Linux-Setup Digest #439, Volume #20 Wed, 17 Jan 01 08:13:09 EST
Contents:
Re: Term emulator with *real* keypad emulation? ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
IMAP server (NDQ)
how to connect to Linux server for internet? ("Jason L")
Re: valid installation partition? ("Martin Schmidt")
Re: IMAP server ("Wong Ching Kuen Frederick")
Deskpro XL HowTo?? ("TransAlp rider")
How does kickstart work? (Guest account Tom Peters)
Re: moving subdirs (Nick Condon)
Re: Please Help Newbie with Realtek 8029 NIC setup ("muppet")
Install tracking? (JIm Linch)
3DFX Voodoo 2 drivers & 2.4.0 - does it work? (Bill LaGrue)
IP masquerade (Fokkema DBRA)
Re: /dev/sr0 has wrong major or minor number (M. Buchenrieder)
Re: how to connect to Linux server for internet? ("Baldrick")
DiskImage of newly installed Linux-Box (media factory)
Re: installing linux with windows 2000 ("Scott Zhang")
Problems Getting Kernel to Work ("Mike Harris")
RH6.2 install from FTP (ozetechnology)
Re: Install tracking? (Michael Heiming)
Re: Term emulator with *real* keypad emulation? (Thomas Dickey)
Re: Upgrading to KDE2 (Marijan Peh)
Re: 3DFX Voodoo 2 drivers & 2.4.0 - does it work? (Steve Martin)
Re: Problems mounting patitions (Ignasi)
Re: moving subdirs (Nick Condon)
Re: moving subdirs ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: Re: Term emulator with *real* keypad emulation?
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 08:13:46 GMT
Roger Blake wrote:
>
> Is there a terminal emulator for X that accurately emulates the VT100
> application keypad, including the use of NumLock as the DEC "Gold"
> editing key?
>
> I'm trying to install my favorite text editor, "ED," which is a clone
> of the old DEC EDT editor. (Available via anonymous ftp from clio.rice.edu.)
> This editor makes extensive use of the numeric keypad in application mode,
> unfortunately all of the terminal emulators I've tried so far don't
> seem to properly emulate the keypad, particularly that pesky Gold key.
> (Though the Linux console does, ED works fine from a text-mode console.)
>
> Thus far I've tried xterm, gnome-terminal, konsole, and e-term along
> with their various keyboard settings where available, and no luck so far;
> the only way I can make ED work properly is to switch to one of the
> text-mode consoles.
>
> Any help finding an emulator that will work with this will be greatly
> appreciated! Though I'm no stranger to vi, having worked extensively
> with DEC systems I've got that blasted EDT keypad burned into my brain...
>
> --
> Roger Blake
> (remove second "g" and second "m" from address for email)
Do a web search for a program called Xkeyboard. This is a program that
diplays a keyboard in a window that lets you asign keys the way you
want.
jamess
--
"On the side of the software box, in the 'System Requirements' section,
it said 'Requires Windows 95 or better'. So I installed Linux."
-Anonymous
------------------------------
From: NDQ <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.networking,comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: IMAP server
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 09:15:29 +0100
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hi,
Could you tell me HOW TO install an IMAP server on RH Linux please.
Thanks very much,
--
NGUYEN-DAI Quy
------------------------------
From: "Jason L" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: how to connect to Linux server for internet?
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 16:44:27 +0800
Hi,
In case I have a Redhat Linux Server which connect to a cable modem. Now I
want to use a crossover cable to connect a Windows 98 client computer to the
Linux Server. How can I make the Win98 client computer able to connect to
the internet through the Linux Server? I only have one static IP provide
from the cable modem company.
Thanks alot.
------------------------------
From: "Martin Schmidt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: valid installation partition?
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 09:37:59 +0100
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb in im Newsbeitrag:
943cbe$6h8$[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> I am installing linux on a friend's computer and had two questions I was
> hoping somebody could answer. The first question is if it is possible
> to put all of the Linux files on a different physical drive, in my case,
> I have the three linux partitions (root,swap, and boot) all on the slave
> drive and was wondering if this would work. My second question is, with
> my previous setup, is it possible to use the Windows 2k boot loader to
> load Linux in this configuration? Thanks for any help!
