Linux-Misc Digest #124, Volume #24               Wed, 12 Apr 00 09:13:05 EDT

Contents:
  Re: cursor speed ("T.E.Dickey")
  Using raid on redhat 6.1 ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
  Re: How Microsoft inhibits competition & innovation (Floyd Davidson)
  Re: Using raid on redhat 6.1 ("kjoe")
  Re: /dev file permission keep changing ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
  Help, please.... (Stefan Jang)
  rpm --freshen problem (Ralf Kleineisel)
  slow linux ("ed johnson")
  Re: slow linux ("kjoe")
  installing via hard drive (pierre amadio)
  Re: XFree86-xfs very slow (Bill Lam)
  Re: Minimal installation on small harddisk? (Jonathan H N Chin)
  Re: Help, please.... (Andreas Kahari)
  Re: socket: Too many open files in system (Marc Andre Selig)
  Matrox G200  setup for X (William Wueppelmann)
  Re: damn system clock will not stay "right" (M Sweger)
  Re: Programming Languages on Linux (Ole Vanman)
  Re: Apache -- CGI (Neil)
  Re: DHCP woes ("Chris Clark")
  Adding functionality to Right-Click mouse button ("C. Gross")
  Re: Probs with password (Bernd Driesen)
  Re: How did the hacker get root access to my system? (Rod Smith)

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

From: "T.E.Dickey" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: cursor speed
Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 10:16:25 GMT

Carthell Glover <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> My cursor seems to move too slow in my vi editor and other X apps as
> well. Is there anything I can adjust to speed it up?

man kbdrate

or in XF86Config
    AutoRepeat  200 30


-- 
Thomas E. Dickey
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.clark.net/pub/dickey

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

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Using raid on redhat 6.1
Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 10:08:50 GMT

I have troubles installing Redhat 6.1 with raid V.
When I start installation I get an error message "No device was found
on which to create new filesystems".

It seems Redhat install program doesn't find any hard disk.

Do you know how to solve this problem ?


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

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

From: Floyd Davidson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: How Microsoft inhibits competition & innovation
Date: 12 Apr 2000 01:30:04 -0800

David Steuber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>
>' uh...no.  Having a "huge" share is not a monopoly.  A monopoly is having
>' 100% share.  Citing various legal ruling doesn't change the basic
>' definitions of words.
>' So, in which product catagory does Microsoft have a monopoly?  We know
>' it's not word processors.  We know it's not web browsers.  We know it's
>' not email programs or news readers.  We know it's not spreadsheets or
>' database programs.  Help me out here.  Tell me which product catagory has
>' been monopolized by Microsoft.
>
>By your definition, none.

His definition is quaint, but it is also incorrect.  A monopoly is
*not* defined as having 100% share (although certainly a 100% share
will provide a monopoly).

A monopoly is having enough control to set prices.

>  Never mind that many companies want
>documents in Word's doc format.  Never mind that Netscape was killed
>by IE, not due to technical merits but due to tying.

That fits Bill Gate's stated purpose in life:  to make money.

I don't particularly care for his products, and don't use them.  But
the man is *exceedingly* good at what he does.

-- 
Floyd L. Davidson                          [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska)

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

From: "kjoe" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Using raid on redhat 6.1
Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 12:18:22 +0100

get 6.2.. it has better raid support
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message <8d1hvc$2p3$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>I have troubles installing Redhat 6.1 with raid V.
>When I start installation I get an error message "No device was found
>on which to create new filesystems".
>
>It seems Redhat install program doesn't find any hard disk.
>
>Do you know how to solve this problem ?
>
>
>Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
>Before you buy.



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

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: /dev file permission keep changing
Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 12:39:13 +0200
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Can't tell you why the permissions are changed back, but the easy solution is to
set the users in the audio group. This solved a similar problem for me.

