Linux-Misc Digest #5, Volume #24 Fri, 31 Mar 00 02:13:03 EST
Contents:
Re: TELNET (Joe Schottman)
Re: Modem problem (David Efflandt)
Re: pnpdump error (David Efflandt)
Re: Booting from floppy to Kernel on Fixed disk (Neil Koozer)
Re: Setting up a second printer with a PCI Parallel Port Card, ... (David Efflandt)
Re: RedHat vs. Mandrake? (Richard Steiner)
Re: Partition disappeared? ("Jordan Hiller")
Re: Windows 2000 (Dances With Crows)
Re: incoming network connection...sometimes ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: staroffice running slowly (Carl Fink)
Re: XWindows (Carl Fink)
Re: Help LILO 10101... Problem!!! (Cameron L. Spitzer)
Re: LILO problem (Cameron L. Spitzer)
Re: Lilo question:How to move Linux Drive to secondary IDE port. (Cameron L. Spitzer)
Re: Lilo question:How to move Linux Drive to secondary IDE port. (Cameron L. Spitzer)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Joe Schottman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: TELNET
Date: 30 Mar 2000 23:05:05 -0500
wally <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I am trying to telnet one of my clients , access is always denied.
> To use telnet, In what file do i setup username & passwords ?.
> I tried logging in as root and all the usernames on the client, it would
> not grant me access what do i do? How do i go about
Are you getting a message from your machine, such as
"bash: /usr/bin/telnet: Permission denied", or are you getting a message from
the client computer? Do you get a login prompt, or does it not even get that
far? It sounds as if the machine you are trying to connect to has been
configured to not allow telnet access, at least not from your connection, for
security reasons. If this is the case, I would suggest that you look into ssh
way to maintain security while allowing you remote access.
As a side note, many computers are configured so that you cannot log in as
root, except from the computer keyboard itself.
Joe Schottman
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (David Efflandt)
Subject: Re: Modem problem
Date: 31 Mar 2000 05:35:40 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Thu, 30 Mar 2000 10:15:29 GMT, Lou Hevly <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>When I hit pppd, Linux doesn't seem to find my modem; at least I hear
>no dialing. Here's what I get in my messages log:
>
>Mar 29 19:32:45 (none) pppd[556]: pppd 2.3.11 started by root, uid 0
>Mar 29 19:32:45 (none) pppd[556]: Using interface ppp0
>Mar 29 19:32:45 (none) pppd[556]: Connect: ppp0 <--> /dev/tty1
>Mar 29 19:33:16 (none) pppd[556]: LCP: timeout sending Config-Requests
>
>Mar 29 19:33:16 (none) pppd[556]: Connection terminated.
>Mar 29 19:33:16 (none) pppd[556]: Exit.
>
>Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
tty1 is a console. I don't think that would work for pppd.
Try /dev/ttyS1 if your modem is on Com2.
>--
>Lou Hevly
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>http://www.visca.com
--
David Efflandt [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.de-srv.com/
http://www.autox.chicago.il.us/ http://www.berniesfloral.net/
http://hammer.prohosting.com/~cgi-wiz/ http://cgi-help.virtualave.net/
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (David Efflandt)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.networking,comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: pnpdump error
Date: 31 Mar 2000 05:40:18 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Thu, 30 Mar 2000 22:42:45 -0500, Scott Fleming <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>when performing a pnpdump, with no parameters, it lists my enet KNE20
>Kingston adapter at 0x240 with IRQ3.
>
>However, when I perform:
>
>pnpdump /etc/isapnp.conf
>
>I get an error that reports 0x0000 is out of range and does not write the
>file. I ran the Kingston adapter setup, which does not detect the adapter.
>Funny thing about all this is, that previous to this, I was using this
>adapter on the same MB under windows 95 w/0 any problems.
You forgot one character (directing the output to the file):
pnpdump > /etc/isapnp.conf
--
David Efflandt [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.de-srv.com/
http://www.autox.chicago.il.us/ http://www.berniesfloral.net/
http://hammer.prohosting.com/~cgi-wiz/ http://cgi-help.virtualave.net/
------------------------------
From: Neil Koozer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Booting from floppy to Kernel on Fixed disk
Date: Thu, 30 Mar 2000 22:01:14 -0800
Martin McCormick wrote:
>
> I have been running a system in which I allow DOS/Windows to
> boot if the system is simply reset or powered up with nothing in the
> floppy drive. I then have a Linux boot disk that I install when I
> want to boot linux from power up or reset. AFter configuring and
> building a new kernel, I see that the kernel or vmlinux file is too
> large to fit on the boot disk. I would still like this functionality
> so my question is whether it is possible to cause a Linux boot disk to
> run a kernel which is actually on the hard drive where it would be if
> one booted via lilo or had linux as the default boot partition?