>
> Douglas Yung
>
>
> Sent via Deja.com
> http://www.deja.com/
To put linux on a different drive is no problem , in fact that's my
prefered way to install linux . I dont have any experience with this
boot loader , but if it fails you can switch to LILO witch should
work .
Martin
------------------------------
From: "Wong Ching Kuen Frederick" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.networking,comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: Re: IMAP server
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 16:57:57 +0800
install the imapd rpm.
"NDQ" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ���g��l��
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Hi,
> Could you tell me HOW TO install an IMAP server on RH Linux please.
> Thanks very much,
> --
> NGUYEN-DAI Quy
------------------------------
From: "TransAlp rider" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux.suse,casema.linux,comp.os.linux.hardware,redhat.config
Subject: Deskpro XL HowTo??
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 10:18:04 +0100
Hi,
Does anyone know where i can find the Compaq DeskPro XL HowTo? the former
link: http://www-c724.uibk.ac.at/XL/ does not exist anymore. Maybe someone
can point me to a mirror.
Thnx in advance,
Erik
------------------------------
From: Guest account Tom Peters <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: How does kickstart work?
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 11:50:15 +0100
[note: posted from a temp address - see personals in footer ]
I have unsuccessfully been trying to get Red Hat's `kickstart` to work
(6.2 version), so a couple of questions.
This is what I did:
- I installed RH 6.2, and then ran mkkickstart and put the output in a
file ks.cfg .
- The manual says you have to put it on a boot floppy. I assume they
mean the MS-DOS install boot floppy with syslinux that you can extract
from the CD (not the ext2fs rescue boot flop that you can create during
installation or with `mkbootdisk`). I had to make place for ks.cfg by
condensing the welcome text screen files, but managed to squeeze it on.
- However, after booting the machine with the floppy and the install CD
in de drive, the process crashes apparently because of an error in a
(Python?) script, that presumably is hidden in the initrd image.
1) So what is that kickstart mechanism anyway? You have to trigger it
as a kernel option. Alan Cox wrote it about 2 years ago.
- Is it a standard Linux kernel feature?
- or is it specific for the Red Hat Linux installation kernels?
- If RH-specific, how can you build your own kernel with KS support?
2) Mandrake apparently uses a different mechanism: the ks.cfg file is
empty, and they have some other script, which actually seems to use more
data, matched to their install program.
- How does their clone-installation mechanism work?
3) And of course,
What magic do you need to do to get kickstart to work?
Any information is welcome,
--
Tom Peters [EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
From: Nick Condon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: moving subdirs
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 10:22:24 +0000
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >Each line in /etc/fstab lists a filesystem and it's mount-point
> >(aka partition and directory). When you want to use your new
> >partition type 'mount /usr' (or reboot your system), the stuff
> >you previously had there disappears and typing 'ls -l /usr'
> >lists the contents of your new partition. If you unmount it
> >('umount /usr') your old stuff reappears.
>
> Ok, this was the missing link (and actual answer to my question).
> It tells me how to insure sanity on the paths.
>
> What's the incantation for fstab? Should I use:
>
> '/dev/hda10/usr /usr ext2 auto,rw,exec 1 1'
Assuming this is a valid description of your /dev/hda10 partition, then
add this line to your /etc/fstab: (Note no '/usr' on the device name)
/dev/hda10 /usr ext2 auto,rw,exec 1 1
The new partition shouldn't contain a 'usr' directory, it should have
the contents of '/usr', i.e. ('lib', 'bin', 'sbin', etc). If your new
partition contains a usr directory it will get mounted as '/usr/usr'
(probably not what you want). Do something like this:
(as root)
mkdir /mnt
mount /dev/hda10 /mnt
cp -pr /usr/* /mnt
That will copy everything in your /usr directory onto /dev/hda10,
recursively, preserving permissions, without creating 'usr' itself.
