Linux-Misc Digest #402, Volume #21 Sat, 14 Aug 99 21:13:08 EDT
Contents:
Updating the kernel from 2.0.36 to 2.2.x (Rajesh Radhakrishnan)
Re: Samba & Win 9x clients: automatically mapping drives (Matt Anderson)
Creating a Distrobution CD (Johnny L Wales)
News Server ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: Linux and the Dung Beatles (Wayne Power)
Re: Creating a Distrobution CD (Abdullah Ramazanoglu)
Re: crontab problems ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: Did SUSE 6.1 egcs lose C++??? ("Anthony W. Youngman")
Re: Linux vs. Unix (James Knott)
Re: Is Linux A Memory Hogging OS? (James Knott)
Re: Any hope for an HP 712C? ("William B. Cattell")
Re: Updating the kernel from 2.0.36 to 2.2.x (Abdullah Ramazanoglu)
Re: News Server (Juergen Heinzl)
Re: Can't add partition to drive (Craig)
Re: Have you heard? ("R.KAa")
unable to open initial console ("Gregory C. Lewin")
Re: Updating the kernel from 2.0.36 to 2.2.x (Howard Mann)
Re: Okidata 6e works under Linux? (Robert Nichols)
Re: specific tux images ("William B. Cattell")
Re: Strange ("William B. Cattell")
Re: A web page: How to set up Oracle 8 on RH Linux 6 (jay)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Rajesh Radhakrishnan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux,comp.os.linux.help
Subject: Updating the kernel from 2.0.36 to 2.2.x
Date: Sat, 14 Aug 1999 18:08:26 -0400
Hi,
I am pretty happy with my RedHat 5.2 and wish to update my kernel only.
I went to http://www.kernel.org and saw the new kernels.
How do I update my kernel. Is there a kernel.rpm that I can download for
my RedHat system that updates my kernel.
Thanks
Rajesh
------------------------------
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.networking
From: Matt Anderson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Samba & Win 9x clients: automatically mapping drives
Date: Sat, 14 Aug 1999 15:29:24 -0700
If you at all familiar with scripting under linux, or batch files under
windoze, then you could create a re-map drives batch or script that gives
all the relevent commands. You could even set it up as a shortcut on the
windoze desktop.
Good Luck!
Matt Anderson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"You shall know the truth, and the truth shall set you free."
John 8:32
On Thu, 13 May 1999, Michael Balderas wrote:
> On Thu, 13 May 1999 21:55:53 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Lee
> Allen) wrote:
>
> >Under Samba, I (think) I have to "map a network drive" on the Win 9x
> >client via point & click. If the client ever boots when the server is
> >down (or not available), then the client will display a prompt, "Do
> >you want to reconnect the next time you log in?" If the user says
> >"No", the mapping is gone, and must be recreated manually.
> >
>
> This is the short coming of Windows 9X in any peer-peer network
> enviroment using Microsoft's file and print sharing to map shared
> resources on remote clients, this is not just related to Samba.
>
> >How can we avoid this problem? Is there some script capability in Win
> >9x that remap the drives for us?
> >
>
> Short of telling the users to hit yes, I am not aware of any way
> around this issue. I get calls from clients all the time who hit "no"
> on the "connect next time" prompt instead of yes. To this day the only
> resolution I have found is to walk them thru connecting to the share
> or fixing it next I was on site. If anyone does have a scripting tool
> that will eliminate this issue I'd be interested in knowing as well.
>
> Mike
>
>
>
------------------------------
From: Johnny L Wales <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Creating a Distrobution CD
Date: Sat, 14 Aug 1999 15:31:32 -0700
Hello! Here's my question:
I've been building some x86 based web servers, and I've run into
something which is rather annoying. I'm installing from a SuSE 6.1 CD,
and each time I build a new machine, I have to go through and manually
select which pacakges I want. I can't save the state from machine to
machine, because the setup utility doesn't allow that. What I would like
is to be able to build my distrobution once in such a way that I could
burn a CD, build as many machines as I wanted, and then put that CD in
each of them to do the install for me. So, the distrobution would need
to do something like this:
1>Boot the CD
2>Run a script/install program which asks me some questions about
partitioning and whatnot. (Including whether I want Apache or thttpd)
3>Installs the kernel, binutils, gcc, perl, apache/thttpd, and startup
scripts where ever they need to be.
Anyone know how to make such a CD from scratch?
--Johnny Wales
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(Replies by e-mail greatly welcomed)
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: News Server
Date: Sat, 14 Aug 1999 22:01:35 GMT
Is there any way of determining what software an ISP's news server is
using.
