Linux-Misc Digest #42, Volume #26 Sun, 15 Oct 00 18:13:01 EDT
Contents:
Re: Microsoft's Anti Linux Page (Paul Lew)
Re: Where do "Programs" go? (Jerry L Kreps)
Re: Where do "Programs" go? (Tony Lawrence)
How to run a program at startup? ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: Where do "Programs" go? (Paul Kairis)
Re: How to execute a program at startup? (Ian Northeast)
Running a perl script as a cron job (Julian Cook/Sherab Gyatso)
compiling trouble ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: wu_ftp (Glitch)
Re: Where do "Programs" go? (Thaddeus L Olczyk)
Linux Tarball OS with SuExec ("ortius")
Re: How to execute a program at startup? (Glitch)
Re: RH7 Kernel Compiling Problem (Metropolis)
Re: How to run a program at startup? (Glitch)
Is there a MS Word (or substitute) for Linux? (jazz)
Help!: BTTV + Hauppauge ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: RH7 Kernel Compiling Problem (Hal Burgiss)
Re: RH7 Kernel Compiling Problem (Metropolis)
Re: ensoniq soundcard (Robert Lynch)
Re: Is there a MS Word (or substitute) for Linux? (Larry Ebbitt)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Paul Lew)
Subject: Re: Microsoft's Anti Linux Page
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 20:10:01 GMT
On 15 Oct 2000 18:53:57 GMT, Andres Soolo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Tony Lawrence <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>> 'Linux cannot deliver on the hype', indeed...
>> Actually, it's great that Microsoft attacks Linux. As someone
>> once said about newspaper articles, say anything you want, just
>> spell the name right- the point being that any attack makes folks
>I guess it was Rockefeller, one of the most famous monopolists in
>history ;-)
>
>......
>> Most sales folks know that you do not mention your competitors
>> unless you absolutely have to. If there is any chance your
>> customer doesn't know your competitors, you sure don't want to
>> help them find out, do you? Yet that's just what Microsoft is
>> doing, so they must feel very very threatened..
>My guess is too many people started calling Microsoft to ask about
>Linux (and I'm sure some of them asked when Microsoft is going to
>ship it), so Microsoft is now trying to assume the role of the
>`independent specialist' and, no doubt, publish more things like
>that one in the near future. Damage control, to say it briefly.
>
The "attack" on linux is just a "red-herring" for ammo for the ms/us
court case; it will be used as "proof" in the courts that ms windows
is not a monopoly...
------------------------------
From: Jerry L Kreps <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To:
comp.os.linux,comp.os.linux.admin,comp.os.linux.help,comp.os.linux.networking,comp.os.linux.questions,comp.os.linux.setup,linux.redhat.applixware
Subject: Re: Where do "Programs" go?
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 15:06:53 -0500
On Sun, 15 Oct 2000, Lamar Thomas wrote:
>When you install programs on Linux RH 6.2 where do they go? I mean, if I
>were installing a program on Windows it would install to "C:\Programs
>Files\(ProgramFolder". Where do they go on Linux? I am setting up my first
>Linux system and I want to make sure I leave enough room a the "Right"
>partition for installing my programs. Do they go to the /usr partition?
>Thanks for your help.
>
>Lamar
It depends on the package. Older packages usually go into /usr/lib/<pkname> or
/usr/local/<plname>. Newer packages usually go to /opt/<pkname>.
The older ones usually don't ask for a destination but rely on your ability to
edit their ".configure" file and set an alternate destination path.
Most newer (and better) programs ask for a destination. I usually chose ./opt
or /opt2 or /opt3. (/opt is common, but I've create /opt2 and /opt3 as
alternative install destinations to avoid overloading /usr.
JLK
------------------------------
From: Tony Lawrence <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To:
comp.os.linux,comp.os.linux.admin,comp.os.linux.help,comp.os.linux.networking,comp.os.linux.questions,comp.os.linux.setup,linux.redhat.applixware
Subject: Re: Where do "Programs" go?
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 16:09:50 -0400
Lamar Thomas wrote:
>
> When you install programs on Linux RH 6.2 where do they go? I mean, if I
> were installing a program on Windows it would install to "C:\Programs
> Files\(ProgramFolder". Where do they go on Linux? I am setting up my first
> Linux system and I want to make sure I leave enough room a the "Right"
> partition for installing my programs. Do they go to the /usr partition?
> Thanks for your help.
Heh :-)
Good question, but the answer is "it depends".
While Linux has (and with pretty good success) tried to bring
some order to this, the fact is that Unix systems have a long and
convoluted history of putting things all over the place.
