On Sat, Feb 02, 2002 at 07:15:30PM -0800, nbs wrote:
I found some old ZIP disks I had backed up some of my websites on,
and thought I'd poke around and see what I had.
Unfortunately, when I went to use my drive (an older, PPA-style 100MB drive),
I was faced with the following:
[snip]
IIRC,
On Mon, Feb 18, 2002 at 03:19:43AM -0800, nbs wrote:
I'm trying to set up remote access to the PC on my LAN which has the
Rio MP3 player connected to it. Unfortunately, the command which talks
to it, rio, requires root access.
As an exercise in safety, I'd like to set up password-less
On Thu, Feb 21, 2002 at 07:39:48PM -0800, Ryan wrote:
Does anyone know what mail servers support [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] style alaising?
Sendmail has an amazingly flexible re-writing
capability, great documentation, and a very
easy to use (and helpful!) re-writing debug
On Wed, Feb 27, 2002 at 10:03:22AM -0800, ME wrote:
snip
$ gcc gcc -funroll-all-loops -S sample.c
When I inspect the above, I see loops included.
-12(%ebp) (3 32-bit offset from %ebp) is set to 5 and -4(%ebp) is incl
until it is cmpl to be no longer less than -12(%ebp).
Labels even show
On Thu, Mar 14, 2002 at 11:14:08PM -0800, Kevin Dawson wrote:
- Can you run md5sum `which gzip` `which gunzip`?
Perhaps someone running your version of Redhat can verify your
executables are not corrupted.
Ocae 9777 548d 5dcb 6179 5599 6f51 3525
On a freshly d/l'd and verified gzip
On Fri, Mar 15, 2002 at 07:42:59AM -0800, Charles Polisher wrote:
On Thu, Mar 14, 2002 at 11:14:08PM -0800, Kevin Dawson wrote:
- Can you run md5sum `which gzip` `which gunzip`?
Perhaps someone running your version of Redhat can verify your
executables are not corrupted.
Ocae
On Fri, Mar 15, 2002 at 08:03:22AM -0800, Peter Jay Salzman wrote:
begin Charles Polisher [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Thu, Mar 14, 2002 at 11:14:08PM -0800, Kevin Dawson wrote:
yeah, before i replied to this message, i checked what libraries gzip is
linked against -- it's just linked against
On Thu, Mar 21, 2002 at 11:28:48PM -0800, Richard S. Crawford wrote:
Tonight, in a desperate bid to free up some space on my hard drive, I went
ahead and created a new directory on my huge unused /u2 partition called
bin. Then I copied everything from /bin to /u2/bin. Then I deleted /bin
On Fri, Apr 26, 2002 at 12:35:05PM -0700, Peter Jay Salzman wrote:
the easiest way to set up wine is by using winex -- www.transgaming.com.
it costs 5 bucks, and they just released a new version of winex: 2.0.1.
once you get winex installed (deb or rpm format available) you can copy
your
On Fri, Apr 26, 2002 at 11:11:05PM -0700, Tom wrote:
Looked up port 177 (XDMCP) on google...
http://www.microimages.com/mix/xdmconfig.htm
I dunno about XDMCP, but a
tom@dilweed:~$ xhost +
access control disabled, clients can connect from any host
Will turn off access controls.
When
Peter Salzman wrote:
i built this system myself, so there is no warrantee, i'm afraid.
as for voiding the non-existant warrantee, i've already voided it. the
power supply is laying open on my table. :)
i'm going to fry's tomorrow to pick up a new fan *and* power supply. if
swapping
is
soaking up all your disk space. In your case,
cd /home
du -ks * |sort -nr
Be cautious about blowing away or truncating any
files or directories if you're not sure of their
function.
Happy hunting!
--
Charles Polisher
Amateurs built the ark. Professionals built the titanic
May 25,Shawn P. Neugebauer wrote:
Does anyone know a way to peek at the environment of a processes, e.g., a
daemon?
sure, cat /proc/PID/environ where PID is the process ID.