Someone recently posted lynx -head -dump http://www.foo.com as a way of
identifying web server software and I was hoping there was some other
little trick for identyfying a news server.
I have no practical reason for wanting to know this. Just curiosity.
Alan
Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Share what you know. Learn what you don't.
------------------------------
From: Wayne Power <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Linux and the Dung Beatles
Date: Sat, 14 Aug 1999 18:56:48 -0400
Richard Steiner wrote:
> Here in comp.os.linux.misc, "Ewoud Booyse" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> spake unto us, saying:
>
> >You know, people keep talking about Linux all day as if it was something
> >worth talking about.
Exactly how much Microsoft stock *do* you own? Clearly, Ewoud, you do
not use Linux. Why do you read this news group?
Richard continues:
> Yes. I use it on two boxes here, and it has saved me $$, made my life
> at home more flexible, and generally been fun to learn and use.
On 5 boxes here since March. No crash and no cash.
> Shouldn't life be fun once in a while? :-)
Only if you dial 1-800-RU-LEGAL first, to be sure it's genuine fun. :-)
> >I think you people are wasting your time since Microsoft surely has
> >some plan of getting rid of Linux.
Gee, Linux is part of my plan to get rid of Microsoft. :-)
> Of course they do... But how will they do it when both the source and
> the compilers needed to compile it are both freely out there?
Disinformation. Isn't that a big part of how they got so big in the
first place? Sorry, I meant to say 'clever marketing'.
And Toby wrote:
> #/usr/bin/perl -w
> #how about talking about them on /dev/null
> use strict;
> my %blast = ( planet => "mars", animal => "dung beetle", human => "Edwoud
> Booyse");
> my $key;
> foreach $key(%blast) {
> open(BLAST, "| /dev/null") or die "No open /dev/null: $!\n";
> print BLAST $key;
> close(BLAST);
> }
This might be quicker if you only opened and closed /dev/null
once, outside the loop. Of course, it's also nice to use an
old style unix mail program to do this. I love the message...
/dev/null: appended
--wmp
------------------------------
From: Abdullah Ramazanoglu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Creating a Distrobution CD
Date: Sun, 15 Aug 1999 02:10:58 +0300
Johnny L Wales wrote:
>
> Hello! Here's my question:
>
> I've been building some x86 based web servers, and I've run into
> something which is rather annoying. I'm installing from a SuSE 6.1 CD,
> and each time I build a new machine, I have to go through and manually
> select which pacakges I want. I can't save the state from machine to
> machine, because the setup utility doesn't allow that. What I would like
> is to be able to build my distrobution once in such a way that I could
> burn a CD, build as many machines as I wanted, and then put that CD in
> each of them to do the install for me. So, the distrobution would need
> to do something like this:
>
> 1>Boot the CD
> 2>Run a script/install program which asks me some questions about
> partitioning and whatnot. (Including whether I want Apache or thttpd)
> 3>Installs the kernel, binutils, gcc, perl, apache/thttpd, and startup
> scripts where ever they need to be.
Hello,
You are talking about kickstart option of RedHat. Possibly you can find
docs about it at their web site (it must be mentioned in
RedHat-Install-Guide as I remember). Normally you create a kickstart
diskette manually, but there is also a RedHat utility (mkkickstart) that
inspects your current system and creates a kickstart diskette so that
your next installation would be a ditto of your current system. It is
included in distro CD.
I have never created a kickstart diskette as yet, but from what I read
it is a way cool method; especially if you are interested in installing
and maintaining a lot of dark-room remote servers. (e.g. a bank :)
For SuSe there might also be such a utility. I don't know.
HTH
--
Abdullah Ramazanoglu [ aramazanoglu AT demirbank DOT com DOT tr ]
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: crontab problems
Date: Sat, 14 Aug 1999 22:26:37 GMT
Hello guys. Thanks for the help.
As typical, I usually figure out my problem
shortly after I post.
It turns out it was my crontab entry.
I had one too many '*' schedule.
The '*' was expanded as a wildcard and I guess
the first file interpolated was my directory
'Desktop', which was then interpreted as a command.
Thanks for the help.
-Godwin DaVinci
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
In article <7p1g0k$p2v$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Dave Ewart" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:7p1e3u$24u$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> > Hmmm... I was afraid you'd say that.
> > My script is just one big comment. It does absolutely nothing.
> > But, I'll double check again.
>
> Is the script executable?
>
> Dave.
>
> --
> Dave Ewart, Computing Manager
> Imperial Cancer Research Fund (Cancer Epidemiology Unit), Oxford
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Share what you know. Learn what you don't.
