Linux-Misc Digest #238, Volume #27 Mon, 26 Feb 01 17:13:02 EST
Contents:
Re: lpr: print file too big - How to correct? (Jean-David Beyer)
Re: Install CD-RW on Linux ?? (Patrick Connors)
Pentium 4 support? (Ron Cresswell)
Re: why /dev/sdx# is a truly unsafe way to refer to physical devices (Andre Kostur)
sawfish/Gnome questions (Roger Davis)
Re: print file too big - How to correct? ("The Spook")
Xfree86 problems (Thaddeus L Olczyk)
Mounting proc fs to /mnt/root/proc ? (Matej Kenda)
Re: redirect stderr to both screen and logfile at same time? (Stefaan A Eeckels)
Re: Install CD-RW on Linux ?? (Dave)
Re: sawfish/Gnome questions
Re: how to play .mp3 files on Linux Mandrake?
linuxconf errors (Bill Tangren)
Re: [Q] How do I boot without a keyboard connected? (steve)
Re: Mounting proc fs to /mnt/root/proc ? (Thaddeus L Olczyk)
Re: Strange 2.4.2 boot error
Re: Pentium 4 support? (Drew Roedersheimer)
Re: Install CD-RW on Linux ?? (Phillip Deackes)
Re: redirect stderr to both screen and logfile at same time? (Juergen Heinzl)
Re: small linux distro (T. Howell)
Re: Strange 2.4.2 boot error ("D. Stimits")
Re: Mounting proc fs to /mnt/root/proc ? (Matej Kenda)
Re: tar from date (-N, --newer, --after-date) (Michael Heiming)
Looking for user friendly fax program (mike)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Jean-David Beyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: lpr: print file too big - How to correct?
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 15:11:44 -0500
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> The lpr program refuses to take files bigger than ~800K
> for print - what means I can not print images. I have 9Mb
> in the printer, and anyways the lpr may not know how big
> will be the file after the filter processes it, so it has
> no business to limit the file size - the print filter may
> do that.
>
> I read almost anything around and did not found how to
> increase the limit.
>
> So, may please someone tell me how to increase the lpr/lpd
> file size limit?
>
Did you look in /etc/printcap? man printcap
--
.~. Jean-David Beyer Registered Linux User 85642.
/V\ Registered Machine 73926.
/( )\ Shrewsbury, New Jersey http://counter.li.org
^^-^^ 3:05pm up 5 days, 22:38, 4 users, load average: 3.50, 3.35, 3.12
------------------------------
From: Patrick Connors <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Install CD-RW on Linux ??
Date: 26 Feb 2001 20:16:08 GMT
Lori Holder-Webb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
: A Google search for CDRW+linux yields 26,000 hits. Items from
: newsgroups, hardware reviews, HOW-TOs, you name it.
: Your best bet, IMO is to try searching the linux ng on Dejanews for
: CDRW. You can look at the HOW-TO at the Linux Documentation Project.
: Either of these strategies ought to give you a nice broad view of the
: issue, and will also tell you how to install and configure the thing
: (which you'll need). You'll also get information on the software that
: you'll need to run the burner, and how to configure that too.
: HTH
: Lori
Minor problem: DejaNews is no more.
Google owns it, but has not posted the Deja archives.
I have heard that when Google bought Deja, they had only a few days
to pull the archives off the Deja servers before the lights were
shut off at Deja and the archives would have been lost permanently. So
Google leased a couple T3 lines and pulled the data.
(Presumably the machines and the data center were not included in the
sale)
But they haven't put the archives back up yet because they have to write
their own front-end. It'll be a while, but it should be a good front-end.
In the meantime, I've seen discussions - mostly theoretical - about
how useful an open-source, volunteer-run archive would be (people archive
the newsgroups they are interested in), and also how difficult searching
such a distributed archive would be.
--
Patrick Connors |
| Smile! The fresh air's good for your teeth.
| -- Jack Bogut, KDKA Radio, 1970s
|
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 27 Feb 2001 07:28:08 +1100
From: Ron Cresswell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Pentium 4 support?
Does anyone know whether the 2.4 (or even 2.2.x) kernels can
take advantage of the SIMD pipeline processor built into the
Pentium 4 chip? Or even if this is a kernel requirement (in
other words, does the chip take care of it behind the
scenes?)