> (assuming /usr is on /dev/hda10) or will simply 'mount /usr'
> work? (I don't see how; how would the system know that '/usr' is
> on '/dev/hda10'?)
When you run 'mount /usr', it looks up the details of the /usr
filesystem in '/etc/fstab'. If there is no entry for /usr in /etc/fstab,
you can still mount it by entering all the options with the 'mount'
command.
Broadly speaking, /etc/fstab serves two purposes, (1) it lists your
filesystems for mounting when the system is starting and (2) it allows
you to use a shortened form of the mount command so you don't have to
remember all the options everytime you want to mount something. That's
not much a gain for /usr, but it can be a big gain for more awkward
stuff like CDs, floppies and NFS.
------------------------------
From: "muppet" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Please Help Newbie with Realtek 8029 NIC setup
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 10:28:41 -0000
> The driver for your card is ne2k-pci. This card is listed with a question
> mark on the RH 7.0 compatability list.
It's an "NE 2000 compatible" network card (if you're looking through the
options in the kernel configuration). This builds the ne2k-pci module (if
you set "module" rather than builtin).
This or "tulip" seems to be a good guess if you don't know the chipset, or
have a generic unbadged network card.
------------------------------
From: JIm Linch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Install tracking?
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 02:41:10 -0800
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
This is an obvious "newbie question" , but is there a way to know what
directories and files are changed when running software "install" files?
A log file of some kind being generated? or a system file image table
that can be snapshot berfore and then after a new program install?
Basically I want to be sure I am not leaving "ORPHANS" behind when
removing trial software.
Thank you for any suggestions.
--
Colossians 4:6
------------------------------
From: Bill LaGrue <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: 3DFX Voodoo 2 drivers & 2.4.0 - does it work?
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 21:36:30 +1100
Hi all...I had a Voodoo 2 running perfectly under kernel 2.2.18, and
upgraded to 2.4.0...now I just get core dumps whenever anything tries
to use Glide. Ive re-installed Glide and the device driver from 3dfx
(3dfx.o) bit still the same problem-i get a message about not having a
Voodoo and the core dump, even just trying the Glide tests. Anyone
have any ideas?
Thanks
Bill
------------------------------
From: Fokkema DBRA <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: IP masquerade
Date: 17 Jan 2001 10:59:19 GMT
Hi all!
I'm about to configure a linux box as the default gateway for three
PCs running Windows 98 (2x) and Linux using IP masquerading. AFAIK,
IP masquerading changes the IP addresses and port numbers of outgoing
and incoming packets. For requests made by internal systems, the source
port is changed to an index number and the IP address is changed to
the gateway's IP address. When this box receives an incoming packet,
the destination port number is used as an index so that the original
port number and IP address can be restored. The web server (or alike)
on the internet will never know the difference.
Well, at least, that's the story. There are internet providers which
don't allow multiple systems to be connected to the internet over a
single link. That's a shame, of course, but I was wondering, some of
them claim they can detect IP masquerading. How do they do that? Can
they do that? Are they checking all packets for strange port numbers?
And if they can detect this, is there any way for IP masquerading to
use standard port numbers or something alike to avoid detection?
Of course, like everybody out there, I'm not trying to decept my local
internet provider; I'm just curious.
David
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (M. Buchenrieder)
Subject: Re: /dev/sr0 has wrong major or minor number
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 08:08:29 GMT
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>Can someone help me with a strange problem?
Yes. Deja.com - where you're posting from. Duh.
>I'm having trouble mounting my old nec scsi cd drive. This is not
>the first time I've compiled kernels for this system and drive. I did
>not have trouble before but after a fresh reinstall of the rh6.2 I keep
>getting the error that '/dev/sr0 has wrong major or minor number' *only*
>with the kernel I compile myself.
[...]
># File systems
>#
># CONFIG_QUOTA is not set
># CONFIG_AUTOFS_FS is not set
># CONFIG_AUTOFS4_FS is not set
>CONFIG_FAT_FS=y
># CONFIG_MSDOS_FS is not set
>CONFIG_VFAT_FS=y
>CONFIG_JFFS_FS_VERBOSE=0
># CONFIG_CRAMFS is not set
># CONFIG_RAMFS is not set
># CONFIG_ISO9660_FS is not set
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
[...]