Hope that helps,
Eggert

On Wed, 12 Apr 2000 01:26:36 GMT, DaveDiego <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>
> When I'm logged into my Mandrake 6.0/ KDE 1.1 desktop the file permissions of
>/dev/dsp /dev/audio and /dev/mixer get changed after someone else does a
><ctrl>+<alt>+<F2>, leaving me logged in and then the second person logs in.
>The second person then starts KDE.
>
>
> Here is whats happening. While still logged in as myself, I logged       
>in as another user and started KDE. The first listing is before the logon,      
>the second listing is after KDE starts and the third listing is after the       
>user logs out.                                                                  


--
Eggert Ehmke
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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

From: Stefan Jang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Help, please....
Date: Mon, 10 Apr 2000 14:57:05 -0700


==============4163A8D988141CA98087C99E
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit


Hello,

I've wrote a simple script that kills process on Linux machine. I
noticed that my
script does kill the processes but gives out following messages:

kill <pid>: No such process
kill <pid>: No such process
kill <pid>: No such process
kill <pid>: No such process
kill <pid>: No such process
kill <pid>: No such process
kill <pid>: No such process
kill <pid>: No such process

Is there a way not to display above message?
Or How do I get rid of this message on Linux?

My script looks like these:

#!/bin/sh -f
# Trying to determine the Operating System
OS=`uname -s`
case $OS in
'Linux')
/bin/ps -auxgww | grep "<Program name>" | grep -v grep | awk '{print
$2}' | xargs kill
;;
esac

Thanks,

Stefan


==============4163A8D988141CA98087C99E
Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

<!doctype html public "-//w3c//dtd html 4.0 transitional//en">
<html>
&nbsp;
<br>Hello,
<p>I've wrote a simple script that kills process on Linux machine. I noticed
that my
<br>script does kill the processes but gives out following messages:
<p><font color="#FF0000">kill &lt;pid>: No such process</font>
<br><font color="#FF0000">kill &lt;pid>: No such process</font>
<br><font color="#FF0000">kill &lt;pid>: No such process</font>
<br><font color="#FF0000">kill &lt;pid>: No such process</font>
<br><font color="#FF0000">kill &lt;pid>: No such process</font>
<br><font color="#FF0000">kill &lt;pid>: No such process</font>
<br><font color="#FF0000">kill &lt;pid>: No such process</font>
<br><font color="#FF0000">kill &lt;pid>: No such process</font>
<p>Is there a way not to display above message?
<br>Or How do I get rid of this message on Linux?
<p>My <b><u><font color="#FF0000">script </font></u></b>looks like these:
<p><font color="#FF0000"><font size=-1>#!/bin/sh -f</font></font>
<br><font color="#FF0000"><font size=-1># Trying to determine the Operating
System</font></font>
<br><font color="#FF0000"><font size=-1>OS=`uname -s`</font></font>
<br><font color="#FF0000"><font size=-1>case $OS in</font></font>
<br><font color="#FF0000"><font size=-1>'Linux')</font></font>
<br><font color="#FF0000"><font size=-1>/bin/ps -auxgww | grep "&lt;Program
name>" | grep -v grep | awk '{print $2}' | xargs kill</font></font>
<br><font color="#FF0000"><font size=-1>;;</font></font>
<br><font color="#FF0000"><font size=-1>esac</font></font><font color="#FF0000"></font>
<p><font color="#000000">Thanks,</font><font color="#000000"></font>
<p><font color="#000000">Stefan</font>
<br><font color="#FF0000">&nbsp;</font></html>

==============4163A8D988141CA98087C99E==


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

From: Ralf Kleineisel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: rpm --freshen problem
Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 13:00:20 +0200

Hi,

I try to upgrade several RPMs on my RedHat 6.2 Box from
an FTP-Server. The option --freshen of rpm should
upgrade only those packages which are already installed
in an older version.
Nevertheless rpm tries to fetch _all_ packages. For
example:

