Linux-Misc Digest #968, Volume #23               Mon, 27 Mar 00 07:13:02 EST

Contents:
  Re: Can Linux be setup to host web folders? ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
  Overriding the process scheduler ("Thanasis Tsilderikis")
  Re: Windows 2000 has 63,000 bugs - Win2k.html [0/1] - Win2k.html [0/1] ("The 
Sorcerer")
  No bootable cdrom (w/ Mandrake 7.0) (jimf)
  Newbie Q : Where's my log files? ("Peet Grobler")
  Newbie Q : Random number generator ("Peet Grobler")
  Newbie Q : Info on scripts ("Peet Grobler")
  Newbie Q : Allowing user to exec /sbin/shutdown ("Peet Grobler")
  shell access restriction ("Alexander N. Ruzhov")
  Newbie Q : 6 tty's running? ("Peet Grobler")
  Newbie Q : Log a user's activity ("Peet Grobler")
  Problem with IRC server ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
  find and grep ? ("Doug")
  Re: Newbie Q : Where's my log files? (Andreas Kahari)
  Re: Newbie Q : Info on scripts (Andreas Kahari)
  Re: Newbie Q : Random number generator (Andreas Kahari)
  Re: Newbie Q : 6 tty's running? (Andreas Kahari)
  Re: debian upgrade (David J. Kanter)
  ANNOUNCEMENT: Garlic, free mol. visual. (Damir Zucic)
  Re: Newbie Q : Allowing user to exec /sbin/shutdown (Andreas Kahari)
  Re: Newbie Q : Log a user's activity (Andreas Kahari)
  Re: Newbie Q : Log a user's activity (Andreas Kahari)
  Re: find and grep ? (Neil)
  Re: find and grep ? (Andreas Kahari)
  Newbie question about Loganalyzers... (Thomas =?iso-8859-1?Q?M=F6ller?=)
  Re: Newbie Q : Where's my log files? ("Peet Grobler")
  Re: Can't ping outside world? ("Martin Beier")
  Re: hosnames in title var of Xterm ("Martin Beier")
  Re: Newbie Q : Allowing user to exec /sbin/shutdown ("Martin Beier")
  Re: Newbie Q : Where's my log files? ("Martin Beier")

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.networking,comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: Can Linux be setup to host web folders?
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 09:04:06 GMT

In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Larry B <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I would like to use my linux box as a file server through the web via
> web folders. Can this be done? What packages would this involve? I
have
> samba installed and working currently.
>
> -Larry
>
>

i must admit i don't know 'web folders'?
is there any reason not to set up a ftp-server?
--
'...' said the joker to the thief
'there's too much confusion, i cant get no relief...
so let us not talk falsely now, the hour's getting late'


Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.

------------------------------

From: "Thanasis Tsilderikis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux,comp.os.linux.help
Subject: Overriding the process scheduler
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 10:37:35 +0100

Hello everybody,

I was wondering if there's any way of 'overriding' the process scheduler,
preferably without modifying/recompiling the kernel.

The reason I want to do this is *not* because I don't like the way Linux
handles this task of course.. As part of a project, I want to enable a
simple system scheduler applet that I've written to briefly take over in
order to demonstrate some of the process scheduling principles involved.

Any ideas whether/how this is feasible?

Feedback would be greatly appreciated.



Thanasis

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Typing "rm x y z" is a lot faster than clicking five times and then
having to convince the system that you really, truly, mean it and this is
not a mistake and that you are consenting adult over 18 and that you
completely understand the consequences and you still want to do it."
             - Andrew S. Tanenbaum on GUIs



------------------------------

From: "The Sorcerer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Windows 2000 has 63,000 bugs - Win2k.html [0/1] - Win2k.html [0/1]
Date: Sun, 26 Mar 2000 12:12:05 +0100

i totaly agree , even bill gate$ had problems when he shows the world
window$98

--

+------------------------------------+
   <<The Sorcerer>>
     ICQ#64678614
+------------------------------------+