Thanks in advance
Ron
PS If there is a better newsgroup for this type of question,
I'd appreciate being pointed in it's direction :)
--
Dr R.W.Cresswell
Manager, CFD&EM
Compumod Pty Ltd
------------------------------
Subject: Re: why /dev/sdx# is a truly unsafe way to refer to physical devices
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Andre Kostur)
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 20:33:49 GMT
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (David Mathog) wrote in
<976qn3$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>I never much cared for the Linux convention of /dev/sdx# for referring
>to scsi disks. Now I've got a reason to really hate it. On one linux
>system I have 5 scsi disks and /dev/sdb had been acting up so after
>rebooting (for unrelated reasons) I went to run badblock on it. With
>-w. I had rebooted into a mode that doesn't mount anything but the root
>disk. Well guess what folks, on this reboot that disk did not come up.
>Because I didn't try to mount it no messages appeared to that effect,
>but the disks were all renamed with c->b, d->c, e->d. Consequently the
>badblock command munched the disk that had been, for every other boot,
>/dev/sdc. You guessed it - the users' files. I had backups, but it's
>taking a while to restore everything.
>
>There's a very good reason VMS and other Unix's store controller, disk,
>and partition infromation in the device names and don't renumber like
>this!
>
>Is there an alternate scsi driver around that will use a syntax more
>like Irix or Solaris ie:
>
> generic specific current
> /dev/sdCdDpP /dev/sd0d2p4 /dev/sdc4
>
>
>where
>
> C controller number
> D disk number (scsi lun)
> P partition
>
>Or is the "short" device form so deeply embedded into Linux that using
>the long form would break things?
>
>Thanks,
>
>David Mathog
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Manager, sequence analysis facility, biology division, Caltech
Check out the device filesystem on the 2.4 kernels. You can specify disks
with names something like
/dev/scsi/bus0/device0/lun0/part5 .... (I could have a couple of the names
wrong, but you get the idea...)
------------------------------
From: Roger Davis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: sawfish/Gnome questions
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 10:31:06 -1000
I have two questions about using sawfish and Gnome.
First, is there any way to make the menu bar that sawfish draws
across the top of the screen go away? ('Use a different window
manager' is not the answer I am looking for, as sawfish is all
I've got.)
Second, how would I go about hand-editing any necessary config
files in ~/.gnome or wherever to specify the use of a particular
theme? When I try to do this the right way using the Gnome control
center, I get the message 'Application "theme-selector-capplet" has
crashed due to a fatal error. (Segmentation Fault)'.
I have these problems because I am running Ximian's Gnome release
on a SPARC Solaris 8 system. Nobody in the Sun newsgroups (nor anyone
from Ximian) has been able to explain why theme-selector-capplet is
busted, thus I'm stuck with trying to hack this mess as above. This
is also why sawfish seems to be my only option for a window manager.
I am trying to build enlightenment for Solaris but have had no luck
so far.
--
Roger Davis
University of Hawaii/SOEST
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
From: "The Spook" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: print file too big - How to correct?
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 21:48:44 +0100
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote ...
> Hi,
>
> The lpr program refuses to take files bigger than ~800K
> for print
-- Cut --
Insert an mx#0 entry in your printcap -- like the following:
printer:\
:lf=/var/log/lpd/printer:\
:lp=/dev/printer:\
:mx#0:\
:sh:\
:sd=/var/spool/lpd/printer:
/TRY
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Thaddeus L Olczyk)
Subject: Xfree86 problems
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 20:47:32 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I just converted my whole system to Reiserfs ( except for /boot).
The way I accomplished this was to tar gzip each partition and
then reformat that partition, and untar ungzip the partition back.
The problem is that everything seems to work. I manage to boot
runlevel 3 fine. The one problem that I have is when I try to start X.
At which point the system hangs and I have to reboot.
Is there some way I can start configuring the system from scratch
( which would be the simplest way to fix things )?
The way the system hangs is this.
The screen goes blank, nothing comes up, and I can still telnet into
the system.
I wonder if what is happening is that a window manager is not being
started.
Any idea?
TIA
------------------------------
From: Matej Kenda <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: linux.redhat.misc,linux.redhat.devel,linux.dev.misc
Subject: Mounting proc fs to /mnt/root/proc ?
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 21:53:37 +0100
Hi,
I must temporarily mount proc filesystem to /mnt/root/proc. I tried to change
/etc/fstab, but it didn't help. I use RH 7.0 with kernel 2.4.1.
Does anyone know how to do that?
Is there any other way to see proc fs on /mnt/root/proc?
