAIL
I will admit to be biased towards NetBSD and OpenBSD code, but then
again who isn't biased toward something :-).
1.) For OpenBSD you'll look at the http://www.openbsd.org/security for
info on vuln and links to patches. Obviously, OpenBSD went through a
code audit to make the packages more
On 20 Sep 01, at 10:11, Birl wrote:
Does anyone know how this folder may have been created?
These folders will be created for every user who logs on locally (which
might be at the console or as a service)
Computername$ is the hidden account for the machine used when logging on at
the domain
Thanks everone for your help.
I think I will be trying out Ethereal. It looks real good.
Quick question: Does anyone have a website that lists a few standard, or
newbie filters?
This would really help.
Thanks again
Jim
- Original Message -
From: Jim Gaudet, MCSE [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To:
Hello Avishay,
Here it is right to the point.
I'm going to install one of the *bsd's for the first time. I have
experience with *nix like, OS's and of course security.
Great!!! *BSD's are cool too, and since you have experience with security I
would have to suggest installing OpenBSD
I am looking fo ra way to keep the security tight and that way people
will have no way to link to my images from auction sites.
I think it may be done using an ISAPI filter but not really sure where
to look. I have tried searches for hotlink Remote-Linking.
Any help is greatly appreciated.
I run FreeBSD almost exclusively these days and have found it very easy to
use. Additionally, there are lots of resources for it specifically.
1) If you hit daemonnews.org, they will happily sell you CDs for the brand
new 4.4 release. Or you can download the iso for the release off of
12 matches
Mail list logo