If you want to know where a specific command lives, "locate" will
tell you that. If you want to know where everyting related to it
lives,
rpm -ql `rpm -qf /pathtofile/command` will tell you.
See http://pcunix.com/Opinion/religion.html for where you should
put any programs YOU write..
.
--
Tony Lawrence ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
SCO/Linux articles, help, book reviews, tests,
job listings and more : http://www.pcunix.com
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: How to run a program at startup?
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 20:05:19 GMT
Hi Friends,
Can anyone tell me how to have my linux system run a particular
program whenever I start up the computer? I have a sound-driver
from OSS that needs to be executed before I can play any sound,
and I'd like to have that happen automatically.
Thanks,
David Merrill
Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.
------------------------------
From: Paul Kairis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Where do "Programs" go?
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 20:28:03 GMT
I agree with the previous posters -- it depends.
As a suggestion, /usr/local and /opt are places I put stuff in.
HTH
Question: is there a need to post your question to 8 groups?
Lamar Thomas wrote:
>
> When you install programs on Linux RH 6.2 where do they go? I mean, if I
> were installing a program on Windows it would install to "C:\Programs
> Files\(ProgramFolder". Where do they go on Linux? I am setting up my first
> Linux system and I want to make sure I leave enough room a the "Right"
> partition for installing my programs. Do they go to the /usr partition?
> Thanks for your help.
>
> Lamar
------------------------------
From: Ian Northeast <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: uk.comp.os.linux
Subject: Re: How to execute a program at startup?
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 21:36:29 +0100
"St�phane K." wrote:
>
> Hi there,
>
> Does anybody know how to execute a program at startup?
>
> The situation: I have to exec my ddns everytime I turn my machine on
> because I have dynamic IP. OK.
> BUT I cannot execute it as normal user (otherwise I would just put a
> line in my .bashrc) it gives me a strange answer
>
> [stephanek@kastar stephanek]$ ddns --modify
> error: unknown port in configuration file: http
>
> so I have to execute the script as root, then it works. How do I tell
> the init program to run this script (as root) everytime I turn the
> computer on? Without logging in as root though?
You don't say what distribution you are using but there may be a "local"
rc script available, which will run automatically at startup. On Red Hat
it is /etc/rc.d/rc.local, linked from /etc/rc.d/rc<runlevel>.d/S99local.
On SuSE there doesn't seem to be one provided but this doesn't stop you
creating one. I don't have any other distros to hand. At worst you could
create a script e.g. /etc/rc.d/rc.ddns and add an inittab entry to call
it. I don't recommend this as all Linux distros I have seen have a
cleaner way of calling initialisation scripts using directories
associated with the run level as above.
I am guessing that "ddns" is a script that uses nsupdate or similar to
register your machine to DNS once it has been given its IP address.
Presumably the DHCP or whatever mechanism you are using to set the
dynamic IP has some initialisation scripts; maybe the call should be in
one of them. My preference is to have the DHCP server do this when it
sends the IP address, so only the DHCP server needs update access to the
DNS. I wouldn't give client machines update access to my DNS servers.
You may not have control of this of course. Indeed, my preference is not
to use dynamic IP at all on Unix machines but to give them all static
ones, leaving dynamic IP for Windows. But this may well not be in your
power either.
I can't suggest why the script is failing as I don't know what it's
doing. But in any case I would not recommend running it from your
.bashrc, as it would then run when you log on, not when the machine
starts, which is not necessarily the same thing. If it is an FTP server
it will function fine if you are not logged in.
Regards, Ian
PS I recommend trimming your .sig a bit.
------------------------------
From: Julian Cook/Sherab Gyatso <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.lang,perl.misc
Subject: Running a perl script as a cron job
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 20:37:22 GMT
Hi folks!
I am running Redhat 6.1 and Perl 5.6
The machine in my office does a LOT of processing and it needs to
FTP the files it creates to two other virtual machines.
I have managed to get the whole procedure down using the Net::FTP
module.
<CREDIT>
In short,..IMHO it's a great little set up I have here. The
credit for creating this is largely due to the help I have received
from this group. Thank you very much.
</CREDIT>
What I would like to do is to set this PERL script as a cron job to
do it's processing and FTPing every 15 minutes.
Does anyone have any idea how I can accomplish this? I am not a
Linux whiz (at least not yet) and this seems to be my one big hang up.
I suppose I could create this script to constantly run but that seems
like a big drain on resources.
Any advice is greatly appreciated.
Many thanks again for all of your help.