Brian V. Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escreveu na mensagem
news:8bgp1t$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, jdaspinw
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> |> The simple truth is that Microsoft makes a damned fine
> |> operating system, and if you can't run Windows without
> |> crashing it, then you'd better get the hell out of Linux
> |> before it smacks you upside the head so hard you don't even
> |> remember your own name.  NT 5 may have bugs, but it's a hell
> |> of a lot more fun to go home at the end of the day and pop
> |> on instant messenger to chat with some friends, then to go
> |> into Linux and startx and then see if your kaudioserver is
> |> running tonight or not.
>
> Give me a break!  There is no one in the world who can consistently run
> Windows 95 or 98 (any edition) without random unexplained crashes.
> And to say that if it is crashing there must be something wrong with
> an application the user has installed just reinforces the fact that
> the OS is inherently fragile for an application to bring it to its knees.
>
> --
> ---------------------------------------------------------------
> Brian V. Smith ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) http://www-epb.lbl.gov/BVSmith
> Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
> I don't speak for LBL; they don't pay me enough for that.
> Check out the xfig site at http://www-epb.lbl.gov/xfig
>
>  To the optimist, the glass is half full. To the pessimist, the
>  glass is half empty. To the engineer, the glass is twice as big
>  as it needs to be.



------------------------------

From: jimf <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: No bootable cdrom (w/ Mandrake 7.0)
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 03:49:39 -0600

I am trying to install Mandrake 7.0 on my dad's computer but his cdrom is
not bootable. I have tried to use this program rawwritewin.exe to make the
disk but I keep getting an error, Failed data 16! or soemthing like that.
I also got my friend's RH boot disk  but once I threw in the Mandrake cd
it got mad.
I guess at this point I am looking for some help.
Thanks
Jimmy


------------------------------

From: "Peet Grobler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Newbie Q : Where's my log files?
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 12:22:41 +0200

Where's the log files on a linux system? Are there any utils to read/empty
them?



------------------------------

From: "Peet Grobler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Newbie Q : Random number generator
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 12:20:34 +0200

When my RedHat Linux system boots, it displays the following message :
"Initializing Random Number Generator : failed"

What's this mean? I've just installed the system, no tweaks, no kernel
rebuilds, nothing.

Thanks, Peet



------------------------------

From: "Peet Grobler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Newbie Q : Info on scripts
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 12:24:11 +0200

Where can I find information on scripts, how to write them, and (possibly)
some sample code?

Thanks,
Peet



------------------------------

From: "Peet Grobler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Newbie Q : Allowing user to exec /sbin/shutdown
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 12:22:09 +0200

Hi.

When running /sbin/shutdown now, the machine tells me:
"Need to be root to shutdown"

The file permissions was set by root to rwxrwxrwx, so anybody should be able
to run it, not??

Still doesn't work. Only root can shutdown the system.

I seriously need to allow another user to shut down the system.

Anybody help?
Thanks



------------------------------

From: "Alexander N. Ruzhov" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: donbass.unix
Subject: shell access restriction
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 13:25:41 +0400

Anybody use subj. in /etc/usertty (Red Hat)?
May be I do something  wrong ?
/etc/usertty:

CLASSES
local tty1 tty2 tty3 tty4 tty5 tty6

GROUPS
root local @udao.dn.pib.com.ua

USERS
*
Result: any user have shell access from anywhere :(

--
Ryzhov N. Alexander



------------------------------

From: "Peet Grobler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Newbie Q : 6 tty's running?
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 12:37:13 +0200

When I boot my RedHat Linux system, and I type "ps", I see 6 tty processes
running. Why is this? I tried stopping them (hey, that's me), and they just
autostart again. What's these processes for?




------------------------------

From: "Peet Grobler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Newbie Q : Log a user's activity
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 12:47:46 +0200

Is there a way to log a single specified user's activities? Like all the
commands he enters and the output he gets?



------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux
Subject: Problem with IRC server
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 10:45:57 GMT

Hi,

Can anyone tell me if its possible to connect to an IRC server using 2
different clients from the same box?

I'm running UnrealIRCd 3.0 that I can learn how it works.  I'm using
the xchat client and i want to connect a second client using Telnet but
the second connection is always refused.  I try to connect using a
different server window in xchat but that also doesn't work.

