Linux-Misc Digest #215, Volume #20 Sat, 15 May 99 12:13:09 EDT
Contents:
Applixware & Glibc 2.1 fix (Phillip Deackes)
xdm and OBEYSESS_DISPLAY error (please help) (EYRAUD)
Re: ghostscript printing (Peter Wyzlic)
128 -bit SSL (Ralph Blach)
Re: information on "how to make a bootable linux cdrom"... or? (Rod Smith)
Re: Registry in Linux ??? (Andrew Chung)
Re: mastering RH CDs (Rod Smith)
Re: Libraries Needed? (Andrew Chung)
Re: creating redhat 6.0 cd (Rod Smith)
Re: silly windows (Andrew Chung)
Re: 128 -bit SSL (Chris Nandor)
Announce: Looking for Linux Jobs and Resumes (ResumesYES)
Re: 128 -bit SSL ("Robert C. Paulsen, Jr.")
Re: Programming crashes my system ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: acroread failure on RH 6.0 (Peter Englmaier)
Re: Registry in Linux ??? ("Thomas Scholz")
FIXED(?): Staroffice/glibc problem (Peter Englmaier)
Re: CD-R as backup device (Cees de Groot)
Re: USB Support (Christopher B. Browne)
2.2.1 Kernel Compiling Problems, some help please? ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Terminator 128/3D does not work ("Karl Lewalter")
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Phillip Deackes)
Crossposted-To: uk.comp.os.linux
Subject: Applixware & Glibc 2.1 fix
Date: Sat, 15 May 1999 12:11:19 GMT
Debian users who use Applixware and have had problems with glibc 2.1 on
your system might like to know that the fix is as follows:
Add this line to your ~/axhome/ax_prof (mine is ax_prof4) file:
axGFSName:tcp/host:7001
Replace 'host' with your machine's hostname.
The fix makes the previous fix of adding a spurious directory to the
config file in /opt/applix/axdata/fontmetrics/gallium/fs/ unnecessary.
Hope this helps someone.
--
Phillip Deackes
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Debian Linux (Potato)
------------------------------
From: EYRAUD <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: xdm and OBEYSESS_DISPLAY error (please help)
Date: Sat, 15 May 1999 13:54:37 +0200
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hello,
Who can explain me what happen in my system :
When connecting from a PC under Xterminal emulation to my LINUX server,
logins attempts are rejected.
xdm log (under debugging mode) says :
Display exited with OBEYSESS_DISPLAY
What does it means ?
Is there a FAQ about this ?
Thanks per advance
Laurent
:-) [EMAIL PROTECTED] :-)
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Peter Wyzlic)
Subject: Re: ghostscript printing
Date: 15 May 1999 12:32:24 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Fri, 14 May 1999 11:35:54 -0600, Frans A. van der Hoorn
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I want to use the pdfwrite driver that comes with ghostscript to
>print postscript files to pdf files. What is the command line
>that i should be using?
gs -dNOPAUSE -sDEVICE=pdfwrite -sOutputFile=something.pdf \
something.ps -c quit
(to be written on one line)
Otherwise use ps2pdf ;)
Peter
------------------------------
From: Ralph Blach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: netscape.public.mozilla.crypto,netscape.public.mozilla.general
Subject: 128 -bit SSL
Date: Sat, 15 May 1999 09:09:08 -0400
I am using Linux with netscape 4.07. I tried to connect to a website
and I got the message
This Server requires 128 -bit SSL. Please contact your Local LAN
administrator to obtain US-only version
of this browser. Do not e-mail the Webmaster!
Where do I get this software for Linux?
Thanks
--
Ralph "Chip" Blach
KF4WBK
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Rod Smith)
Subject: Re: information on "how to make a bootable linux cdrom"... or?
Date: Sat, 15 May 1999 14:01:53 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[Posted and mailed]
In article <7hdv6o$qat$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
TedC <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> i am looking for information on creating bootable linux cdroms. i am using
> EasyCD Creator under windows 95. any information will be appreciated...
Are you talking about a bootable install CD, or some sort of custom
installation that runs from off of a CD? You'd need very different
procedures for both of those situations.
If you want to create a Red Hat install CD, check my web page:
http://www.channel1.com/users/rodsmith/rhjol.html
There's not a whole lot there about making the CDs bootable, because IMHO
this is a very fluffy feature that's overemphasized in most cases, though
it is vital in a few situations. Judging from the posts I've seen on the
topic, most people who try to create a bootable CD waste far more time
trying to figure out how to do it than they save from not having to boot
their installs from floppy. There is SOME information on my site on
creating a bootable install CD, though.
