There is still a major issue here which remains unresolved. All
newbies need to be given a jumpstart ... unlike Win  from where
most people migrate from, Linux definitely has a fair amount of
"sysadmining" effort, even for a single user box.

To suggest to people the "proper" way of doing such  things the
need for requisite info in a consise form needs to be available
in some form somewhere ... for newcomers to be pointed to.

Many of us on the list have been doing things  manually. Some a
bit better off because they have also tasted Linuxconf ( surely
having learnt from that experience).

I have just about "seen" linuxconf. I had RH-5.2  installed for
a short while in 1999, and went back to Slack and deb. What put
me off with Linuxconf was the amount of things it meddled with,
which Slack guys would hate.  I promptly did a rpm -e (IIRC) on 
it ... and went on with my Slack admin habits in RH !!

However, what I forget were the things it dealt with in a chro-
nological order. Surely, as a group we can chip in our bits and
have the info at one place provided, the  full  Linuxconf menus
are known. There has never been Linuxconf on Slack, and  I just
cant recollect the whole list which I probably  saw a few times
only two years ago.

If there is sufficient response, why don't we put our own bits
together and make a viable substitute ? We need:

a) List of all things done by Linuxconf
b) For most things short docs. A few, like the one below can be
   covered in LOST snippets itself.
c) Few things like sendmail, ppp or wvdial may need scripts ...
   which may be available with many of us, or we can write such
   things de novo ...
d) A page to put them all up (least of the bothers)
  
Though I don't know Linuxconf itself, but surely can contribute
in several areas ...

Are there more voices for the cause ... as an LIH venture ?

Bish

On Thu, Oct 18, 2001 at 07:33:11PM +0530, Rashik Kathuria wrote:
> Here I agree with you. But like I wrote earlier, lexicon has 
> evolved and is better now. BUT as I said earlier the BEST is 
> change things by hand  or scripts  you have written yourself 
> and can trust.
> 
> +++ Rashik Kathuria [linux-india] <18/10/01 18:15 +0530>:
> > Out of interest I would like to  know as  to what security 
> > hazards can linuxconf cause.
> 
> Open relay in sendmail, for starters
> Then again it is noted for screwing up any modifications you 
> make by hand to any config file ...
> 
> I've had enough bad  experiences with linuxconf - configured 
> sendmail boxes being broken into to spam my users that I'm a 
> bit allergic to it :)
> 


--
:
####[ Linux One Stanza Tip (LOST) ]###########################

Sub : Sysadmin utils (hostname)                      LOST #106

To change the host name of your machine, as root edit the file
/etc/hostname. Alternatively, use the 'hostname' program. "man
hostname" for details ... 

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