TIA,
Matej
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Stefaan A Eeckels)
Subject: Re: redirect stderr to both screen and logfile at same time?
Crossposted-To:
alt.os.linux,alt.solaris.x86,comp.unix.admin,comp.unix.aix,comp.unix.misc,comp.unix.shell
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 21:58:08 +0100
In article <9mwm6.5864$43.28730@zonnet-reader-1>,
"J.Smith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>
>> >The OP said:
> BTW, whats an OP ?
Original Poster
--
Stefaan
--
How's it supposed to get the respect of management if you've got just
one guy working on the project? It's much more impressive to have a
battery of programmers slaving away. -- Jeffrey Hobbs (comp.lang.tcl)
------------------------------
From: Dave <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.help,comp.os.linux.redhat
Subject: Re: Install CD-RW on Linux ??
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 13:54:30 -0700
On Mon, 26 Feb 2001 18:27:20 GMT, "John Gill"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Hi all.
>
>Is anyone using a CD-RW device on Linux ? If so, what works best, IDE or
>SCSI and what are the implications for use with Linux back-up software --
>network based.
I strongly suggest going SCSI. I have an IDE CDRW and it's a constant
source of compatability problems with linux CD-burning applications,
most of which require a SCSI drive or at least SCSI emulation.
With enough effort you can make an IDE drive work, but SCSI will save
a lot of little headaches.
------------------------------
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: sawfish/Gnome questions
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 16:10:28 -0500
There should be arrows on either side of the bar. Click them.
Roger Davis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> I have two questions about using sawfish and Gnome.
>
> First, is there any way to make the menu bar that sawfish draws
> across the top of the screen go away? ('Use a different window
> manager' is not the answer I am looking for, as sawfish is all
> I've got.)
>
> Second, how would I go about hand-editing any necessary config
> files in ~/.gnome or wherever to specify the use of a particular
> theme? When I try to do this the right way using the Gnome control
> center, I get the message 'Application "theme-selector-capplet" has
> crashed due to a fatal error. (Segmentation Fault)'.
>
> I have these problems because I am running Ximian's Gnome release
> on a SPARC Solaris 8 system. Nobody in the Sun newsgroups (nor anyone
> from Ximian) has been able to explain why theme-selector-capplet is
> busted, thus I'm stuck with trying to hack this mess as above. This
> is also why sawfish seems to be my only option for a window manager.
> I am trying to build enlightenment for Solaris but have had no luck
> so far.
>
> --
> Roger Davis
> University of Hawaii/SOEST
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: how to play .mp3 files on Linux Mandrake?
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 16:18:08 -0500
xmms can;t access the sound system on your computer.
What it lists are some of the possible reasons.
Is your sound card a SB Live or one of it's derivatives, sitting on a pci
slot ?
If so, you need to head over to "opensource.creative.com" ( I think ) and
get the driver tar ball,
Then follow the sb-live howto .
finally, do a "modprobe emu10k1" and it should load without problems.
If you have a isa sound card, you need to find it's irq and io-port, from
windows, and then in linux, run "sndconfig" . if sndconfig cannot find it,
you can manually specify the irq and io. Take care that sndconfig is for ISA
cards.
hth
Gaurav Navlakha <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Hi,
>
> I tried using Xmms, but when I select an mp3 file to play, it spits out
> the following message:
>
> Please check that:
> 1. You have the correct output plugin selected
> 2. No other programs is blocking the soundcard
> 3. Your soundcard is configured properly
>
> Anyone has a clue as to what the problem might be? My soundcard is good
> with windows. And I have no other programs accessing the sound card open
> (afaik)
>
> Thanks in advance,
> Gaurav.
>
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Bill Tangren)
Date: 26 Feb 2001 21:11:04 GMT
Subject: linuxconf errors
I am running linuxconf 1.19r2-4, under Redhat 7.0, kernel version 2.2.17-14.
When I make changes to a user account, I get the following error (many times)
Error message from remadmin :** WARNING **: Unknown type for widget
"tree-0.book.maijn-1.3.cl".
This error message does not seem to affect the functioning of linuxconf. What
is causing it? How can I fix the problem?
Thanks
Bill Tangren
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Bill Tangren
U.S.Naval Observatory
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (steve)
Subject: Re: [Q] How do I boot without a keyboard connected?
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 21:05:56 -0000
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On 26 Feb 2001 18:09:50 GMT, Rudy Taraschi
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>"FREDRIK LINDSTR�M" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> You can buy a dummy plugg in a good computer shop. I used to my
>> server in the garage.