I've reasoned that the server is configured to only allow one client
per host.  However I can't find anything in the configuration files to
change this.

If it helps I'm on using Mandrake 7.0 on a standalone box.




Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.

------------------------------

From: "Doug" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: find and grep ?
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 21:09:27 +1000

Hello all,

How do I give the output of something like
find . -name '*html'
to grep so that I can search through the contents of all the found files.

eg: to find all the *html files that contain <FORM>

Piping doesn't seem to work as the file list is searched, not the contents
of each file in the list.

Thanks,
Doug





------------------------------

From: Andreas Kahari <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Newbie Q : Where's my log files?
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 10:56:47 GMT

In article <38df367e$0$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Peet Grobler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Where's the log files on a linux system? Are there any utils to
read/empty
> them?
>
>


In /var/log, they ought to be emptied by cron jobs running once a
day/week.

/A

--
# Andreas K�h�ri, <URL:http://hello.to/andkaha/>
# Scandinavinans, without us "thursday" wouldn't exist!


Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.

------------------------------

From: Andreas Kahari <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Newbie Q : Info on scripts
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 11:03:44 GMT

In article <38df36d8$0$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Peet Grobler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Where can I find information on scripts, how to write them, and
(possibly)
> some sample code?
>
> Thanks,
> Peet
>
>

What kind of scripts?

For bash scripts, try the 'bash' manual page and take a look at the web
(look for shell script programming or something similar). Try looking at
the bash prompt HOWTO at
<URL:http://www.linuxdoc.org/HOWTO/Bash-Prompt-HOWTO.html>.

For Perl scripts, try the 'perl' manual page  and the manual page for
'perldoc', and take a look at the web at <URL:http://www.perl.com/>.

Did you try to look for the answers before posting?

/A


--
# Andreas K�h�ri, <URL:http://hello.to/andkaha/>
# Scandinavinans, without us "thursday" wouldn't exist!


Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.

------------------------------

From: Andreas Kahari <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Newbie Q : Random number generator
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 11:00:12 GMT

In article <38df35ff$0$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Peet Grobler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> When my RedHat Linux system boots, it displays the following message :
> "Initializing Random Number Generator : failed"
>
> What's this mean? I've just installed the system, no tweaks, no kernel
> rebuilds, nothing.
>
> Thanks, Peet
>
>

Do you have the /dev/random device built? I'm not sure, but not having
built it is the only reason I know of which could result in that error
message... If this is indeed the error, there's a script called
'MAKEDEV' (I think) in the /dev directory that you can use to build it.

/A


--
# Andreas K�h�ri, <URL:http://hello.to/andkaha/>
# Scandinavinans, without us "thursday" wouldn't exist!


Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.

------------------------------

From: Andreas Kahari <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Newbie Q : 6 tty's running?
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 11:10:31 GMT

In article <38df39e6$0$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Peet Grobler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> When I boot my RedHat Linux system, and I type "ps", I see 6 tty
processes
> running. Why is this? I tried stopping them (hey, that's me), and they
just
> autostart again. What's these processes for?
>
>


Hey! You're flooding the news group! You'r questions are all answered by
info on <URL:http://www.linuxdoc.org/>! Take a look in the HOWTO
documents on your system (they should be in /usr/doc).

You always have six tty's. In console mode, you can switch between them.
See the keyboard and console HOWTO at
<URL:http://www.linuxdoc.org/HOWTO/Keyboard-and-Console-HOWTO.html>

/A

--
# Andreas K�h�ri, <URL:http://hello.to/andkaha/>
# Scandinavinans, without us "thursday" wouldn't exist!


Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.

------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (David J. Kanter)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: debian upgrade
Date: 27 Mar 2000 11:01:00 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

On Sun, 26 Mar 2000 08:12:25 -0600, Tim Kelley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>If I have slink, and I want potato, is it corrct that all I need to do is 
>apt-get distribution-upgrade?

Make sure your sources.list is pointing to potato. Then do all the apt-get
stuff.