# rpm -q rpm-build
package rpm-build is not installed
]# rpm --freshen -v
ftp://ftp.uni-bayreuth.de/pub/linux/redhat/redhat-6.2/i386/RedHat/RPMS/rpm-build-3.0.4-0.48.i386.rpm
 
Retrieving
ftp://ftp.uni-bayreuth.de/pub/linux/redhat/redhat-6.2/i386/RedHat/RPMS/rpm-build-3.0.4-0.48.i386.rpm
error: failed dependencies:
        /bin/bash2 is needed by rpm-build-3.0.4-0.48

If I download the package first and try it locally it works:
# rpm --freshen -v rpm-build-3.0.4-0.48.i386.rpm
no packages require freshening    


Do I something wrong or is this a bug of the rpm program?

-- 
Ralf Kleineisel  -  Regionales Rechenzentrum Erlangen

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

From: "ed johnson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: slow linux
Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 12:05:50 +0100

I have a linux system and lately it has slowed down loads. I don't know a
great deal about linux but a couple of friends have been using my machine.
It is possible that they could be running something.

I there a way to see what is currently running on the system please ???

--
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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

From: "kjoe" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: slow linux
Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 13:04:20 +0100

this is very basic to any unix... 'ps -aux' or 'top'
ed johnson wrote in message <8d1lau$fl2$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>I have a linux system and lately it has slowed down loads. I don't know a
>great deal about linux but a couple of friends have been using my machine.
>It is possible that they could be running something.
>
>I there a way to see what is currently running on the system please ???
>
>--
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>



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

From: pierre amadio <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: installing via hard drive
Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 10:37:10 +0000

Hello.

I have trouble installing a mandrake on a toshiba
libretto.

As this laptop comes with a peculiar pcmcia floppy disk, i choose to try a hard
disk installation.

On a fat16 partition i copyed the installation cdrom (that i already use to
install mandrake sucessfully on another computer) and launch the installation
via loadlin.

The trouble is the installation process complain that it s not able to find the
installation files although i have copyed all file in the Mandrake directory.

I also rename the Mandrake directory to Redhat cause if i did not the
installation process did not start at all because it didnt find valide redhat
image on the disk (just after telling i want a hard drive installation).

I also tryed to install a debian slink, base was succesfully installed, but i
still have problems installing the other package using dselect.

Help needed badly (i cannot stant having my libretto running only windows :) ).

Pierre Amadio

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

From: Bill Lam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: XFree86-xfs very slow
Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 11:30:04 GMT


Chris Lowth wrote:
> 
> On Mon, 6 Mar 2000, Hal Burgiss wrote:
> 
> > On Mon, 6 Mar 2000 14:53:45 +0000, Chris Lowth
> > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > >I have a redhat 6.0 box - its an i486/50dx machine - nothing flash.
> > >Running XFree86 and netscape.
> > >
> > >I dont expect miracles, but I have found there is a severe speed
> > >problem with XFS. It manifests itself as a 2 minute delay in the
> > >start=up of netscape.
> > >
> > >Even "xbanner" takes 90 seconds to run.
> > >
> > >Using "ps -A x" I have noted that all the time delay is being mopped 
up
> > >in "user land" loops in the xfs server.
> > >
> > >I have even re-installed redhat 5.2, 6.0, 6.1 and caldera 1.3 - ALL
> > >have the same problem.
> > >
> > >Am I missing something here - is this a bug, or do I really have to
> > >live with the auful though that Windows is better than linux on this
> > >box - I think I really couldnt handle that!
> > 
> > Very strange. I have a hard time thinking what xfs would be doing to
> > cause this. But, you might try hardwiring all your Fontpaths into
> > /etc/X11/XF86Config, kill xfs, restart X and see if it is xfs or maybe
> > something else that xfs is interacting with. It might be something 
wonky
> > with your networking as all of these are using Unix Domain Sockets. Why
> > would xbanner need xfs (just thinking out loud)?
> 
> Hal - Thanks for the input. I tried your suggestion - and it makes no
> difference to the time taken to do things - but now it is the X server
> that clocks up vast amounts of cpu time rather than XFS. I wonder whether
> it's something in a lower level libary that both of these ways of doing
> things use.
> 
> Has anyone else had this problem - or conversly: has any one got some
> success stories about netscape on a 486?
> 
> -- 
> From Chris Lowth
> ---
> My Real e-mail address is (roughly):
> chris <AT> lowth <DOT> dircon
> <DOT> <SEA> <OH> <DOT> <YOO> <KAY>
> (Silly over-parnoid anti-spam measure)


