John Covici wrote:
> Hi. I have to convert my mailman2 to mailman3 because of the python
> business. I installed the appropriate packages, but their
> documentation as to how to set it up and upgrade mailman2 is quite
> inscrutible -- also it assumes ubunto and some strange python things
> such
Hi. I have to convert my mailman2 to mailman3 because of the python
business. I installed the appropriate packages, but their
documentation as to how to set it up and upgrade mailman2 is quite
inscrutible -- also it assumes ubunto and some strange python things
such as installing in a virtual
On 11/03/2021 19:39, Alexander Puchmayr wrote:
Only one of the two SSDs is attached at the same time to the system, the other
one is disconnected. One contains a gentoo installation (just updated
yesterday), the other one an Ubuntu LTS 20.04. This allows dual-.boot by
switching connection
On 3/11/21 12:39 PM, Alexander Puchmayr wrote:
Hi there,
Hi,
I have a weird harddisk detection problem which rises the questio:
what does the gentoo-kernel make differently than the ubuntu kernel?
Probably multiple things. They probably have configurations that are at
least slightly
On Thu, Mar 11, 2021 at 12:39 PM Alexander Puchmayr <
alexander.puchm...@linznet.at> wrote:
>
> Hi there,
>
> I have a weird harddisk detection problem which rises the questio: what
does
> the gentoo-kernel make differently than the ubuntu kernel?
>
> The system in question has 2 identical SSDs
Hi there,
I have a weird harddisk detection problem which rises the questio: what does
the gentoo-kernel make differently than the ubuntu kernel?
The system in question has 2 identical SSDs (Kingston SV300S3 60GB) and two
identical HDDs (older Maxtor7V300F0 300GB) , all connected to SATA/AHCI
On 3/11/21 6:38 AM, Michael wrote:
The syntax is:
IP_address canonical_hostname [aliases...]
The man page for hosts has the following to say:
DESCRIPTION
This manual page describes the format of the /etc/hosts file.
This file is a simple text file that associates IP addresses with
On 3/11/21 6:38 AM, Michael wrote:
I'm losing my thread in this ... thread, but what I'm trying to say
is the AD/ DC and Kerberos way of processing the /etc/hosts entries,
when an /etc/hosts file is used, is different to your run of the mill
Linux box and server.
I disagree.
First, AD/DC ~
On Wednesday, 10 March 2021 16:58:47 GMT Grant Taylor wrote:
> On 3/10/21 8:25 AM, Michael wrote:
> > I think this is relevant to DNS resolution of/with domain controllers
> > and may depend on the AD/DC topology.
>
> I disagree. Pure Linux in a MIT / Heimdal Kerberos environment has the
> same
On 10/03/21 18:37, Grant Taylor wrote:
> ACK
>
> By default, Kerberos includes IP restrictions in tickets. It chooses
> the IP based on what the system returns. So if the system returns
> 127.0.0.1 (or ::1) for the hostname, any tickets that use that IP will
> be non-viable / useless anywhere
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