matters worse?
(Is it safe to reboot at this point, or should I drop back to glibc 2.0?)
Please Cc: me on replies because I'm not subscribed to this list.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU is a terrible
Greg Wooledge ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Shortly after installing the new glibc 2.1 packages, I noticed that
init had started to run away:
(Is it safe to reboot at this point, or should I drop back to glibc 2.0?)
Well, my computer decided the matter for me. About half an hour after
writing
This is in response to a very old message on debian-user which I saw
while browsing the mailing list archives.
I've got IP masq working on a Debian system with kernel 2.1.132 at
home. I think you're missing the obligatory echo for the 2.1.x
kernels to turn on IP forwarding. I'm not at home
This is in response to a fairly old message on debian-user.
I run qmail at home on a Debian system which is connected via dialup
PPP (using diald) with a dynamic IP address. I'm not at home right
now, so if you need to see exact copies of config files, let me know
and I can look them up.
First
The necessary package for telling Debian that you've got a locally
built mail-transport-agent installed is equivs. I don't know whether
the hamm version will work right or not... several months back, during
either hamm or slink upgrading, my equivs suddenly stopped working; I
filed a bug report,
(Function not
implemented)
(or, after upgrading strace:)
nfsservctl(0x1, 0xb25c, 0) = -1 ENOSYS (Function not implemented)
I'm going to try knfs next
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU
the kernel, and installing
the Debian knfs package (replacing nfs-server), it finally worked! :-)
The NFS-HOWTO document is dated 1997. It doesn't cover *any* of this.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU
( 1.3.0). The
new slang1 package has a version number of 1.3.8-2 or so.
As far as I know, you should *not* upgrade slang1 at this time.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU is a terrible thing to waste.
http
that are in the
current potato.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU is a terrible thing to waste.
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
matches).
Passing multiple files at a time to egrep is also more efficient --
the -exec version may be significantly slower.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU is a terrible thing to waste.
http
/init.d/xntp3. The (x)ntpd daemon itself won't cause any problems --
it will run patiently in the background, even if the time servers are
not reachable.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU is a terrible thing
.
In the future, the /etc/rc6.d/SXX scripts MIGHT be moved to
/etc/rc6.d/K1XX for clearity.
I hope so.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU is a terrible thing to waste.
http://www.kellnet.com
Steve George ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Any pointers to info along these lines would be great - atm I've had to giveup
mutt for Netscape mailer :-(
Mutt can rewrite the From: header for you.
In my ~/.muttrc (sort of) I have this:
my_hdr From: Greg Wooledge [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I don't use
.d and /etc/rc6.d.
You should put that one back to S50hwclock.sh.
(Also note that, as someone else pointed out, the others are correctly
named as well, even though they don't appear to be.)
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED
proxy. With any luck, squid will save the offending files
on disk (check the cache logs).
I can't give any detailed help here, though -- I only use realplayer on
rare occasions. Good luck.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED
audio driver Copyright (C) by Hannu Savolainen 1993-1996
SB 4.16 detected OK (220)
SB16: Bad or missing 16 bit DMA channel
But I'm definitely getting 16-bit stereo output.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because
-freely.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU is a terrible thing to waste.
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpM7PzJ2RwNw.pgp
Description: PGP signature
internally by the kernel.
The 'c' in the first column means that this is a character device file
(as opposed to a 'b'lock device file).
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU is a terrible thing to waste.
http
as
specified in /etc/syslog.conf. (You will see several lines beginning
with mail which specifies what to do with log messages received from
programs which use the mail facility for their output.)
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED
://http.us.debian.org/debian/dists/unstable/main/binary-i386/base/ae_962-25.1.deb'
ae_962-25.1_i386.deb 35360 59df7b78823f8304e7da3e3915ef6f7b
(Ugly, but functional.)
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU
emphasize this strongly enough. If you have to set your From:
header for any reason, you should make the envelope sender match.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU is a terrible thing to waste.
http
locally onto a running Linux
system, this shouldn't be an issue. If you're transferring the files
with FTP, make sure you're doing it in binary (image) mode.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU is a terrible
Zimmerman [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: test
test
.
quit
Then see what the message looks like.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU is a terrible thing to waste.
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge
you can do to force them.
It's better to run the application *inside* gdb -- then if it segfaults,
you can do bt or where to get a stack trace, and mail it off to
whoever wants to see it (the program's maintainer, etc.).
$ gdb foo
...
(gdb) run arg1 arg2 ...
... seg fault ...
(gdb) bt
--
Greg
Pavilion? If so, go into the BIOS (I think it's F1 when
the HP logo comes up...), and find the part that shows your installed
operating system. It may have choices like Win95, Win98, Other.