Chris.
I have got an EXECTLY THE SAME problem with you.
I am working in a X-Terminal project at my college. The "Server" running 
xfs is a powerful PIII 300 machine with 256MB Ram, but the "Client" is 
very thin, having just a 486/33DX CPU with 8MB of Ram.
Whenever the "Client" request font, the xfs located in the "Server" 
consumes an average 95% of CPU time for a long time(More or less the same 
with you, I think). Do remember that its a PIII 300 machine. It seems that 
it is completely not reasonable.
However, when I try to run X in the "Server" locally(That means the 
XServer in the thin "Client" machine is not involved), the machine just 
works in perfect condition.
I would like to know if you have solved the problem. I have an idea: have 
you tried the older version of xfs(say, for RH 5.2). Is it possible that 
the newer version of xfs has some deficiency on Client/Server task, so it 
have to change its port from 7100 to -1?
Regards,
Bill Lam

--
Posted via CNET Help.com
http://www.help.com/

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

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jonathan H N Chin)
Subject: Re: Minimal installation on small harddisk?
Date: 12 Apr 2000 12:32:00 +0100

[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>Can't speak against BSD (I like linux and the GPL too much), but debian
>is a good choice. You can get icewm, xfree, and a good set of tools in
>about 70meg. Choose "standard server", go into dselect and unmark any
>things you don't need like nfs-server, nis-server, pop and smtp servers,
>install, then add the basic xfree stuff. A good place to recover a few
>megs is /usr/doc and the man pages, which you may not really need on
>each and every xterminal.

I don't understand.

How is any of this relevant to running the machine as an X terminal?
X terminals need run only the server and a chooser locally; all the
applications (including window manager) can run on the remote client.

These are Suns we are talking about. You don't need to use any local
disk at all if you are happy to boot and swap over the net (although
having swap on the box would of course make sense).


>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> > Hi, we have some old Sun IPCs with small 200Mb harddisks. We'd like
>to use
>> > these machines as X terminals. We've tried installing Redhat but
                       ^^^^^^^^^^^
>even with
>> > minimal packages chosen we can't seem to meet the 160Mb (40 Mb swap)
>> > available. Any suggestions, or should we try something else, i.e.
>*BSD?


Some of these links are not be directly relevant but may be of
interest nonetheless:

    Converting Old PCs into Standalone X Terminals:
    http://www.menet.umn.edu/~kaszeta/unix/xterminal/

    Diskless Nodes HOW-TO document for Linux:
    http://www.fokus.gmd.de/linux/HOWTO/Diskless-HOWTO.html

    LTC - The Linux Thin Client Project:
    http://www.linuxsupportline.com/~dheltzel/ltc.html

    Poor Man's [Diskless] XTerminal - Offical Page:
    http://people.delphi.com/sjc/linux/poor.html

--> SPARC-Linux Xterminal README:
    http://www2.gol.com/users/gaijin/Linux/

    Setting up a diskless Linux system:
    http://www.slug.org.au/diskless.html

    Teck's Linux diskless PC X-Terminal howto:
    http://web.singnet.com.sg/~leetc/howto/x-terminal.html



-jonathan

-- 
Jonathan H N Chin, 1 dan | deputy computer | Newton Institute, Cambridge, UK
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | systems mangler | tel/fax: +44 1223 335986/330508

                "respondeo etsi mutabor" --Rosenstock-Huessy

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

From: Andreas Kahari <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Help, please....
Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 11:45:10 GMT

Why don't you use the GNU/Linux 'killall' command? (make sure you're
really on a GNU/Linux system first and not e.g. a Solaris system,
otherwise the 'killall' command may not do what you want it to do).