Julian Cook
president_at_webticker_dot_com
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: compiling trouble
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 20:42:33 GMT
I have RH 6.1 and just installed Kernel version 2.3.8 compiled and
make bzlilo, moved the System.map and vmlinuz file both to boot. When
I reboot with the new kernel and it bombs at saying "In swapper task -
not syncing".
Any one have any idea what I did wrong.
John
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 16:50:09 -0400
From: Glitch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: wu_ftp
why wouldn't it?
Rafael wrote:
>
> Will wu_ftpd 2.6.1-6.i368 work on RedHat 6.1?
>
> Rafael
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Thaddeus L Olczyk)
Crossposted-To:
comp.os.linux,comp.os.linux.admin,comp.os.linux.help,comp.os.linux.networking,comp.os.linux.questions,comp.os.linux.setup,linux.redhat.applixware
Subject: Re: Where do "Programs" go?
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 20:50:46 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Sun, 15 Oct 2000 19:30:37 GMT, "Lamar Thomas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>When you install programs on Linux RH 6.2 where do they go? I mean, if I
>were installing a program on Windows it would install to "C:\Programs
>Files\(ProgramFolder". Where do they go on Linux? I am setting up my first
>Linux system and I want to make sure I leave enough room a the "Right"
>partition for installing my programs. Do they go to the /usr partition?
>Thanks for your help.
>
>Lamar
>
>
Programs can go whereever you want.
You just have to make sure that the directory is in the PATH
enviromental variable.
It is a good idea to not make a big mess of things by installing
things willy nilly.
If you are just testing a program, you can install it in the home
directory (/home/username) as that user. You can then play with the
program untill you are convinced that you want it and that it won't
mess with the installed OS. Then you an install it in some common
directory.
------------------------------
From: "ortius" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Linux Tarball OS with SuExec
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 17:18:25 -0400
Anyone have a link to a precompiled, tarred webserver configuration... we
wonder why it's not done, or if it IS available and just not well known.
Looking for these components in a tarball.. to be used over & over on new
servers as needed.
1. Linux
2. Apache
3. SSL
4. SSH
5. Mysql
6. Mod_perl
7. SUEXEC
8. FTP
9. TELNET
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
Of course lost items are always found in the "last place " you look.
Who's going to keep looking after it's found ?
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 17:33:13 -0400
From: Glitch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: uk.comp.os.linux
Subject: Re: How to execute a program at startup?
u could probably setuid the script so that you as a regular user could
execute it without actually being root. Or, if u dont like the thought
of setuid bit being set on it put it in the bootup script for your
distro. For Suse its in boot.local. For RH it might be rc.config but I
forget exactly. As those are the only 2 distros I've used I can only
help with those 2. If u have another distro just find out what he main
startup script is and put your script at the end so that it gets
executed. You might have to put it in like this: exec
/path/to/script/scriptname
hope this helps....and if it does, can i have leech access?
"St�phane K." wrote:
>
> Hi there,
>
> Does anybody know how to execute a program at startup?
>
> The situation: I have to exec my ddns everytime I turn my machine on
> because I have dynamic IP. OK.
> BUT I cannot execute it as normal user (otherwise I would just put a
> line in my .bashrc) it gives me a strange answer
>
> [stephanek@kastar stephanek]$ ddns --modify
> error: unknown port in configuration file: http
>
> so I have to execute the script as root, then it works. How do I tell
> the init program to run this script (as root) everytime I turn the
> computer on? Without logging in as root though?
>
> Thanks for your help folks,
>
> PS: all this is for my ftp server to run properly... Who wants leech
> access?
> --
> *******************************************************************************
> * Stephane K. * [EMAIL PROTECTED] * Are you
> nuts? *
> * * *
> No?... *
> * Humanoid, __ __ Bruxelles, Earth
> * *
> * / \/ \ * You
> should! *
> ***************/********\******************************************************
> \ /
> \ / ~~~~~~~~~~~! members.fortunecity.com
> \ / ~~~~~~/stephen79k
> \ / ~~~~~~~~
> -------\/----------------------------------------
------------------------------
From: Metropolis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: RH7 Kernel Compiling Problem
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 17:32:53 -0400
Thanks to both of you (Robert and Hal) for the hints...
That said, I personally think it's ridiculous to have that limitation
in Redhat. I'm an extremely experienced Wintel administrator, but
know little about Linux (obviously). But it seems to me that
compatibility is one of the cornerstones of the Linux world. Is there
any good reason that Redhat did this?
I'll give this a shot. Thanks again for the help!