Yes. That's my favorite way of using lilo. All you have to do is edit
the boot= line in /etc/lilo.conf as follows:
boot=/dev/fd0
Then just run lilo with a floppy in the drive. I assume the rest of
your /etc/lilo.conf is ok.
Neil.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (David Efflandt)
Subject: Re: Setting up a second printer with a PCI Parallel Port Card, ...
Date: 31 Mar 2000 06:01:19 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Thu, 30 Mar 2000, Yan Seiner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>alias parport_lowlevel parport_pc
>options parport_pc io=0x3bc,0x378,0x278 irq=7,none,none
> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^
>change to suit
>
>--Yan
Actually you don't even need that second line at all unless you are going
to be setting an IRQ with tunelp. Otherwise lpd just polls all ports and
doesn't even use any IRQs for printing. Use tunelp with the -s switch to
check status:
# tunelp /dev/lp0 -s
/dev/lp0 status is 15, busy, ready
# tunelp /dev/lp1 -s
/dev/lp1 status is 120, busy, out of paper, on-line
# tunelp /dev/lp2 -s
/dev/lp2: Device not configured
lp0 is sleeping HP4L, lp1 PCI card (no printer), lp2 does not exist
>Bob Pelletier wrote:
>>
>> Hello all,
>>
>> I was wondering if anyone has every setup a second LPT port on a Linux
>> box with a PCI parallel card. I'm running kernel 2.2.12 with lp
>> modulerized, and I know the IRQ and IO port for the for the PCI parallel
>> adapter. I think all I need to do is put a couple of lines in my
>> /etc/conf.modules to get lp or parport to recognize it, though I do not
>> know what those lines should be.
>>
>> Am I on the right track? Do anyone have any suggestions?
>>
>> TIA,
>>
>> Bob Pelletier
--
David Efflandt [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.de-srv.com/
http://www.autox.chicago.il.us/ http://www.berniesfloral.net/
http://hammer.prohosting.com/~cgi-wiz/ http://cgi-help.virtualave.net/
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Richard Steiner)
Subject: Re: RedHat vs. Mandrake?
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thu, 30 Mar 2000 20:39:02 -0600
Here in comp.os.linux.misc, Bill Delphenich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
spake unto us, saying:
>How is Mandrake different from RedHat? They seem so similar; there must
>be a basic difference in emphasis somewhere but its not obvious to me.
Which versions? Earlier versions were basically Red Hat with KDE and
some other stuff added. Later versions have a completely different
installation routine and update tools than Red Hat does.
--
-Rich Steiner >>>---> [EMAIL PROTECTED] >>>---> Bloomington, MN
OS/2 + BeOS + Linux + Solaris + Win95 + WinNT4 + FreeBSD + DOS
+ VMWare + Fusion + vMac + Executor = PC Hobbyist Heaven! :-)
Your E-Mail has been returned due to insufficient voltage
------------------------------
From: "Jordan Hiller" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Partition disappeared?
Date: Fri, 31 Mar 2000 06:16:57 GMT
Michael Kelly <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Try fdisk -l /dev/hd? where ? is your hd such as /dev/hda
> That will spit out the partition table with no risk of writing
> anything.
>
> See what partitions you have. You may have just messed it up
> so that it's not mounting in /etc/fstab.
fdisk and /etc/fstab look okay - the partitions are there and appear to be
okay.
I tried "mount /dev/hdc3 /usr" and it worked, I still have my data! *sigh of
relief* I'm still having problems but it may be because /etc/inittab seems
to be completely blank. If that's the case, is there a "default" I can
download somewhere and use without knowing too much about how it works?
Thanks,
Jordan
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Dances With Crows)
Subject: Re: Windows 2000
Date: 31 Mar 2000 01:18:04 EST
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On 30 Mar 2000 20:33:48 -0600, William Cherry
<<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> shouted forth into the ether:
>> > Hi,
>> > I can mount my windows 2000 partition from my Linux without any problem.
>> > The only thing is that I need to be root to access this partition. When
>> > I try to access it as a regular user I always get "access denied". A
>> > "chmode -R 777" gets the job done but after a reboot I have to
>Also check out the umask, uid, and gid options. For example, adding the
>umask=777 option will make all the files readable and writable by everyone.