-- 
David Kanter
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

------------------------------

From: Damir Zucic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: ANNOUNCEMENT: Garlic, free mol. visual.
Date: 27 Mar 2000 11:21:46 GMT

ANNOUNCING GARLIC, FREE / OPEN SOURCE MOLECULAR VISUALIZATION PROGRAM

Garlic is a free molecular visualization program, written for unix
and unix compatible systems, especially linux.

The requirements to compile, install and run garlic are minimal:

(1) No-name PC running any distribution of linux, or unix workstation.

(2) The X server should be capable to support the TrueColor visual,
    with at least 8 bits per pixel + color monitor. On some systems,
    TrueColor is not available at 8 bits per pixel, but other color
    depths (12, 15, 24, ...) support this visual.

(3) GNU C compiler and the standard c library (libc).

(4) The standard X11 library (libX11).

(5) The standard math (libm).

Garlic may be used by students, teaching stuff, scientists and some
other people interested in macromolecular structures.

Detailed information, screenshot gallery and sources may be found at:


        O---------------------------------------O
        |                                       |
        |      http://pref.etfos.hr/garlic      |
        |                                       |
        O---------------------------------------O


                                                Damir Zucic
                                                [EMAIL PROTECTED]


------------------------------

From: Andreas Kahari <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Newbie Q : Allowing user to exec /sbin/shutdown
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 11:22:59 GMT

In article <38df365e$0$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Peet Grobler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi.
>
> When running /sbin/shutdown now, the machine tells me:
> "Need to be root to shutdown"
>
> The file permissions was set by root to rwxrwxrwx, so anybody should
be able
> to run it, not??
>
> Still doesn't work. Only root can shutdown the system.
>
> I seriously need to allow another user to shut down the system.
>
> Anybody help?
> Thanks
>
>

Some answers:

http://www.linuxdoc.org/LDP/LG/issue28/lg_tips28.html#shut
http://www.linuxvoodoo.org/howto/all/00000059.html
http://frf.hypermart.net/linux-newbie/FAQ2.htm#shutdown_as_user

/A

--
# Andreas K�h�ri, <URL:http://hello.to/andkaha/>
# Scandinavinans, without us "thursday" wouldn't exist!


Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.

------------------------------

From: Andreas Kahari <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Newbie Q : Log a user's activity
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 11:27:09 GMT

In article <38df3c5e$0$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Peet Grobler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is there a way to log a single specified user's activities? Like all
the
> commands he enters and the output he gets?
>
>

YOU DON'T WANT TO DO THIS!


/A


--
# Andreas K�h�ri, <URL:http://hello.to/andkaha/>
# Scandinavinans, without us "thursday" wouldn't exist!


Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.

------------------------------

From: Andreas Kahari <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Newbie Q : Log a user's activity
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 11:33:30 GMT

In article <38df3c5e$0$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Peet Grobler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is there a way to log a single specified user's activities? Like all
the
> commands he enters and the output he gets?
>
>

Why don't you give "No Such Agency" a call, see if they let you get a
licence to run Echelon...


Sure, you can install all kinds of nifty daemons that picks up
everything all users type on their keyboards... There's a program that
will even capture the screen image once every x seconds and store it in
a database...


Then, try to keep your employees.

/A



--
# Andreas K�h�ri, <URL:http://hello.to/andkaha/>
# Scandinavinans, without us "thursday" wouldn't exist!


Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.

------------------------------

From: Neil <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: find and grep ?
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 12:50:20 +0100

On Mon, 27 Mar 2000 21:09:27 +1000, "Doug" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>How do I give the output of something like
>find . -name '*html'
>to grep so that I can search through the contents of all the found files.

find . -name "foo.*" -print | xargs grep "stuff" 

grep -li is handier since it gives you filenames and in not case sensitive



------------------------------

From: Andreas Kahari <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: find and grep ?
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 11:36:26 GMT

In article <8bnfgp$8rj$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"Doug" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> How do I give the output of something like
> find . -name '*html'
> to grep so that I can search through the contents of all the found
files.
>
> eg: to find all the *html files that contain <FORM>
>
> Piping doesn't seem to work as the file list is searched, not the
contents
> of each file in the list.
>
> Thanks,
> Doug
>
>


Try

grep '<FORM>' `find ./ -name "*.html" -print`

Notice the use of backticks to get the filenames to run grep on.