--
Rod Smith
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.channel1.com/users/rodsmith
NOTE: Remove the "uce" word from my address to mail me
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Andrew Chung)
Subject: Re: Registry in Linux ???
Date: 15 May 1999 14:00:34 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Sat, 15 May 1999 13:44:04 +0200, Thomas Scholz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>So there is nothing that keeps track of the applications installed
>on the system, regarding location, configuration, ... things like that.
>Everything else (e.g. finders) is put on top of the os. There are also
>no obligatory(!) conventions, that cannot be overcome.
>
>Please correct me if I'm wrong.
You're wrong... Package managers keep track of where packages are installed.
They know where the files are. It just doesn't know about stuff that you put
in yourself. And there is a standard on where to put what... people just
don't follow it..=P
>So it is just as it is under windows. I mean the registry isn't obligatory
>and therefore IMHO of no use. Except for the hw-settings.
It's not just for hardware settings... the registry provides a persistent and
consistent way for storing configuration info. You might argue that this is
good because individual apps don't have to figure out where and how to put
their config info. But of course you end up putting all the vital info in
one spot, which isn't such a good idea either.
--
Andrew Chung [EMAIL PROTECTED]
See http://anderoo.dhs.org/~anderoo/pgp.html for PGP key
It's a sin only if you dwell on the what ifs and the but ifs
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Rod Smith)
Subject: Re: mastering RH CDs
Date: Sat, 15 May 1999 14:06:10 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[Posted and mailed]
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Mark Robinson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> How can I make my own bootable RH6 cd? Do I need any special options?
> thanx
See my web page on creating a Red Hat CD:
http://www.channel1.com/users/rodsmith/rhjol.html
This site doesn't emphasize bootability, because IMHO that's a fluffy
feature that takes more effort to set up than you're likely to save.
(There are exceptions, of course, as in laptops that can't have both a CD
and a floppy installed at the same time.)
My site was written for RH 5.x, but AFAIK it's still 95-99% accurate for
RH 6.0. I hope to update it for 6.0 within a week or so.
--
Rod Smith
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.channel1.com/users/rodsmith
NOTE: Remove the "uce" word from my address to mail me
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Andrew Chung)
Subject: Re: Libraries Needed?
Date: 15 May 1999 14:03:58 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Sat, 15 May 1999 00:03:50 -0700, Jason Bond <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Does anyone know where I can get ahold of the following libraries?
>
>failed dependencies:
> libaudiofile.so.0 is needed by x11amp-0.9-beta1.1-1
> libesd.so.0 is needed by x11amp-0.9-beta1.1-1
Try www.enlightenment.org
--
Andrew Chung [EMAIL PROTECTED]
See http://anderoo.dhs.org/~anderoo/pgp.html for PGP key
It's a sin only if you dwell on the what ifs and the but ifs
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Rod Smith)
Subject: Re: creating redhat 6.0 cd
Date: Sat, 15 May 1999 14:09:30 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[Posted and mailed]
In article <7hfsam$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Bob Cunius" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> hi,
> i recently downloaded redhat 6.0 from ftp.redhat.com in hopes of burning
> the files onto a cd.
See my web site on the topic:
http://www.channel1.com/users/rodsmith/rhjol.html
Please read, or at least skim, the first page, the "Basic Instruction"
page, and the "CD-ROM Tips" page. There are a lot of potential pitfalls.
--
Rod Smith
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.channel1.com/users/rodsmith
NOTE: Remove the "uce" word from my address to mail me
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Andrew Chung)
Subject: Re: silly windows
Date: 15 May 1999 13:53:22 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>ok i'll try again.....an read the spelling this time
>does anyone have any idea why windows has exe's that are linux
>commands?...ping and ftp are two but im sure i found more...look in ur
>windows directory...they use the same commands syntex(?) everything....y?
???
These aren't linux commands..... you'll find them in many other OSes. The
fact that they have similar command syntaxes is probably just coincidence
(there's only so many logical ways of saying "ftp ftp.netscape.com"..).
--
Andrew Chung [EMAIL PROTECTED]
See http://anderoo.dhs.org/~anderoo/pgp.html for PGP key
It's a sin only if you dwell on the what ifs and the but ifs
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Chris Nandor)
Crossposted-To: netscape.public.mozilla.crypto,netscape.public.mozilla.general
Subject: Re: 128 -bit SSL
Date: Sat, 15 May 1999 14:07:55 GMT
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "Robert C. Paulsen, Jr."