>On my machine, I have a group called "dos" and I set the gid of my win
>partition to that and set the umask to 077.
s/umask=777/umask=000/g
(I made that same mistake a while back. The umask is the REVERSE of the
normal file perms. 777 perm=anyone can read/write/exec; 000 umask=
essentially the same thing.)
--
Matt G / Dances With Crows \###| Programmers are playwrights
There is no Darkness in Eternity \##| Computers are lousy actors
But only Light too dim for us to see \#| Lusers are vicious drama critics
(Unless, of course, you're working with NT)\| BOFHen burn down theatres.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.networking
Subject: Re: incoming network connection...sometimes
Date: Fri, 31 Mar 2000 06:13:42 GMT
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Janet <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have an odd problem with incoming network connections (outgoing
always
> seems to be fine). Sometimes (and there doesn't seem to be a pattern
to
> these times), my computer will suddenly stop responding to outside
> connections. I'm not able to ping it, ssh in, etc. etc. When I
> traceroute it, the traceroute stops one hop before my computer:
>
> traceroute to bistromath.Stanford.EDU (171.66.65.41), 30 hops max, 38
byte
> packets
> 1 res-gateway (171.66.16.1) 1.435 ms 0.927 ms 0.911 ms
> 2 Core3-gateway (171.64.3.98) 1.524 ms 1.323 ms 1.188 ms
> 3 jenkins-gateway (171.64.3.13) 1.979 ms 2.146 ms 1.365 ms
>
> However, I _can_ access it from the other computer in my room (which
> doesn't need to go through the gatways). Eventually, it just starts
> responding to connections again (i.e., I don't have to do anything). I
> can't find anything in the logs which seems out of the ordinary.
>
> Oh, I'm using a Red Hat system with a 2.2.9 kernel, DHCP (pumpd
running).
> Is there something I should look for in the network configuration, or
is
> it possible the router is just screwy?
>
> Thanks,
> Janet
>
we had problems like that when the module in the router/gateway was
'screwy'.
you could ask your networking people to hook you into another port -
preferably, if it is the kind where they have like 10 modules in a rack
have them put you in another module.
your machine should not 'know' where the connection is coming from
(as in 'is it local or alien ?'),
so it would not respond differently to routed connections afaik.
--
'...' 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: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Carl Fink)
Subject: Re: staroffice running slowly
Date: 30 Mar 2000 13:38:32 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On 30 Mar 2000 10:37:24 GMT Karel Jansens <jansens_at_ibm_dot_net> wrote:
>
>It's a darn fine program, but if you do lots of spreadsheet and
>database-related work, it quickly becomes tiresome. Nothing - and I
>mean _nothing_! - beats WP as a high-powered wordprocessor though. It
>will perform 99.99% of the tasks you would do with a dedicated DTP
>package.
WordPerfect Office 2000 for Linux is shipping now for release next
week, which might solve your database and spreadsheet objections.
--
Carl Fink [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I-Con's Science and Technology Guest of Honor in 2000 will be Geoffrey
A. Landis. See <http://www.iconsf.org> for I-Con information.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Carl Fink)
Subject: Re: XWindows
Date: 30 Mar 2000 13:40:06 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On 30 Mar 2000 04:55:43 GMT Peter T. Breuer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Carl Fink <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>: Folks, remember that kmail being suid is a *guess* on my part, never
>: confirmed by the original poster. It's owned by root on my system
>: (Debian 2.1) but not suid. If it *is* suid, it's presumably an
>: error, not something the package manager meant to do.
>
>No, it has to be suid in order to open and modify pap-secrets on the fly.
>All the docs tell you that. Or used to!
Why would kmail modify pap-secrets? You're thinking of kppp, aren't
you.
--
Carl Fink [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I-Con's Science and Technology Guest of Honor in 2000 will be Geoffrey
A. Landis. See <http://www.iconsf.org> for I-Con information.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Cameron L. Spitzer)
Crossposted-To:
uk.comp.os.linux,comp.os.linux.hardware,comp.os.linux.setup,linux.redhat.install
Subject: Re: Help LILO 10101... Problem!!!
Date: 31 Mar 2000 05:38:22 GMT
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Marc wrote:
>Martin wrote:
>>
>> When installing RH 6.1 on my system after the LILO configuration has
>> completed upon rebooting my system I get the 10101010... string running
>> accross the screen. I then have to boot into DOS and "fdisk /mbr". I have an
>> IBM Deskstar 20.5GB drive with 2 partitions of 10GB running Win 98 and a 4GB
>> Quantumn Fireball running Linux. I did not have any probs with LILO before
>> the IBM drive was installed.