------------------------------
From: "Anthony W. Youngman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: uk.comp.os.linux
Subject: Re: Did SUSE 6.1 egcs lose C++???
Date: Sat, 14 Aug 1999 07:28:31 +0100
Reply-To: "Anthony W. Youngman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Michael Hasenstein
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> Errr..I'm trying to compile with the gcc from the egcs package, that is
>> the whole point of this thread. The g++ was merely a vain symlink
>> attempt to gcc because 'g++' is what the KDE app expected and there is
>
>So why don�t you just install g++ (package �gpp�).
>
>
>> no g++ on my system. This got me thru 'configure' but when I did the
>> make it barked about __null, not having a clue what it was (this is at
>> compiling stage). This made me think I might need 'g++' as a separate
>> program.
>...
>> So permit me to remain sceptical that the egcs in Suse 6.1 specifically
>> is kind of lacking something. I know it might boil down to a package I
>> haven't installed but I did a full dependency check in Yast and it
>
>Exactly.
>
I had a similar problem ...
I upgraded SuSE 5.2 (with a working gcc) to SuSE 6.0, only to find that
gcc stopped working. All dependencies etc were fine.
I only discovered that I now needed to install TWO packages - "gcc front
end" and "gcc back end", and SuSE gave me no warning that I needed the
front end as well as the back (the annoying thing was - why hadn't YaST
done it automatically, as it was upgrading a working install).
--
Anthony W. Youngman - wol at thewolery dot demon dot co dot uk
Trousers with a single hole in their waistband are topologically equivalent
to a doughnut. These sugarcoated trousers have yet to catch on at fast-food
outlets! (SuperStrings by F. David Peat)
If replying by e-mail please mail wol. Anything else may get missed amongst
the spam.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (James Knott)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: Linux vs. Unix
Date: Sat, 14 Aug 1999 08:22:29 -0400
Reply-To: James Knott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
In article <7opsjg$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Floyd Davidson) wrote:
>It means the place where people hunt snowy owls. And indeed,
>I see 2-3 of them almost every day!
People or owls? ;-)
--
E-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
_________________________________________________________________________
The above opinions are my own and not those of ISM Corp., a subsidiary of
IBM Canada Ltd.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (James Knott)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.advocacy
Subject: Re: Is Linux A Memory Hogging OS?
Date: Sat, 14 Aug 1999 08:10:49 -0400
Reply-To: James Knott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
In article <haiso7.199.ln@localhost>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Stuart R. Fuller) wrote:
>: >I'm no expert on this subject, but might the CPU power use at idle
>: >depend on exactlt what the OS does in its idle loop? In order to
>: >truly idle the CPU, the OS can't just have the scheduler running
>: >something in a loop. That would keep the CPU awake.
>:
>: .... which is precisely why Linux (on Intel, at least) executes the
>: 'hlt' instruction in its idle task, which halts all processor activity
>: (until the processor is woken by the next hardware interrupt).
>
>The most common reason that HALT instructions (HLT on Intel) are issued by an
>operating system is to make sure that the cpu is quiet so that DMA operations
>can proceed without interference from the cpu. After all, if the cpu has
>nothing else to do while awaiting the completion of an I/O, there is no sense
>in having perform memory operations (while in a loop) competing with the DMA
>traffic. Also, if the cpu is halted, it can respond to interrupts must
>faster, in that it doesn't need to finish the current instruction before
>taking the interrupt.
>
>This concept of halting the cpu during idle periods is an old concept that
>predates the ability of the cpu to power down.
FWIW, there was an item in the Linux Journal a few years ago, about
battery life in notebook computers. It seems that Linux & OS/2 got
better battery life than Windows, because they used the halt
instruction when idle, whereas Windows used a loop. Also years ago,
when I was using an IMSAI 8080 computer with my amateur radio
equipment, I wrote the software to use a halt instruction while idle,
so as to reduce the amount of radio frequency noise generated. On
some frequencies, I could here a small chirp when ever I used the
keyboard.
--
E-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
_________________________________________________________________________
The above opinions are my own and not those of ISM Corp., a subsidiary of
IBM Canada Ltd.
------------------------------
From: "William B. Cattell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Any hope for an HP 712C?
Date: Sat, 14 Aug 1999 00:17:56 GMT
Steve Gage wrote:
>
> Hello folks,
>
> I have an HP Deskjet 712C. Is there any hope of getting any output out
> of this rig under Linux (RH 6.0)? I've tried a couple of the Deskjet
> filters to no avail - is there some secret?