>
>Thanks for the tip, but no computer store around here has ever heard of
>one. It seems logical to me hat such an animal should exist. Could
>you give me the name and/or source of yours? Thanks in advance!
>
>--
>Rudy Taraschi
>
><rudy at see aye ee dot see aye> is my correct email address
I'm assuming your BIOS won't allow you to turn off the keyboard check?
I have a P150 does this no problem, sorry if I missed it and you already
posted ...
--
Steve S.
yubdub
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
remove CLOTHES before replying
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Thaddeus L Olczyk)
Crossposted-To: linux.redhat.misc,linux.redhat.devel,linux.dev.misc
Subject: Re: Mounting proc fs to /mnt/root/proc ?
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 21:06:40 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Mon, 26 Feb 2001 21:53:37 +0100, Matej Kenda
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Hi,
>
>I must temporarily mount proc filesystem to /mnt/root/proc. I tried to change
>/etc/fstab, but it didn't help. I use RH 7.0 with kernel 2.4.1.
>
>Does anyone know how to do that?
>Is there any other way to see proc fs on /mnt/root/proc?
>
>TIA,
>
>Matej
How about a symbolic link?
------------------------------
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Strange 2.4.2 boot error
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 16:22:03 -0500
memtest-x86 generates a similar output if it can't read from the floppy.
D. Stimits <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> I'm trying to install a new kernel 2.4.2 on a RH 7.1 beta, SMP. The
> default RH kernel (2.4.0-0.99.11smp) works fine. But when I create a
> boot
> floppy, I'm coming up with a non-lilo error I've never seen before,
> being
> partially a dump of some cpu registers. I've tried compiling a stock
> 2.4.2
> kernel with both the gcc and kgcc compilers, getting some warnings on
> gcc
> that disappear with kgcc, though both compile (both were tested, both
> fail
> the same way). The system is basically aic7xxx scsi, dual pII 450. Here
> is the error, can anyone shed any light on this, which occurs
> immediately
> after the kernel load, and repeats to infinity:
>
> 0200
> AX:0212
> BX:6C00
> CX:5001
> DX:0000.
>
> D. Stimits, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> PS: I'm especially interested in what the "0200" indicates, since it
> isn't a register dump.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Drew Roedersheimer)
Subject: Re: Pentium 4 support?
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 21:17:26 GMT
On Tue, 27 Feb 2001 07:28:08 +1100, Ron Cresswell wrote:
>
>
>Does anyone know whether the 2.4 (or even 2.2.x) kernels can
>take advantage of the SIMD pipeline processor built into the
>Pentium 4 chip? Or even if this is a kernel requirement (in
>other words, does the chip take care of it behind the
>scenes?)
>
>Thanks in advance
>
>Ron
>
>PS If there is a better newsgroup for this type of question,
>I'd appreciate being pointed in it's direction :)
>
>--
>Dr R.W.Cresswell
>Manager, CFD&EM
>Compumod Pty Ltd
Not sure about your question, but you might want to post this to
comp.os.linux.hardware. I think there's a comp.os.linux.kernel
NG too...
best of luck
-DR
--
Build a system that even a fool can use and only a fool will want to use it.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Phillip Deackes)
Subject: Re: Install CD-RW on Linux ??
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 21:14:49 GMT
In article <97edi8$48q$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Patrick Connors wrote:
>Minor problem: DejaNews is no more.
>Google owns it, but has not posted the Deja archives.
| -- Jack Bogut, KDKA Radio, 1970s
Huh? Try http://groups.google.com/ |
--
Phillip Deackes
Using Progeny Debian Linux
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Juergen Heinzl)
Crossposted-To:
alt.os.linux,alt.solaris.x86,comp.unix.admin,comp.unix.aix,comp.unix.misc,comp.unix.shell
Subject: Re: redirect stderr to both screen and logfile at same time?
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 21:30:13 GMT
In article <duvm6.5858$43.28628@zonnet-reader-1>, J.Smith wrote:
>
>>
>> Just redirect stderr on to stdout before piping it to tee, eg:
>>
>> find . 2>&1 | tee foo
>>
>
>Well ive tried this on AIX 4.x, using ksh:
>
>cat thisfiledoesnotexist 2>&1 | tee -a logfile
>
>and...
>
>stderr still goes to the screen (the cat error message, complaining it cant
>find the file), but *not* to the logfile...
>huh ?