Why do you send HTML?

/A


In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
  Stefan Jang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --------------4163A8D988141CA98087C99E
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
> Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
>
> Hello,
>
> I've wrote a simple script that kills process on Linux machine. I
> noticed that my
> script does kill the processes but gives out following messages:
>
> kill <pid>: No such process
> kill <pid>: No such process
> kill <pid>: No such process
> kill <pid>: No such process
> kill <pid>: No such process
> kill <pid>: No such process
> kill <pid>: No such process
> kill <pid>: No such process
>
> Is there a way not to display above message?
> Or How do I get rid of this message on Linux?
>
> My script looks like these:
>
> #!/bin/sh -f
> # Trying to determine the Operating System
> OS=`uname -s`
> case $OS in
> 'Linux')
> /bin/ps -auxgww | grep "<Program name>" | grep -v grep | awk '{print
> $2}' | xargs kill
> ;;
> esac
>
> Thanks,
>
> Stefan
[HTML cut]

--
# Andreas K�h�ri, <URL:http://hello.to/andkaha/>.
# All junk email is reported to the appropriate authorities.


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

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

From: Marc Andre Selig <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: socket: Too many open files in system
Date: 12 Apr 2000 13:27:09 +0200

Lilia Vogt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> I guess some tuning is needed. Does anybody knows how to increase the
> number of open files system-wide? We run RedHat Linux 6.1.

The total number of file handles allocated by the kernel can be set
using a command such as
        echo 8192 >/proc/sys/fs/file-max

The per-process default maximum is statically set and can, AFAIK, only
be changed by recompiling the kernel.  Set #define NR_OPEN in limits.h
and fs.h and recompile.

There are also the resource limits which can be set for an individual
process through setrlimit(2) or ulimit(3) or the bash builtin ulimit,
as in
        ulimit -n 2048

Most of this is described in the Linux kernel documentation, in
Documentation/proc.txt.

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

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (William Wueppelmann)
Subject: Matrox G200  setup for X
Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 12:19:53 GMT

I've been trying to configure my Matrox G200 AGP card with XFree 3.2.3 (as
provided by Debian 2.1).  I can get a working setup using the VGA_16
server, but when I try to configure it to use the SVGA server using
XF86Setup, no matter how I configure it, when it tries to start the X
server, it does so at 320x200 resolution.

Has anyone seen anything like this, and does anyone know what I should be
doing?  Does the SVGA server not support the G200, and if not, what server
should I be looking for?

Thanks.

-- 
It is pitch black.
You are likely to be spammed by a grue.

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

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (M Sweger)
Subject: Re: damn system clock will not stay "right"
Date: 12 Apr 2000 12:24:43 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



see man hwclock with the options to set the BIOS clock from Linux.
Then use the options to set the linux clock.

To get the right time from an atomic clock do

rdate tock.usno.navy.mil

or the closest atomic clock to you.

Villy Kruse ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
: On 7 Apr 2000 15:53:43 GMT, Bill Unruh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

: >
: >The linux clock is divorced from the bios clock. The bios clock is only
: >used to set the intial time on bootup. It is there that your problem
: >lies. You have changed something and your system is confused. 
: >
: >




: There is an exception if the system hass been sleeping for a while and
: the system clock hasn;t been updated.  When the system is woken up
: it needs to set the clock from the RTC clock, and for this the kernel
: needs to know if the RTC clock is running UTC or local time.

: Therefore there is a kernel configuration paramter CONFIG_APM_RTC_IS_GMT
: which you can set when you re-compile the kernel.