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
# Ralph Blach wrote:
# >
# > I am using Linux with netscape 4.07. I tried to connect to a website
# > and I got the message
# >
# > This Server requires 128 -bit SSL. Please contact your Local LAN
# > administrator to obtain US-only version
# > of this browser. Do not e-mail the Webmaster!
# >
# > Where do I get this software for Linux?
# >
#
# You need to get the 128-bit Netscape from
#
# http://www.netscape.com/download/
#
# You don't need any other changes to your Linux system.
#
# Note that there is something called "fortify" that can upgrade a 40-bit
# Netscape (what you have) to the 128-bit Netscape. I have never used it,
# but if you can find it it will probably be a much smaller download (if
# that makes a difference to you).
You should be able to just run a "simple" little perl program to activate
128-bit encryption on your Netscape browser.
The following program first appeared in The Perl Journal #9. Well, it was
probably elsewhere before that. I edited it because in my 4.5 binary, the
text "TS:" matched "HINTS:" and was only supposed to match "BITS:".
#!/usr/bin/perl -0777pi
s/BITS:.*?\0/$_=$&;y,a-z, ,;s, $,true,gm;s, 512,2048,;$_/es
Just save that as "ns-128" or something and run (on a COPY of your binary!):
% ns-128 /usr/bin/netscape-copy
It seemed to work for me, on Linux for Intel and LinuxPPC.
--
Chris Nandor mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://pudge.net/
%PGPKey = ('B76E72AD', [1024, '0824090B CE73CA10 1FF77F13 8180B6B6'])
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (ResumesYES)
Subject: Announce: Looking for Linux Jobs and Resumes
Date: 15 May 1999 14:44:07 GMT
These sites are Free and allow Employers, Agents and Jobs Seekers for both full
time and consulting positions to post and view both Jobs and Resumes for FREE.
Want More you say!
Both of These sites also offer FREE Automatic EMAIL notification when ANY
message is posted on the Boards, this means that you will ALWAYS be the first
to see when a New Job or Resume is posted.
Still want more you say!
JobRap allows Employers, Agents, Job Seekers and there families to TALK on the
Internet for FREE. Up to 30 people can be talking at the same time without ANY
loss of conversation, even when multiple people are talking at the same moment.
OH, Now you want the links, well make sure you bookmark them as well
FREE Job and Resumes Posting sites are:
http://www.trav-tech.com
http://www.programming-services.com
JobRap can be DOWNLOADED from:
http://www.trav-tech.com/chat.html
------------------------------
From: "Robert C. Paulsen, Jr." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: netscape.public.mozilla.crypto,netscape.public.mozilla.general
Subject: Re: 128 -bit SSL
Date: Sat, 15 May 1999 08:34:48 -0500
Ralph Blach wrote:
>
> I am using Linux with netscape 4.07. I tried to connect to a website
> and I got the message
>
> This Server requires 128 -bit SSL. Please contact your Local LAN
> administrator to obtain US-only version
> of this browser. Do not e-mail the Webmaster!
>
> Where do I get this software for Linux?
>
You need to get the 128-bit Netscape from
http://www.netscape.com/download/
You don't need any other changes to your Linux system.
Note that there is something called "fortify" that can upgrade a 40-bit
Netscape (what you have) to the 128-bit Netscape. I have never used it,
but if you can find it it will probably be a much smaller download (if
that makes a difference to you).
____________________________________________________________________
Robert Paulsen http://paulsen.home.texas.net
If my return address contains "ZAP." please remove it. Sorry for the
inconvenience but the unsolicited email is getting out of control.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Crossposted-To: alt.linux,alt.os.linux,alt.os.linux-redhat
Subject: Re: Programming crashes my system
Date: 15 May 1999 13:56:17 GMT
In the sacred domain of comp.os.linux.misc didst Robert J. Sprawls
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> eloquently scribe:
: On 9 May 1999, brian moore wrote:
:> This is, of course, highly useful for a programmer: at that point, a
:> copy of the state of the program is saved to disk, including the
:> contents of all the registers and all your data. A "postmortem" can
:> often find the cause of the problem.
: Question: Is there a utility to decipher the core dump? It's all binary,
: so how does one go about reading it?
gdb (GNU Debugger) can decypher core dumps.