That's the best way for sure. Once in a while this is handy
too: ps ewww (note there's no hyphen in front of the
On Fri, Jun 14, 2002 at 06:58:38PM -0700, Micah Cowan wrote:
Peter Jay Salzman writes:
hey there,
every tutorial on gdb says compile with -g within the first few lines.
but what if you don't? or rather, what if you can't compile with -g?
but how do you inspect arguments,
Henry House wrote:
The macro is to be used for typesetting a cookbook; comparable usage suggests
that fractions should be not be written out in words but should change to
italics in italic text. (Keeping maths in roman in italic blocks is of course
the correct usage in the mathematical
Ryan wrote:
I should think visio can export to some sane format. I'll check at work
tomorrow
I seem to remember that Visio will export in Adobe Illustrator
format, which is actually PostScript under the hood. It
might be possible to walk Visio's internal data structures in
Ivfhny Onfvp and
On Sun, Dec 22, 2002 at 10:25:53AM -0800, Rod Roark wrote:
Suppose I have two DSL lines attached to my multi-homed
server. I can think of two different ways to handle the
DNS:
Two DSL lines to the same service address very
likely share space in the same conduit all the way
to the central
On Sun, Rod Roark wrote:
Indeed, service failure might not be mechanical at all, but
human error in managing the account (either on the part of
^
[1][2]
[1] Surely this is a typo? ITYM sub- or in-human.
[2] ITYM 'mangling'
Alwayys speel-check befor
On Thu, Jan 02, 2003 at 12:28:57AM -0800, Richard Crawford wrote:
Trying to get my system ready for upgrading to RH8, I decided to run rpm
--rebuilddb on my system. I got Segmentation fault.
What does this mean? How can I repair the fault?
--
Slainte,
Richard S. Crawford
Try: rm -f
Also see:
http://www.rpm.org/hintskinks/repairdb/
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On Thu, Jan 30, 2003 at 09:21:27PM -0800, Katie wrote:
OK, here's what I've got:
#!/bin/bash
qy | lynx https://secureweb.ucdavis.edu:443/cgi-auth/sendback?\
http://email.ucdavis.edu/news/news-succeed.html\
^^
Have you checked if ls is correctly reporting the file size?
Maybe du / df or some such would help confirm the fire is
actually small.
Find midnite commander, it has a Linux un-rm feature that
rocks. It might already be installed as mc, but you can also
find it at http://www.gnome.org/mc/
Michael J Wenk wrote:
Problem with mc on this problem was that it hung. I don't know why, but it
did hang.
mc to system library: hand over another block!
System library to disk driver: another block on the double!
Disk driver to IDE interface: read block xyz, I'll wait for it!
Disk drive to
Tim Riley wrote:
Peter Jay Salzman wrote:
if someone wants to do me a favor...
1. download bash_bindings.txt from
vh224401.truman.edu/~dbindner/mirror
2. source it (source bash_bindings.txt)
3. hit the up arrow key
4. make sure your last history item is pulled up
This
Peter Jay Salzman wrote:
does it work for anybody?
Not here.
SuSE does the right thing as-is; this is from /etc/inputrc :
$if mode=vi
set editing-mode vi
set keymap vi
$endif
and the environment has INPUTRC set to /etc/inputrc,
but that can be
Peter Jay Salzman wrote:
chuck,
is your libreadline 4.2 or 4.3?every 4.2 system i've tried, it
works.
it doesn't seem to work on 4.3.
I locate'd this file: /lib/libreadline.so.4.2
so I guess it's 4.2...
Could it be something to do with $TERM ? Mine's
set to xterm, but iirc sometimes
Peter Jay Salzman wrote:
begin Charles Polisher [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Peter Jay Salzman wrote:
chuck,
is your libreadline 4.2 or 4.3?every 4.2 system i've tried, it
works.
it doesn't seem to work on 4.3.
I locate'd this file: /lib/libreadline.so.4.2
so I guess it's
On Wed, Apr 02, 2003 at 06:15:18PM -0600, Jay Strauss wrote:
Nevermind about the colors, it seems to be working
But I'd still like to determine the fonts that are installed
Here's my list of font-related programs, most of
them are directly related to X. My fave: tkfont.
Most cryptic:
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