Adam
On Sun, 15 Oct 2000 17:17:18 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] () wrote:
>On Sun, 15 Oct 2000 09:59:29 -0700, Robert Lynch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>>The warnings come from the gcc-2.96 compiler. There's been some
>>controversy about RedHat using this as their default compiler in
>>RH7. However, with RH7 RedHat wants you to use the provided kgcc
>>~ egcs/gcc 2.71 (I think) instead of gcc, for kernel compiles.
>
>Yes, that is why kgcc is there.
>
> http://www.redhat.com/support/docs/gotchas/7.0/gotchas-7-6.html (kgcc)
>
>
>--
>Hal B
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 17:34:49 -0400
From: Glitch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: How to run a program at startup?
depends on your distro, which one do u have?
in suse i put my oss stuff in boot.local i believe.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Hi Friends,
>
> Can anyone tell me how to have my linux system run a particular
> program whenever I start up the computer? I have a sound-driver
> from OSS that needs to be executed before I can play any sound,
> and I'd like to have that happen automatically.
>
> Thanks,
> David Merrill
>
> Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
> Before you buy.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (jazz)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.advocacy
Subject: Is there a MS Word (or substitute) for Linux?
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 17:23:44 -0400
I really need a powerful word processor with templates, styles, etc.
What is available for Linux? How about for Powerpoint and Excel?
Thanks ---
Jazz
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Help!: BTTV + Hauppauge
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 21:25:34 GMT
Hi,
I'm getting crazy trying to have a Hauppauge WinTV PCI working under
SuSE 6.x / Linux 2.2.7
Under win95 Hauppauge support asked me to change both base memory audio
& video address
to the following, and it's working:
video: 78000000 - 78000FFF
audio: 78002000 - 78002FFF
IRQ9
my graphics card is a Diamond S3 Vision 968 PCI at IRQ11:
000C0000 - 000C7FFF
000A0000 - 000AFFFF
000B0000 - 000BFFFF
F8000000 - F9FFFFFF
Under Linux the card is detected but the base address seems bad (see
below).
the channel scans work but kwintv or xawtv show distorted images.
triton1 did'nt help
I've recompiled the module, I've also tried to use the vidmem parm but I
get an
"invalid parameter parm_vidmem"
any hints? thanks.
Olivier.
=============================================================
modprobe of bttv 0.6.4h:
================
Oct 15 22:48:44 texavery kernel: i2c: initialized
Oct 15 22:48:44 texavery kernel: i2c: driver registered: tuner
Oct 15 22:48:46 texavery kernel: Linux video capture interface: v0.01
ALPHA
Oct 15 22:48:46 texavery kernel: bttv: Host bridge 82437FX Triton PIIX
Oct 15 22:48:46 texavery kernel: bttv0: Brooktree Bt878 (rev 17) bus: 0,
devfn: 72, irq: 9, memory: 0xfbfff000.
^^^^^^^^^ ?????
Oct 15 22:48:46 texavery kernel: PCI: Enabling bus mastering for device
00:48
Oct 15 22:48:46 texavery kernel: bttv: Enabling 430FX compatibilty for
bt878
Oct 15 22:48:46 texavery kernel: bttv: 1 Bt8xx card(s) found.
Oct 15 22:48:46 texavery kernel: bttv0: Hauppauge eeprom: tuner=Philips
FI1216MF MK2 (3)
Oct 15 22:48:46 texavery kernel: bttv0: model: BT878(Hauppauge new
(bt878))
Oct 15 22:48:46 texavery kernel: i2c: bus registered: bt848-0
Oct 15 22:48:46 texavery kernel: tuner: type is 3 (Philips SECAM)
Oct 15 22:48:46 texavery kernel: i2c: device attached: tuner (addr=0xc2,
bus=bt848-0, driver=tuner)
=========================================================
Hauppauge.txt:
==========
Model 38066 Rev. B409
Serial #3938646
Tuner Formats: PAL (B/G) / SECAM (L/L')
Tuner Audio: Mono
Video Formats: NTSC ( M ) PAL ( B G H I D K M N NCOMBO ) SECAM ( L L' )
Audio Outputs: BackPanel
External Inputs: 1
S-Video Inputs: 0
Teletext: Yes (Software)
Radio: None
Decoder: BT878
Tuner Model: Philips FI1216MF MK2
EEprom Contents:
84 12 00 00 05 50 0e 7f 24 09 01 b2 94 19 44 89 00 00 00 00 04
84 0a 00 01 01 20 77 00 40 56 19 3c 00
74 02 01 00 02
79 26
Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Hal Burgiss)
Subject: Re: RH7 Kernel Compiling Problem
Reply-To: Hal Burgiss <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 21:43:57 GMT
On Sun, 15 Oct 2000 17:32:53 -0400, Metropolis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>That said, I personally think it's ridiculous to have that limitation
>in Redhat. I'm an extremely experienced Wintel administrator, but
>know little about Linux (obviously). But it seems to me that
>compatibility is one of the cornerstones of the Linux world. Is there
>any good reason that Redhat did this?