(But you need the source from which the program that dumped was compiled)
--
______________________________________________________________________________
|[EMAIL PROTECTED]| |
| Andrew Halliwell | "The day Microsoft makes something that doesn't |
| Finallist in:- | suck is probably the day they start making |
| Computer science | vacuum cleaners" - Ernst Jan Plugge |
==============================================================================
|GCv3.12 GCS>$ d-(dpu) s+/- a C++ US++ P L/L+ E-- W+ N++ o+ K PS+ w-- M+/++ |
|PS+++ PE- Y t+ 5++ X+/X++ R+ tv+ b+ DI+ D+ G e>e++ h/h+ !r!| Space for hire |
==============================================================================
------------------------------
From: Peter Englmaier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: acroread failure on RH 6.0
Date: Sat, 15 May 1999 11:06:54 -0400
if it's due to glibc than my fix for staroffice posted
accidentialy 6 times (ooops... sorry!) may help.
I have no problems with acroread 3.0. Maybe you just
miss some library? Sounds like some of the 'locale'
library stuff is missing. Should be part of the
XFree86-3.3.3....rpm.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Has anyone had success with acroread under RH 6.0? I get
>
> Warning: locale not supported by C library, locale unchanged
> Warning locale not supported by Xlib, local set to C
> Warning: X locale modifiers not supported, using default
> [the above, I get in other programs, too]
> Fatal System Error: Raise at top of Exception Stack
>
> This is both the 3.0 version of the reader and the 4.0 version of the
> reader.
>
> Incidentally, similar problems happen with nscal (the netscape calendar
> from Netscape 4.5 [where do I get an updated version for 4.51?]). I
> presume this is all due to glibc 2.1, but if there is a fix, I would
> like to know.
>
> --== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==--
> ---Share what you know. Learn what you don't.---
------------------------------
From: "Thomas Scholz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Registry in Linux ???
Date: Sat, 15 May 1999 16:22:33 +0200
These packet managers are exactely what I ment with being just put on top of
the os. As you said these managers (or comparable sw) don't recognize the
stuff you put on the system, let's say manually, nor the stuff other apps
might put on the system. So the data these managers are maintaining is
"corrupt", not complete. The concept is wrong.
Solution would be a database (integrated into the os, no user manipulation)
that recognizes everything(!!!) that goes in and out of the system. This
would provide
system integrity.
Ok, question is, if something like this is desirable.
>>So there is nothing that keeps track of the applications installed
>>on the system, regarding location, configuration, ... things like that.
>>Everything else (e.g. finders) is put on top of the os. There are also
>>no obligatory(!) conventions, that cannot be overcome.
>>
>>Please correct me if I'm wrong.
>
>You're wrong... Package managers keep track of where packages are
installed.
>They know where the files are. It just doesn't know about stuff that you
put
>in yourself. And there is a standard on where to put what... people just
>don't follow it..=P
>
------------------------------
From: Peter Englmaier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: FIXED(?): Staroffice/glibc problem
Date: Sat, 15 May 1999 10:49:26 -0400
Yet another solution for the Staroffice/glibc problems.
RH6.0 has problems with old glibc-2.0.7 binaries, or some old
glibc-2.0.7 binaries have problems with RH6.0. Staroffice and
many other programs do not work with the new glibc. Here is
a workaround based on the 'misc. binary format' feature of
the linux kernel. Even printing seems to work (at least for me).
Please post if this does or does not work for you. Staroffice
still gives some error message at startup, but works fine.
Note: This may also fix other problems reported with the glibc.
0) do *not* modify any staroffice scripts or binaries... (the easy
step first)
1) install the rpm's for
compat-glibc-5.2-2.0.7.1
compat-libs-5.2-1
2) install the appended wrapper file in
/usr/i386-glibc20-linux/lib/ld-wrapper
and do
chmod a=rx /usr/i386-glibc20-linux/lib/ld-wrapper
This file will be used to run old applications.
3) install the appended rc.binfmt file below in /etc/rc.d/
make it execute:
chmod a=rx rc.binfmt
run rc.binfmt to activate it. If it produces error
messages, you probably have no misc. binary format
compiled in the kernel. You want to call the
file from /etc/rc.d/rc.serial as well (add a line
saying '/etc/rc.d/rc.binfmt'.
This works as follows: when the kernel is asked to 'execute' a
binary with extension '.bin', it runs the wrapper file instead.
The wrapper loads the binary with the 'right' loader. To run
other old binaries, e.g. 'goodie', simply do:
mv goodie goodie.bin
ln -s goodie.bin goodie
BTW, if somebody finds out the 'magic' bytes of old binaries,
the script could be triggered using the magic fingerprint.