Select Other.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL
sound to work on it
But the parts of it I *do* use work just fine -- the serial port (external
modem), the hard drive, the CPU, and the network card I put in it
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU
againg from
zero. Please help.
If you have no unallocated drive space, then you'll have to create a
swap file instead of a swap partition.
man mkswap
man swapon
man fstab
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU
greg greg4 Oct 17 16:54 foo
That's over knfs, with a patched 2.2.12 kernel on the server.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU is a terrible thing to waste.
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge
is great,
but it's kind of obsolete (*nobody's* using a.out any more), so it's
hard to find these days. I used google and managed to turn up a copy
at http://www.linuxhq.com/HOWTO/ELF-HOWTO.html.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED
and
telling it to point to a string constant (which is in read-only memory).
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU is a terrible thing to waste.
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
this in ~/.bashrc if it works; and make sure you have source ~/.bashrc
or . ~/.bashrc in your ~/.bash_profile or ~/.profile. I will *never*
understand why login bash shells do not read ~/.bashrc by default)
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL
package
to work; I found it much better to configure IP masquerading by hand.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU is a terrible thing to waste.
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
and
run the tic as root.
You may want to read /usr/doc/xterm/README.Debian as well, even if you
aren't using xterm.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU is a terrible thing to waste.
http://www.kellnet.com
kernel.
Also see the Ethernet HOWTO.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU is a terrible thing to waste.
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpt9NIU3g69H.pgp
Description: PGP signature
that (possibly a different date), something
is wrong.
A quick glance at /dev/MAKEDEV makes me think that you can recreate this
with '/dev/MAKEDEV std' if necessary. But you may want to double-check
that before running it.
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http
this command:
echo 1 /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
Unfortunately, I don't have any references for additional reading. :-(
--
Greg Wooledge| Distributed.NET http://www.distributed.net/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | because a CPU is a terrible thing to waste.
http
the routes for you
when you configure your network interfaces. Linux 2.0.x does not, so you
have to add the routes manually.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge
directly. But this will only work if the printers have IP addresses...
which may not be the case (depending on how Netware-centric your printer
administrators are).
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http
sendmail='/usr/sbin/sendmail -oem -oi -f [EMAIL PROTECTED]'
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpPbCmIAhpjA.pgp
Description: PGP signature
sure you understand the backquotes too.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgp6N3Q9rn0we.pgp
Description: PGP signature
PROTECTED]|[EMAIL
PROTECTED]|[EMAIL PROTECTED])$
(Those 4 addresses are all the possible addresses which end up in my
mailbox on my home system. Of course the last two won't work for anyone
on the Internet -- they're just for my LAN.)
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs
)
[ $GMT = -u ] GMT=--utc
hwclock --systohc $GMT
if [ $VERBOSE != no ]
then
echo CMOS clock updated to `date`.
fi
;;
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs
of /dev/null.)
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpIkwcP8xvv7.pgp
Description: PGP signature
this in an emergency!
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpAvFpnPEAbt.pgp
Description: PGP signature
device files -- /dev/tty1, /dev/tty2, etc.
As root, try something like this:
echo hello, world /dev/tty6
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpTj08rT5p3t.pgp
Description
for the current unstable release. Potato has some packages
that don't work quite right yet, but libc6 is not one of them.)
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge
.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpo8BqCdOSiU.pgp
Description: PGP signature
but not the development packages.
Update libc6-dev, libncurses4-dev, etc.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpK2aelEEQZK.pgp
Description: PGP signature
Art Lemasters ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
/etc/resolve.conf
Should be `/etc/resolv.conf'.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgp52KUvPIhOT.pgp
Description: PGP signature
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
2. When I login as any user other than root, the system rejects
me with the error msg:
System bootup in progress -- please wait
rm /etc/nologin
Then try to find out why the nologin file was left lying around
--
Greg Wooledge
Olaf Conradi ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Use of implicit split to @_ is deprecated at ./dialog.pl line 34.
$message_len = split(/^/, $message);# -- line 34
Split normally returns an array, not a scalar... unless I'm missing something.
(I'm no perl guru.)
--
Greg Wooledge
127
touch /etc/init.d/ntpdate
Then retry your installation.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpL7YVXmqyjQ.pgp
Description: PGP signature
the glibc Version.
That worked!
Right, glibc2 is libc6.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpgXOmWvVgzI.pgp
Description: PGP signature
that as a very last resort.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpHzF6m0Cxdu.pgp
Description: PGP signature
you can actually reach the Internet
when ntpdate starts up
Finally, make sure you consult local files first during name resolution.
In /etc/nsswitch.conf, you should have:
hosts: files dns
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED
(either client or server),
make sure you upgrade to the potato version of the DHCP packages before
rebooting with the 2.2 kernel, and you should be fine.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http
way to do it(TM).)