: Villy

--
        Mike,
        [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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

From: Ole Vanman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Programming Languages on Linux
Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 14:40:48 +0200

Den Wed, 12 Apr 2000 15:16:34 +1000, skrev "Michael Westerman"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

>Delphi ?
>
>i like delphi 5.0

Kylix is scheduled later this year:

http://community.borland.com/article/0,1410,21301,00.html

�Ol�!
-- 
Remove fjern_dette from my address.


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

From: Neil <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Apache -- CGI
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 13:55:08 +0100

On Tue, 11 Apr 2000 23:00:10 GMT, "Egbert Sous�"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>It's not quite as simple as sticking a perl script in the cgi-bin directory.
>Here are some conf files from my system.  Look them over

hrm, but access.conf and srm.conf are deprecated. The lines are now in
httpd.conf.





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

From: "Chris Clark" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.dcom.sys.cisco
Subject: Re: DHCP woes
Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 13:04:05 GMT

One thing I am curious about, you say that you have helper address and you
have forwarded 67 and 68? The helper address all by itself will forward udp
broadcasts on about 7 ports. You must specifically turn things off that you
do not want forwarded. Can you post a config?

Chuko Liang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:8cvg8j$77p$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
>
> I've set up a Linux DHCP server on a network with many VLANs.  I've got
> a helper address pointing to the DHCP server, and I've forwarded udp 67
> and 68.
>
> The problem I'm having though, is that the DHCP server is on the 10.0.1.*
> subnet, and the machine in question is on the 10.0.41.* subnet.  DHCP
> serves out fine to machines on the 10.0.1.* subnet, but it acts wierd on
> the 10.0.41.* subnet.  There, a 10.0.41.* address is handed out, and then
> superseded by one from the 10.0.1.* subnet.  This happens with a Win98
> laptop and an OpenBSD box, so the problem is not specific to Windows.
> The dhcp server gets two DHCPDISCOVER requests: one comes via 10.0.41.1,
> and one comes from eth0, both within milliseconds of the other.
>
> Does dhcp think its getting two requests, or is it actually getting two
> requests.  I've been working on this (with help from others) on and
> off for the better part of a week, and gotten no where.
>
> Anyone have any ideas?  The dhcpd.conf follows, along with an excerpted
> show running config (and show ip interface for the specific interface)
> from the Cisco router.
>
>
>
> # dhcpd.conf
> #
>
> option domain-name "incognito.com";
> option domain-name-servers 10.0.1.2;
>
> option subnet-mask 255.255.255.0;
> default-lease-time 14400;
> max-lease-time 14400;
>
> subnet 10.0.41.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
>   range 10.0.41.2 10.0.41.254;
>   option broadcast-address 10.0.41.255;
>   option routers 10.0.41.1;
> }
>
> subnet 10.0.1.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
>   range 10.0.1.75 10.0.1.240;
>   option broadcast-address 10.0.1.255;
>   option routers 10.0.1.1;
> }
>
> #sh ru
> interface FastEthernet0/1.41
>  encapsulation isl 41
>  ip address 10.0.41.1 255.255.255.0
>  ip helper-address 10.0.1.2
>  no ip redirects
>  no ip directed-broadcast
>  ip nat inside
>
> #sh ip int 0/1.41
> FastEthernet0/1.41 is up, line protocol is up
>   Internet address is 10.0.41.1/24
>   Broadcast address is 255.255.255.255
>   Address determined by non-volatile memory
>   MTU is 1500 bytes
>   Helper address is 10.0.1.2
>   Directed broadcast forwarding is disabled
>   Outgoing access list is not set
>   Inbound  access list is not set
>   Proxy ARP is enabled
>   Security level is default
>   Split horizon is enabled
>   ICMP redirects are never sent
>   ICMP unreachables are always sent
>   ICMP mask replies are never sent
>   IP fast switching is enabled
>   IP fast switching on the same interface is enabled
>   IP Flow switching is disabled
>   IP Feature Fast switching turbo vector
>   IP multicast fast switching is enabled
>   IP multicast distributed fast switching is disabled
>   Router Discovery is disabled
>   IP output packet accounting is disabled
>   IP access violation accounting is disabled
>   TCP/IP header compression is disabled
>   RTP/IP header compression is disabled
>   Probe proxy name replies are disabled
>   Policy routing is disabled
>   Network address translation is enabled, interface in domain inside
>   WCCP Redirect outbound is disabled
>   WCCP Redirect exclude is disabled
> --
>  _ __                        /
> ' )  )         /        /   /
>  /--' ________/_____.  /_  '
> /    (_) (_) /_) (_/|_/ / o