It is not a limitation. It is by design. The real problem is that over
the years the kernel has adopted some gcc'isms -- pecularities specific
to that compliler. Apparently these are engrained to the point of being
extremely difficult to remove. That is why only certain compiler
versions are 'certified' for kernel building. Note that you never see
kernel builds with other C compilers: MS, Borland, etc. So we get stuck
with a compiler that is kernel compatible, but has other shortcomings.
So Redhat decides to package two compilers -- one for kernel compiling
(and where backward compatibility is important), and one with that is a
little more robust which works a little better with *almost* everything
else. Just a matter of getting used to it. I personally think it is a
good thing. I've used kgcc only for kernels, and so far gcc for
everything else, and seems to 'work'.
--
Hal B
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
------------------------------
From: Metropolis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: RH7 Kernel Compiling Problem
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 17:52:52 -0400
WOOHOO! Those hints worked, guys. Thanks!
Adam
On Sun, 15 Oct 2000 12:23:08 -0400, Metropolis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>Hey folks...
>
>Having problems recompiling a kernel in RH7. My steps are:
>
------------------------------
From: Robert Lynch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: ensoniq soundcard
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 14:54:04 -0700
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
kailash thakur wrote:
>
> Hi!
> I have a problem with my ensoniq soundcard. I configured the sound
> when installing debian on my system a couple of weeks ago but the kernel
>
> module doesnt seem to be working at all. I tried a "cat /proc/pci " that
> gave me the following
> output:
>
> Bus 0, device 12, function 0:
> Multimedia audio controller : Ensoniq ES1371 (rev 4).
> Slow devsel. IRQ 9. Master Capable. Latency = 64. Min Gnt=12.
> Maxlat=128.
> I/O at 0xef00[0xef01].
>
> i then did a "modprobe es1371" and it executed with no error messages.
>
> I fired up xmms and tried to play mp3s -- it gave an error saying
> "couldnt
> open audio".
>
> According to the linuxdoc.org Sound HOWTO a "cat /dev/sndstat" should
> give
> me the configuration details of the soundcard. When i do a "cat
> /dev/sndstat" it gives me this output:
>
> ---*start*---
>
> OSS/Free:3.8s2++-971130
> Load type: Driver loaded as a module
> Kernel: Linux gongura 2.2.17 #1 Sun Jun 25 09:24:41 EST 2000 i686
> Config options: 0
>
> Installed drivers:
>
> Card config:
>
> Audio devices:
>
> Synth devices:
>
> Midi devices:
>
> Timers:
> 0: System clock
>
> Mixers:
>
> ---*end*---
>
> The original kernel module had been configured with the "modconf"
> utility.
>
> I would really appreciate it if someone could shed some light on this
> issue.
>
> thanks,
>
> Kailash.
Just to mention, it does seem possible to get it going. I have
this in /proc/pci:
===
Bus 1, device 1, function 0:
Ethernet controller: Intel Corporation 82557 [Ethernet Pro
100] (rev 8).
IRQ 9.
Master Capable. Latency=64. Min Gnt=8.Max Lat=56.
Non-prefetchable 32 bit memory at 0xff8ff000 [0xff8fffff].
I/O at 0xde80 [0xdebf].
Non-prefetchable 32 bit memory at 0xff700000 [0xff7fffff].
===
And it is working. This is with the 2.4.0-testX kernels. I also
had it working with 2.2.x kernels. This is my (sound part of
the) modules stack (/sbin/lsmod):
es1371 24276 2 (autoclean)
ac97_codec 7556 0 (autoclean) [es1371]
soundcore 3940 4 (autoclean) [es1371]
HTH. Bob L.
--
Robert Lynch-Berkeley CA [EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 18:08:05 -0400
From: Larry Ebbitt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.advocacy
Subject: Re: Is there a MS Word (or substitute) for Linux?
jazz wrote:
> What is available for Linux? How about for Powerpoint and Excel?
StarOffice is a pretty good Office clone.
--
Larry Ebbitt - Linux + OS/2 - Atlanta
------------------------------
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End of Linux-Misc Digest
******************************