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgplRGpeAkDWC.pgp
Description: PGP signature
Emulate3Buttons turned on in your XF86Config file, and then use both
buttons together to simulate the middle mouse button you're lacking.
If you have a three-button mouse, just use the middle button to paste
whatever is highlighted.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL
if you can *talk to* salmon.math.tcd.ie or
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgp7HbCQgXJlK.pgp
Description: PGP signature
); you'd be better off buying a better
graphics card if that's at all possible -- you'd not only save money,
but you'd get better performance.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge
Shaul Karl ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
6 elif [ ! -d $HOME/.fvwm -a ! -e '$HOME/.fvwm.nowarn ]
Notice the quotes on this line. There's a single-quote before the second
$HOME which should be a double quote.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL
problems
with either of these.
The 2.2.1[23] kernel makefiles automatically include the
-fno-strict-aliasing option to gcc, which is the only Linux/gcc problem
that I'm aware of. (And gcc 2.95.2(?) now uses no-strict-aliasing by
default anyway.)
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs
exceed a certain amount of CPU time,
but either of these carries severe drawbacks in many situations.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpyomGYm76GL.pgp
Description: PGP
option to look for is CONFIG_PSMOUSE. I can't remember
what it's called in menuconfig.
Then use /dev/psaux for your mouse device.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge
the gpm in it console him?
After editing /etc/gpm.conf, run this:
/etc/init.d/gpm restart
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpicWnAqNKJE.pgp
Description: PGP signature
You need to have libX11.so as a symbolic link to the appropriate shared
library. Normally you do this by installing the xlib6g-dev package.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com
2.1 Linux / 2.2.9 / qmail -
I had some trouble with 2.2.9. You should probably upgrade to 2.2.10
(which has a good reputation) or 2.2.13 (the latest stable kernel).
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http
inadvertant firewall problem?
That's possible. Are you using ipfwadm or ipchains or ipmasq? If so,
include relevant configuration scripts.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge
completely sound.
If you have any ipfwadm or ipchains commands, or if you have installed
the ipmasq package, try getting rid of them. (I had nothing but problems
with the slink ipmasq package) Otherwise, you may have to talk with
your ISP and see if they can help.
--
Greg Wooledge
to connect to remote host: Connection refused
That's because ntp uses UDP, not TCP. Telnet is a TCP/IP application.
If you want to connect to a UDP port, look into netcat.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http
, or asking there.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpfYeS8JPDIn.pgp
Description: PGP signature
didn't make an error
in your transcription, /user should probably be /usr.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpeuaBjdadlA.pgp
Description: PGP signature
Neil Booth ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
ldconfig: warning: can't open /usr/lib/libslang.so (No such file or
directory), skipping
ldconfig: warning: can't open /usr/lib/libslang.so (No such file or
directory), skipping
Update the slang1-dev package.
--
Greg Wooledge
', which will give you a data.tar.gz file.
You can extract that with gzip and tar (check their man pages).
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpVq4SaJZfyX.pgp
Description: PGP
Pann McCuaig ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
What do you call discovering a weak password using the tools created
for that purpose?
It is most certainly not decryption. We usually call it cracking,
or more specifically, brute-force cracking.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs
a CD set)
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpGul7o42Vs1.pgp
Description: PGP signature
.*, but
this worked for the set of kernels I was using at the time)
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpIjzRH1EYh9.pgp
Description: PGP signature
, replacing deb with deb-src.
deb http://http.us.debian.org/debian potato main contrib non-free
deb-src http://http.us.debian.org/debian potato main contrib non-free
To use it, just apt-get source mutt or whatever.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpeJx9sH7WKK.pgp
Description: PGP signature
, but the install script for it
complains that it wants to remove a file used by the hostname package.
After downloading the new nis package, install it with this command:
dpkg -i --force-overwrite nis_*.deb
After that, you should be fine.
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs
tf ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
can someone put me out of my misery and tell me the format for date?
date --help | head
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge
Pann McCuaig ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
On Wed, Nov 03, 1999 at 22:24, Greg Wooledge wrote:
Pann McCuaig ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
What do you call discovering a weak password using the tools created
for that purpose?
It is most certainly not decryption. We usually call it cracking
'?) class, either in /etc/sendmail.cf or in some
auxiliary file such as /etc/sendmail.cw (if sendmail.cf points to that).
(I normally use qmail, so I can't remember whether it's 'Cw' or 'CW')
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED
libglib1.2-dev
as well).
--
Greg Wooledge| Truth belongs to everybody.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | Red Hot Chili Peppers,
http://www.kellnet.com/wooledge/ |
pgpSJNratadsE.pgp
Description: PGP signature
be capable of delivering
mail to its final destination. (The drawback is that if a message can't
be delivered immediately, it will sit in a queue on your local system.