[-]
Substitute "huh" with "AIX" which is a joke, not an OS. Yes, if 2>&1 does
not cause the error message, if written to stderr, to end up in logfile
you've found a problem.
AIX though comes with all kinds of interesting features (even some useful
ones like it can be shut down), so I'd not even wonder if it'd insist on
writing to /dev/tty.
You can try ...
cat thisfiledoesnotexist 2>/tmp/logfile
...
I feel your pain 8)
Juergen
--
\ Real name : Juergen Heinzl \ no flames /
\ EMail Private : [EMAIL PROTECTED] \ send money instead /
------------------------------
Subject: Re: small linux distro
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (T. Howell)
Date: 26 Feb 2001 21:37:11 GMT
"Major Dondo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>I need to put a small linux distro on an old laptop. I can get tom's
>disk running with network support, so all I need now is an ftp install of
>a distro that is smaller than, say 100 MB, has Xwindows (I need a
>graphical browser) and supports PCMCIA for my network card.
>
>The lap top has 24 MB of ram, and it's a 486DX4.
>
>Any suggestions welcome!
A mini-distribution, like a "full" Linux distribution, is as much a
personal preference decision as anything. I'd suggest taking a look at
Freshmeat's (http://www.freshmeat.net) "Mini Distributions" list (you'll
find it under Browse -> Console -> Mini Distributions, from the main page).
Each has it's benefits, and you can tell their relative popularity, release
frequency, read user comments, etc.
Hope that helps!
Regards,
T. Howell
thowell(at)core.com
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 14:34:45 -0700
From: "D. Stimits" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Strange 2.4.2 boot error
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> memtest-x86 generates a similar output if it can't read from the floppy.
This same floppy works when making a boot disk from the redhat install,
so it can't be the actual floppy or floppy drive. I wish I had
memtest-x86 around though, it might provide some clue as to error codes.
There might be some indirect relationship, but I can't imagine how/what
at the moment. It seems strange.
>
> D. Stimits <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> > I'm trying to install a new kernel 2.4.2 on a RH 7.1 beta, SMP. The
> > default RH kernel (2.4.0-0.99.11smp) works fine. But when I create a
> > boot
> > floppy, I'm coming up with a non-lilo error I've never seen before,
> > being
> > partially a dump of some cpu registers. I've tried compiling a stock
> > 2.4.2
> > kernel with both the gcc and kgcc compilers, getting some warnings on
> > gcc
> > that disappear with kgcc, though both compile (both were tested, both
> > fail
> > the same way). The system is basically aic7xxx scsi, dual pII 450. Here
> > is the error, can anyone shed any light on this, which occurs
> > immediately
> > after the kernel load, and repeats to infinity:
> >
> > 0200
> > AX:0212
> > BX:6C00
> > CX:5001
> > DX:0000.
> >
> > D. Stimits, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
> > PS: I'm especially interested in what the "0200" indicates, since it
> > isn't a register dump.
------------------------------
From: Matej Kenda <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: linux.redhat.misc,linux.redhat.devel,linux.dev.misc
Subject: Re: Mounting proc fs to /mnt/root/proc ?
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 22:37:02 +0100
Thaddeus L Olczyk wrote:
> How about a symbolic link?
I can't use it because I will do chroot on /mnt/root and old root will become
invisible.
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 22:43:03 +0100
From: Michael Heiming <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: tar from date (-N, --newer, --after-date)
Frederick Bartlett wrote:
> tar --version gives the same results here, so that can't be it.
>
> Should I therefore assume that it's the kernel? Or could it be something
> specific to Red Hat? I'm using RH 7.0 and kernel 2.2.16-22smp.
I could test it on other machines with 2.2.x kernel, but it would work anyway.
Maybe just another thing RH mucked up with the 7.0 distro, I don't know, as I
only use SuSE....
You should try the soultion David suggested with a small script, to get things
working.
Michael Heiming
------------------------------
From: mike <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Looking for user friendly fax program
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 16:47:42 -0500
Hi,
I have been looking at some fax programs for Linux.
I am presently running mostly Redhat 6.1, 6.2 and
at times Mandrake 7.0 and 7.2.
I have tried installing hylafax and a graphical front end with
no success. I tried xfax and when I brought up the interface,
there seems no way to receive faxes only send them. It
seem tedious to try to use the shell fax programs efax and efix.
It doesn't seem like a great program for business purposes.
Thanks
Mike
------------------------------
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End of Linux-Misc Digest
******************************