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

From: "C. Gross" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.development.system,comp.os.linux.development.apps
Subject: Adding functionality to Right-Click mouse button
Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 07:54:54 -0400

Hello All,

I would like to add functionality to the right-click mouse button.

I would like to add a menu item/action if a right-click is performed
on an desktop icon.  For example, if I were to click on the icon of a
Star Office document in the KDE Home Directory file browser, I would
like to be able to select my own menu item, like a print command,
underneath the menu item "Delete" or "Copy" or "Move to Trash."

Does anyone know how to do this or if it is possible for us to add
this functionality in KDE and GNOME?

Thanks.

    -- C





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

From: Bernd Driesen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Probs with password
Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 09:53:03 +0200

Hi Otavio,

no, its not a problem with samba. The agent has its own protocol to give
out the data. In another forum someone said, it could be the
introduction of "shadow passwords" in SuSE 5.3 or 6.0. Is it possible to
disable shadow passwords?

ciao, Bernd.

Otavio Exel schrieb:
> 
> Bernd Driesen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > I have used SuSE Linux 5.2 as internetrouter. On this machine is a
> > backup-agent from Cheyenne (uagent version 4.0c for linux) installed.
> > I had no problems backing up this machine from our novell server until
> > I made an update to SuSE Linux 6.1. Now, when I want to access to the
> > linux machine via the backup-agent, the agent tells me, that the
> > password is wrong. Does anybody know, why linux tells the agent the
> > wrong password?
> 
> what kind of access? smb thru samba? in case it is samba there is a
> chance that your new version of samba uses encrypted passwords;
> see man smbpasswd
> 
> beers,
> 
> --
> Otavio Exel /<\oo/>\ [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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

Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Rod Smith)
Subject: Re: How did the hacker get root access to my system?
Crossposted-To: alt.2600,alt.linux,comp.os.linux
Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2000 13:07:32 GMT

[Posted and mailed]

In article <8csu24$5ro$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
        [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> In article <CJlI4.4564$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
>   [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> 
> See, I'm not a hacker, so virtually all these methods of accessing
> and spoofing are alien to me. How does one spoof an IP address?

I've never done it myself, but it involves running some special software
that sends out TCP/IP packets that are malformed. The process is described
in _Maximum Linux Security_, among other places. (That's also a very good
book if you want to secure your Linux box. I've got links to its pages on
Amazon and Fatbrain at http://www.rodsbooks.com/books/books-network.html.)

>> > Why are all the files dated *tomorrow* ????
>>
>> I don't know. Mine are dated correctly. Is your system clock correct?
> 
> Actually, yes. In the *morning* the dates shown for proc are
> correct. In the evening, they show *tomorrow*. I have not nailed
> down what time of the evening that switches over. Guess there's a
> little cron job for me, eh? :-)

It's just past 9:00 AM here, and mine are still dated correctly. My guess
is you've got some sort of timezone problem. Are dates on other files
correct? That is, if you do "touch foo", does foo come out with the
correct time and date?

-- 
Rod Smith, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.rodsbooks.com
Author of books on Linux networking & multi-OS configuration

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


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