If you're not permanently connected to the Internet, you would have to
account for this -- there are several methods.)
--
Greg
On Tue, Aug 09, 2016 at 09:14:56AM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 08, 2016 at 11:14:36AM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > It appears that no_root_squash is being ignored.
Opened bug #833925. :(
On Tue, Aug 09, 2016 at 08:05:41PM -0400, Maureen L Thomas wrote:
> It starts to boot up and goes through all of the normal boot processes
> and then stales just before the final screen to sign on. All I get is
> the - flashing in the upper left hand corner. The only message I get is
> i8042
On Wed, Aug 10, 2016 at 05:17:32PM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> Any suggestions on what I can try to change? Could you post your jessie
> server's /etc/exports and /etc/default/nfs-kernel-server configs, or at
> least the parts relevant to the working no_root_squash mount? And an
On Thu, Aug 11, 2016 at 05:43:12PM +0200, Ulf Volmer wrote:
> /etc/exports is
>
> /export/backup-n40l bob.clients(rw,no_subtree_check)
> virt(rw,no_root_squash,no_subtree_check)
I changed my /etc/exports from what I had to:
/home arc1(ro,no_root_squash,sync,no_subtree_check)
Ran
On Thu, Aug 11, 2016 at 07:29:33PM -0400, Maureen L Thomas wrote:
> The computer is the acer the screen I use with it is the hp w2007
In any discussion about video drivers, or X failing to start, the
primary piece of information you need in order to make any progress
on the problem at all is
I did some web surfing when this thread was posted, to try to track
down *which kernel versions* are affected by this TCP security flaw.
I haven't seen this information posted yet.
http://www.cs.ucr.edu/~zhiyunq/pub/sec16_TCP_pure_offpath.pdf says:
"The feature is outlined in RFC 5961, which is
On Fri, Aug 12, 2016 at 05:19:21PM +0200, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Why then is the sysctl present in the current Wheezy's 3.2 kernel ?
>
> The patches which introduced the flawed feature were backported in
> upstream 3.2.37 kernel.
>
>
On Wed, Aug 10, 2016 at 11:01:41PM +0200, Erwan David wrote:
> Le 10/08/2016 à 22:38, Ulf Volmer a écrit :
> >> Is there ANYONE using NFS with no_root_squash on jessie amd64 successfully?
> >> If so, please tell me how you did it!
> > NFS run here with jessie amd64 and no_root_squash fine w/o any
I am trying to backup files from one server, using another server
which has a tape drive attached. I've done this many times before.
The problem is, *this* time, root on the NFS client can't read the files
on the NFS server. It appears that no_root_squash is being ignored.
I have two Debian
On Mon, Aug 08, 2016 at 11:14:36AM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> It appears that no_root_squash is being ignored.
>
> 1) NFS server: svr4 (jessie)
>
> /home -no_subtree_check arc1(ro,no_root_squash,sync)
Nobody? :(
Additional information:
* It's not limited t
On Fri, Aug 12, 2016 at 10:49:59PM -0400, Stefan Monnier wrote:
> I'm looking for a decentralized instant message system (e.g. XMPP, SIP,
> ...) where I can be sure that I receive all messages, even if I'm not
> connected when the message is sent [ Obviously, I'll only receive them
> when I'm back
On Wed, Aug 17, 2016 at 02:32:32AM -0300, Beco wrote:
> This alias caused bash to crash:
>
> http://sprunge.us/PMhe
Please don't use paste sites when communicating with a mailing list.
This isn't IRC. Just include all of the necessary information in your
email.
> The alias is now corrected to
On Wed, Aug 17, 2016 at 09:53:36AM -0400, Gene Heskett wrote:
> On Wednesday 17 August 2016 09:12:40 Brian wrote:
> > You would advise using gparted to shrink an XFS partition in spite of
> >
> > http://xfs.org/index.php/XFS_FAQ#Q:_Is_there_a_way_to_make_a_XFS_files
> >ystem_larger_or_smaller.3F
On Thu, Feb 02, 2017 at 05:59:57PM +, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> [redacted]'s rudeness and unpleasantness to anyone and everyone who tries to
> help
> him does get a bit wearing.
Speaking of which, I'll share the solution I came up with to implement
a mailing list killfile (ignore list), but I
On Wed, Feb 08, 2017 at 02:08:13PM -0300, Daniel Bareiro wrote:
> Thanks for sharing the news. These days I was looking for information on
> whether Stretch was already in full freeze since the scheduled date was
> last Sunday. But I had not found anything about it. I even planned to
> ask on this
1 - 100 of 3767 matches
Mail list logo