>
> TIA,
>
> Steve
Steve, check out my Linux page - it's listed below. I have
the same printer and by using the software listed I have bw
printing going. My understanding is that the color drivers
are being worked on.
Bill
--
==============================================================
http://members.home.com/wcattell/linux.html
==============================================================
Park not thy Harley in the darkness of thine garage, that it
may collect dust for want of being oft ridden. Ride thy
Harley
with thy brethren, and rejoice in the spirit of the road.
==============================================================
------------------------------
From: Abdullah Ramazanoglu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux,comp.os.linux.help
Subject: Re: Updating the kernel from 2.0.36 to 2.2.x
Date: Sun, 15 Aug 1999 02:36:41 +0300
Rajesh Radhakrishnan wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I am pretty happy with my RedHat 5.2 and wish to update my kernel only.
> I went to http://www.kernel.org and saw the new kernels.
Hi Rajesh,
I would strongly suggest upgrading from 5.2 to 6.0 instead. IMHO kernel
version and release (x.y.z : Version.Release.Patch, but I'm not sure if
it's correct terminology) upgrades are not trivial at all, since it
affects too many programs, so you would have to upgrade and/or tweak
maybe half of your system. And when something doesn't work, you would
have to find out if it's because a broken upgrade or something else.
If there weren't 2.2.x based distros around, it would make sense doing
the "operation" by yourself. But since there is 6.0 shipping with kernel
2.2.5, the operation is already done and field-tested.
Just my 8710 TRL (~ $.02 :)
--
Abdullah Ramazanoglu [ aramazanoglu AT demirbank DOT com DOT tr ]
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Juergen Heinzl)
Subject: Re: News Server
Date: Sat, 14 Aug 1999 23:44:31 GMT
In article <7p4ovr$93s$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>Is there any way of determining what software an ISP's news server is
>using.
>
>Someone recently posted lynx -head -dump http://www.foo.com as a way of
>identifying web server software and I was hoping there was some other
>little trick for identyfying a news server.
>
>I have no practical reason for wanting to know this. Just curiosity.
telnet news.foo.com 119 ... it should be enough or type help for help,
quit for ... ah, guess yourself 8)
Ta',
Juergen
--
\ Real name : J�rgen Heinzl \ no flames /
\ EMail Private : [EMAIL PROTECTED] \ send money instead /
------------------------------
From: Craig <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: redhat.general
Subject: Re: Can't add partition to drive
Date: Sat, 14 Aug 1999 23:30:49 GMT
Problem solved.
Reading another post, I discovered a utility
named ShowFAT. It works great. It told me
the names of the files hogging the end of my
partition. They were all in my \WINDOWS backup
directory. I deleted the backup directory,
defragmented, ran FIPS, and got 295 MB free,
which was close enough to the 300 I wanted.
ShowFAT is nagware but only costs $25 - well
worth the money.
================== Posted via CNET Linux Help ==================
http://www.searchlinux.com
------------------------------
From: "R.KAa" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.security
Subject: Re: Have you heard?
Date: Sat, 14 Aug 1999 00:28:07 +0000
Adam Rafuse wrote:
> Has anyone noticed that if you type the letter to the right of what you
> wanted to, MS becomes ZD? (if you reach the end of the KB, loop back...)
>
> Just an interesting observation...
Interesting indeed! Then again... look to the future - the characters ahead
of MS...and you get NA - not applicable. N/A: MS.
Or spell MS backwards and you get S & M.. then again....why is the
multiplied hex value of RedHat 666... oops... I miscalculated.. anyways...
if you play it backwards it DOES sound like "Bill is dead..." (in classic
arabic) ...or was it "bill me later.." ..forgot..
K.
------------------------------
From: "Gregory C. Lewin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: unable to open initial console
Date: Fri, 13 Aug 1999 20:10:28 -0400
My system locked the other day, and I had to turn it off without shutting
it down gently (I had just finished installing a samba server and I did
not smbumount properly or something-don't really know).
Anyway, now when I boot, I don't get the nice long list of things that the
system checks, although it appears to start all of the daemons (tcp/ip
works, local files are mounted, etc.). Examination of the boot log shows
the following line:
Warning: unable to open initial console
I get a weird command line interface (it doesn't scroll right), and when I
type KDE, I get:
Fatal server error: Cannont find a free VT
I'm about to re-install, but I'd like to know what might be wrong. Any
pointers would be helpful.
Gregory C. Lewin
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
From: Howard Mann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Updating the kernel from 2.0.36 to 2.2.x
Date: 14 Aug 1999 23:34:59 GMT
[Follow-ups to c.o.l.m]
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Rajesh Radhakrishnan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi,
>
> I am pretty happy with my RedHat 5.2 and wish to update my kernel only.