Peter.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>ld-wrapper:
#!/bin/sh
# wrapper for old glibc binaries
p=`basename $1`
if [ "$p" = "soffice.bin" -o "$p" = "psetup.bin" -o "$p" = "setup.bin"
]; then
exec /usr/i386-glibc20-linux/lib/ld-linux.so.2 --library-path
/usr/i386-glibc20-linux/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH "$@"
fi
exec /lib/ld-linux.so.2 "$@"
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>rc.binfmt
#!/bin/sh
if /sbin/modprobe binfmt_misc.o ; then
# clear register first
echo -1 >/proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc/status
REGISTER=/proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc/register
# old glibc
echo ':oldglibc:E::bin::/usr/i386-glibc20-linux/lib/ld-wrapper:'
>${REGISTER}
fi
------------------------------
From: Cees de Groot <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: CD-R as backup device
Date: Sat, 15 May 1999 12:53:54 GMT
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I've got one of those too and I do multi-session backups.
Multi-session backups are quite expensive in terms of space overhead on
the disk, so I'm investigating the packet writing mode of cdrecord. I
don't know whether it is possible, but something like writing small
ext2fs images in packet mode without closing the disk would be very
useful for incremental backups (pending full UDF support).
Is this feasible?
--== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==--
---Share what you know. Learn what you don't.---
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Christopher B. Browne)
Crossposted-To: redhat.general,comp.os.linux.development.system
Subject: Re: USB Support
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sat, 15 May 1999 14:25:16 GMT
On 15 May 1999 07:52:07 GMT, Michael Proto <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> posted:
>On Sat, 15 May 1999 01:33:54 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] muttered:
>>USB-ZIP drives are a neat option; who knows when?
>
>IIRC, USB Zip drives *ARE* available. I've seen some that have a
>transparent-blue case that resembles a <shudder> iMAC.
Availability of *drives* is not the issue; I've seen them on store shelves.
The issue is the availability of a driver that knows how to talk to them.
*That* is the thing for which I wonder "when?"
--
Those who do not understand Unix are condemned to reinvent it, poorly.
-- Henry Spencer <http://www.hex.net/~cbbrowne/lsf.html>
[EMAIL PROTECTED] - "What have you contributed to free software today?..."
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: 2.2.1 Kernel Compiling Problems, some help please?
Date: Sat, 15 May 1999 13:53:48 GMT
i downloaded the 2.2.1 source, sucessfully compiled, and booted a test
kernel on an old 486.
However, I wanted to further tweak the options, i.e., turn some
options into module form, add support for a.out binaries -- which the
help file said was recommended -- along with some other minor stuff.
When I added the changes, make dep, make clean, and compiled, I get
the following errors. Note: on a 486, the 2.2.1 kernel takes about 7
hours to compile, so you may understand how painful it is to find out
after 6-7 hours that an error occured, and stops compiling.
so what must I do to continue the compile?
...compiling info....then following error....
2.2.1/lib/lib.a /usr/src/kernel-source-2.2.1/arch/i386/lib/lib.a \
--end-group\ -o vmlinux
drivers/scsi/scsi.a(hosts.o)(.data +0xc): undefined reference to
'proc-scsi-ppa'
drivers/scsi/scsi.a(hosts.o)(.data +0x10): undefined reference to
'ppa-proc-info'
drivers/scsi/scsi.a(hosts.o)(.data +0x28): undefined reference to
'ppa-detect'
drivers/scsi/scsi.a(hosts.o)(.data +0x2c): undefined reference to
'ppa-command'
drivers/scsi/scsi.a(hosts.o)(.data +0x34): undefined reference to
'ppa-queuecommand'
drivers/scsi/scsi.a(hosts.o)(.data +0x3c): undefined reference to
'ppa-about'
drivers/scsi/scsi.a(hosts.o)(.data +0x40): undefined reference to
'ppa-reset'
drivers/scsi/scsi.a(hosts.o)(.data +0x50): undefined reference to
'ppa-biosparam'
make: *** [vmlinux] error 1
------------------------------
From: "Karl Lewalter" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Terminator 128/3D does not work
Date: 15 May 1999 15:41:46 GMT
Hi,
i want to install Linux Kernel 2.2.3, but my Hercules Terminator 128/3D GLH
APG card does not work properly with the x-server. It seems that the
Trio-3D chipset is not supported. Is there any other configuration that
works ??
Thanks. :-))
------------------------------
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End of Linux-Misc Digest
******************************