The automatic stuff in RH 6.1 does not handle large hard drives
properly. Complain to Red Hat.
Meanwhile, make a boot floppy. It will save you aggravation.
> I have two hard disks in the computer, one is fixed the other is in a
>removable drawer.
Make a boot floppy. It will save you aggravation.
Lilo is not well suited to environments where the disk configuration
changes all the time.
Cameron
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Cameron L. Spitzer)
Crossposted-To: vmware.for-linux.installation
Subject: Re: LILO problem
Date: 31 Mar 2000 05:49:45 GMT
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Matthew Gabeler-Lee wrote:
>"G. Pollack" wrote:
>
>> I'm trying to set up vmware for Win98 as a guest OS, using the rawdisk
>> method. Win98 is on /dev/hda1, and the MBR is on /dev/hda0. When I
>> attemp to Power On, lilo writes just 'L' to the screen, and then I get
>> the following message:
>>
>> Attempt to read 1 sector(s) starting at sector 6044173. This is outside
>> the allowed range for raw disk '/home/jerry/vmware/win98/win98.hda'.
>>
>> Can anyone tell me what's wrong, and how to correct it?
>
>This ought to be covered in a faq. It is definitely covered in the lilo
>documentation. Lilo is not psychic. It need to know what devices to
>boot! Therefore, it needs to read from the linux drive that stuff is
>stored on!
The Lilo installer /sbin/lilo needs to know that at install time.
The bootstrap loader LILO (aka boot.b and friends) doesn't care
about "linux drives." It doesn't even care about partitions.
You can install LILO on a system that doesn't have any
"linux drives."
Cameron
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Cameron L. Spitzer)
Subject: Re: Lilo question:How to move Linux Drive to secondary IDE port.
Date: 31 Mar 2000 06:14:40 GMT
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, John in SD wrote:
>Windows MUST be on /dev/hda (drive C:); and it must be a primary
>partition.
>
>You may or may not be able to put Linux on /dev/hdc. LILO uses only
>BIOS calls to load the kernel, so /dev/hdc MUST be device 0x82.
>/dev/hda is 0x80, and /dev/hdb is 0x81. My BIOS installs all three
>drives, so I can boot /dev/hdcX.
>
>If your BIOS only installs 0x80 and 0x81 (Windows/DOS drives C: and
>D:), you are completely out of luck with LILO.
That is not true. The LILO mini-HOWTO describes a setup with a
traditional BIOS (/dev/hda only) and Linux on a drive that DOS
and the BIOS cannot see at all.
The current version of Lilo can use the Int 13 Extensions to boot
Linux from a 15 GB Microsoft partition that spans the first 4000
cylinders, even if Linux is on the seventh SCSI drive on a
parallel port adapter and the BIOS can only see /dev/hda.
Lilo is extremely versatile. Unfortunately, it is not user friendly.
It does not have colorful menus and a helpdesk.
If you don't want to read documentation, you can't use it in ways
that Red Hat et al don't automate for you. You'll have to buy
System Commander or Partition Magic instead. But it's rude to tell
other people that they can't do it just because you can't be
bothered to figure out how.
Cameron
>
>Neil Koozer has another boot loader, which might work, however. It is
>called NUNI. Search this NG, and the hardware NG for a reference to
>his site.
>
>--John in SD
>
>
>
>On 29 Mar 2000 14:35:28 EST, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Dances
>With Crows) wrote:
>
>>On Wed, 29 Mar 2000 13:25:33 -0500, Blackstar
>><<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> shouted forth into the ether:
>>>I would like to move my Linux RHv6.1 drive(/dev/hdb) to the secondary
>>>IDE port(/dev/hdc).
>>>Lilo is on the MBR of /dev/hda (Windoze98). Lilo fails to boot Linux if
>>>I move the drive to /dev/hdc. I know I can change the Lilo to the MBR of
>>>the second drive and restore the MBR of /dev/hda with FDISK /MBR.
>>
>>It seems as though the BIOS has a hard time reading from anything but the
>>first two IDE drives on bootup. LILO also won't work unless it's
>>somewhere on the first hard disk. (From the LILO documentation.)
>>
>>>I want to use my bios at boot up to select which drive to boot.
>>
>>Yuck. If you reboot your machine frequently, that means every time you
>>boot, you have to waste 10-15 seconds messing with the BIOS. Not cool,
>>plus it might not work the way you expect. I installed LILO on the MBR of
>>/dev/hdb and told the BIOS to boot from that drive. No go, though the
>>kernel and the map file were on /dev/hdb well udner the 1024-limit.