> I went to http://www.kernel.org and saw the new kernels.
>
> How do I update my kernel. Is there a kernel.rpm that I can download for
> my RedHat system that updates my kernel.
>
> Thanks
> Rajesh
http://www.redhat.com/corp/support/docs/kernel-2.2/kernel2.2-upgrade.html
Cheers,
--
Howard Mann
http://www.newbielinux.com
(a LINUX website for newbies)
Smart Linuxers search at: http://www.deja.com/home_ps.shtml
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Robert Nichols)
Subject: Re: Okidata 6e works under Linux?
Date: Sat, 14 Aug 1999 00:31:47 GMT
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
The Hedge Fox <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
:
:Is there some way to telling the 6e to switch to HP4 mode when Linux
:boots up? I don't want to have to use DOSEMU and the Okidata DOS
:utils or remember to change it in Windows when I reboot.
Sure. Just arrange for the following to be sent to the printer at the
start of each print job:
\033%-12345X@PJL ENTER LANGUAGE = PCL\015\012
Where \033, \015 and \012 are ESC, CR and NL, respectively.
--
Bob Nichols [EMAIL PROTECTED]
PGP public key 1024/9A9C7955
Key fingerprint = 2F E5 82 F8 5D 06 A2 59 20 65 44 68 87 EC A7 D7
------------------------------
From: "William B. Cattell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux,alt.linux,comp.os.linux.advocacy
Subject: Re: specific tux images
Date: Sat, 14 Aug 1999 00:48:04 GMT
I saw some links for 'Tux' pics on
http://www.linux.org/info/logos.html
Bill
Will the Chill wrote:
>
> Hello all. I'm searching for pictures of tux, specifically pictures of
> him/her (?) either wearing some sort of a hat, wearing sunglasses,
> sweating, or any combination. I need this picture for a logo I'm
> creating for a new LUG. Any help on these would be great. I searched
> using google and altavista, but turned up none of these images (however,
> I HAVE seen them before). You can send them directly to me if you
> like. My address is '[EMAIL PROTECTED]', w/out the 'nospam.'.
> Thanks a ton!
>
> -Will the Chill
--
==============================================================
http://members.home.com/wcattell
==============================================================
Park not thy Harley in the darkness of thine garage, that it
may collect dust for want of being oft ridden. Ride thy
Harley
with thy brethren, and rejoice in the spirit of the road.
==============================================================
------------------------------
From: "William B. Cattell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Crossposted-To: alt.linux,comp.os.linux.questions
Subject: Re: Strange
Date: Sat, 14 Aug 1999 00:49:30 GMT
Ed Russell wrote:
>
> Hi:
> I had been running rh5.2 for quite a while and it worked fine.
> However, after some research I decided to give rh6 a try. I have to admit
> that it does have some improvements. However, when attempting to use one of
> my fav apps (x11amp v0.9 beta) I can only get audio when running as root.
> As any other user I get "unable to get audio". Any ideas, thoughts,
> pointers, flames will be appreciated.
I had the same thing going until I chmod'd x11amp to 777.
Maybe not the cleanest (best) solution but it works for me.
Bill
--
==============================================================
http://members.home.com/wcattell
==============================================================
Park not thy Harley in the darkness of thine garage, that it
may collect dust for want of being oft ridden. Ride thy
Harley
with thy brethren, and rejoice in the spirit of the road.
==============================================================
------------------------------
From: jay <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: A web page: How to set up Oracle 8 on RH Linux 6
Date: Sun, 15 Aug 1999 00:30:45 GMT
Well, I gave up on Caldera 2.2 and went to buy a copy of red hat 6.0
since it's red hot on the market. I followed the procedure by Reuben A.
King and succesfully installed the Oracle 8.05. Thank you, Reuben!
I do have a problem with auto start. I added the dbora script and the
links as you wrote. Here is what I did:
1. If I su to oracle and run the oracle enviroment, when I run
$ORACLE_HOME/bin/dbstart, the mesage said the server started.
2. If I su to oracle and run (without run oracle enviroment first)
$ORACLE_HOME/bin/dbstart, here is the message:
svrmgrl: erro in loading shared libraries: libclntsh.so.1.0
cannot open shared object file: No suhc file or directory.
Well, the libclntsh.so.1.0 is in $ORACLE_HOME/lib.
Would anybody give me some advice?
Thanks in advance!
================== Posted via CNET Linux Help ==================
http://www.searchlinux.com
------------------------------
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End of Linux-Misc Digest
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