/A


--
# Andreas K�h�ri, <URL:http://hello.to/andkaha/>
# Scandinavinans, without us "thursday" wouldn't exist!


Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.

------------------------------

Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 13:58:11 +0200
From: Thomas =?iso-8859-1?Q?M=F6ller?= <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.unix.admin,comp.unix.questions,com.os.linux.answers
Subject: Newbie question about Loganalyzers...

Hi!

I wonder if someone can help me with some guidance choosing
a good free or comersial loganalyzer for Linux or Solaris.

The loganalyzer must be able to analyze logs in real time
and make decsisions based on any event and perform a task
there after. Eg. A rule in a firewall has been broken and
the event is sent to the syslog server. The analyzer records
it and sends a mail to a couple of predefined e-mail
addresses. Or if a less serious event has taken place the
analyzer will print the event to a line printer.

Where can I get my hands on such a loganalyzer?...If it
exists that is...


Thanks a bunch!

Best regards
/Thomas M�ller         [EMAIL PROTECTED]


------------------------------

From: "Peet Grobler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Newbie Q : Where's my log files?
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 13:54:24 +0200

How do I set up these cron jobs?


Andreas Kahari wrote in message <8bnepa$kad$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>In article <38df367e$0$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
>"Peet Grobler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Where's the log files on a linux system? Are there any utils to
>read/empty
>> them?
>>
>>
>
>
>In /var/log, they ought to be emptied by cron jobs running once a
>day/week.
>
>/A
>
>--
># Andreas K�h�ri, <URL:http://hello.to/andkaha/>
># Scandinavinans, without us "thursday" wouldn't exist!
>
>
>Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
>Before you buy.



------------------------------

From: "Martin Beier" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Can't ping outside world?
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 13:51:28 +0200

>
> I can ping from any of my workstations back to MachineB. No problem. But
> machine B can only ping
> itself and 127.0.0.1.
>

An ifconfig eth0 on machine B would be helpful. You should also provide a
trace from tcpdump on machine B when it is being "pinged" from outside!

[EMAIL PROTECTED]




------------------------------

From: "Martin Beier" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: hosnames in title var of Xterm
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 14:05:00 +0200

> In Suse linux, tcsh is configured in such as way as to display hostname
and path
> in the title bar of Xterms.
>
> Is there a way to do this in bash for remote systems ? I've trawled around
all
> the usual places but to no avail.
>
export PS1='\u@\h:\w > '
Perhaps this works.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]




------------------------------

From: "Martin Beier" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Newbie Q : Allowing user to exec /sbin/shutdown
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 14:11:19 +0200


Peet Grobler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb in im Newsbeitrag:
38df365e$0$[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Hi.
>
> When running /sbin/shutdown now, the machine tells me:
> "Need to be root to shutdown"
>
> The file permissions was set by root to rwxrwxrwx, so anybody should be
able
> to run it, not??
>
> Still doesn't work. Only root can shutdown the system.
>
> I seriously need to allow another user to shut down the system.
>
Changing the file permissions of the shutdown program enables all
users to execute the binary, put does not prevent it from still
denying users if their id not equals zero. Do not change file permissions
of system files! Try to create an appropriate /etc/shutdown.allow instead.
See man shutdown(8).

[EMAIL PROTECTED]





------------------------------

From: "Martin Beier" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Newbie Q : Where's my log files?
Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 14:16:55 +0200


Peet Grobler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb in im Newsbeitrag:
38df367e$0$[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Where's the log files on a linux system? Are there any utils to read/empty
> them?
The location of log files depends on the Linux distribution. Take a look at
the /etc/syslog.conf
file. This configures where any class of message is being stored. Logs are
usually text files,
you can read them with any tool (grep, sed, tail, vi, ...)

[EMAIL PROTECTED]




------------------------------


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