>>
>>If I were you, I'd try this: Put your Linux disk on /dev/hda, and put
>>your WinXX disk on /dev/hdc. Install LILO in the MBR of your Linux disk,
>>and have the lilo.conf be like this:
>>
>>other=/dev/hdc1
>> label=dos
>> table=/dev/hdc
>>
>>I do not know if this will work, though it should with recent BIOSes.
>>Whether WinXX can handle being on /dev/hdc is another story entirely.
>
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Cameron L. Spitzer)
Subject: Re: Lilo question:How to move Linux Drive to secondary IDE port.
Date: 31 Mar 2000 06:05:27 GMT
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Blackstar wrote:
>I would like to move my Linux RHv6.1 drive(/dev/hdb) to the secondary
>IDE port(/dev/hdc).
I've done that a couple of times.
The most likely problem you will have is that your BIOS is too
primitive to boot from /dev/hdc.
If your BIOS won't boot from it, you can't use LILO with it.
> I recently removed my IDE CD and CD-R drives from
>my system and installed a SCSI Plextor CD-RW drive and Seagate SCSI
>Hornet NS20 Travan tape drive. By doing this I have freed up the
>secondary IDE port.
>
>Lilo is on the MBR of /dev/hda (Windoze98). Lilo fails to boot Linux if
>I move the drive to /dev/hdc.
That's because the mapfile you built when you installed LILO
instructs LILO to ask BIOS for sectors from /dev/hda.
>I know I can change the Lilo to the MBR of
>the second drive and restore the MBR of /dev/hda with FDISK /MBR. I want
>to use my bios at boot up to select which drive to boot.
The Lilo that came with your commercial Linux distribution is too
old, and doesn't know how to use the INT 13 Extensions to overcome
the 1023 cylinder limit.
If you have not invested much in the Win-98 stuff on the new
/dev/hda, re-partition drive hda with a small /dev/hda1. Put an
ext2 partition on there for convenience. Reinstall win-98 on
/dev/hda2. Move /boot from whereever it is now to /dev/hda1.
>System:
>PII 350Mhz
>128 mb ram
>Voodoo Banshee AGP card
>Sound Card: ES1371 (SB PCI 128)
>Ethernet: Linksys 10/100 (Cable Modem Access)
>SCSI:
>PLEXTOR 32/12/4X CD-RW
>Seagate NS20 Travan Tape Drive
>/dev/hda: Maxtor 20G drive (Windoze98)
>/dev/hdb: Maxtor 8G (Linux RHv6.1) Want it to be /dev/hdc
>
>I have read the HOWTO on adding drives, etc. They don't expressly say
>how to do the lilo change without moving files to a new HD.
>Any help would be appreciated!: )
>My present /etc/lilo.conf file:
>boot=/dev/hda
>map=/boot/map
>install=/boot/boot.b
>prompt
>vga=0
>timeout=50
>default=linux
>
>image=/boot/vmlinuz-2.2.12-20.scsi
> label=linux
> initrd=/boot/initrd-2.2.12-20.img
> read-only
> root=/dev/hdb7
>image=/boot/vmlinuz-2.2.12-20-1
> label=linux.old
> initrd=/boot/initrd-2.2.12-20.img
> read-only
> root=/dev/hdb7
>image=/boot/vmlinuz-2.2.12-20
> label=linux.org
> initrd=/boot/initrd-2.2.12-20.img
> read-only
> root=/dev/hdb7
>
>other=/dev/hda1
> label=dos
>
>Thanx,
>
>Pete McDade
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Screw Red Hat. It's not their kernel, it's ours. Install
real kernel source. Build a bzImage that works for your
system when you boot it from a floppy, raw.
Now that you have a bzImage that you know what's in it
and what modules it needs, you're ready to install Lilo.
Make a "floppy that boots at hard drive speed" as
shown in the Lilo mini-HOWTO. Now you have everything but your
ever-changing hard drive geometry down.
Add a stanza that describes the configuration you are going to
have when you move the drive, and rerun lilo(8).
Now move your drive.
Boot your system from your floppy. Notice that it can't find
/usr (if that's a second partition) and swap. That's okay.
Fix your /etc/fstab to reflect the new configuration, and your
floppy will boot your system correctly. Once you have a correct
boot config on floppy it is easy to translate it to a hard drive
only boot setup.
1.44 MB floppy disks are the workaround for the Microsoft/BIOS
nightmare. I don't know why folks are so reluctant to use them.
Cameron
------------------------------
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End of Linux-Misc Digest
******************************