Well, what do you expect without support for ISO9660 ??
Hint: No CDROM filesystem support, no CDROM reading.
Michael
--
Michael Buchenrieder * [EMAIL PROTECTED] * http://www.muc.de/~mibu
Lumber Cartel Unit #456 (TINLC) & Official Netscum
Note: If you want me to send you email, don't munge your address.
------------------------------
From: "Baldrick" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: how to connect to Linux server for internet?
Date: Tue, 16 Jan 2001 14:15:34 -0000
Jason L <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Hi,
>
> In case I have a Redhat Linux Server which connect to a cable modem. Now
I
> want to use a crossover cable to connect a Windows 98 client computer to
the
> Linux Server. How can I make the Win98 client computer able to connect to
> the internet through the Linux Server? I only have one static IP provide
> from the cable modem company.
Hi!
Does you CM connect via a LAN card, hopefully it does...
You'll need 2 x NIC, one for the internet connection (eth1), the other for
your internal network (eth0).
Use DHCP (pump) to configure the eth1
Assign a valid IP address for your internal network 192.168.blah.blah
You'll also need to setup a DNS caching server (possibly) and IP MASQ
(ipfwadm/ipchains or iptables depending on your kernel rev.)
There are various howto's available at LDP, if you get stuch post more
details of your config.
HTH
J
------------------------------
From: media factory <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: DiskImage of newly installed Linux-Box
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 12:22:54 +0100
After installing a rpm based Linux System (Suse) and installation of some
additional stuff from source tarballs, I'd like to conserve the system in an
easy restorable kind of binary-snapshot.
One way could be to start the system from the Suse-CD, mount the source
harddrive with the already installed system ro and an formated but empty
destination harddrive rw and create a tar archive on the destination.
When setting up a new LinuxBox, I would again have to start from the
Suse-CD, create a file system on the new hard drive and expand the tar
archive from previously created backup-harddrive onto the new drive.
Did anybody try this or a similar procedure so far?
The ideal solution would be to have this archive located on the harddisk or
DVD-Ram of a Laptop running Linux and to have a customized boot-disk or -CD
on the new Linux-Box to be setup, which boots a minimal Linux-sytem into a
RAM-disk and accesses the Laptop via Ethernet.
Peter
------------------------------
From: "Scott Zhang" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux
Subject: Re: installing linux with windows 2000
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 19:38:20 +0800
Reply-To: "Scott Zhang" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
It is very easy to install Linux in Windows2000: go to the CONTROL
PANEL-->Administrative tools-->Computer management-->Disk management, delete
the last partition, and then, of course install Linux from CD-ROM. In this
case, you can install Linux on the rest partition that you delete just now.
------------------------------
From: "Mike Harris" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Problems Getting Kernel to Work
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 09:43:50 -0000
I decided to try and build a new kernel for my SUSE 7 linux system. I made
sure that I backed up the original kernel so that I could fall back to a
working system. I setup the new kernel using "menuconfig" I changed very
little but just removed some functions that I didn't use like "raid". I
built the new kernel following the instructions in the SUSE manual, but when
I boot it I get errors saying that there are "unresolved modules for the
sound card drivers (es1371)". I'm sure that I compiled and installed the
modules. Has anyone got any idea what I've done wrong? Also when I revert
to the old kernel it still comes up with the same error.
Thanks for any help
------------------------------
From: ozetechnology <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RH6.2 install from FTP
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 11:54:22 GMT
Has anyone used this?
Is there anything I need to look out for?
Thanks.
--
site: http://www.ozetechnology.com
+++ New Images in the gallery +++
Sent via Deja.com
http://www.deja.com/
------------------------------
From: Michael Heiming <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Install tracking?
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 14:26:31 +0100
JIm Linch wrote:
> This is an obvious "newbie question" , but is there a way to know what
> directories and files are changed when running software "install" files?
>
> A log file of some kind being generated? or a system file image table
> that can be snapshot berfore and then after a new program install?
>
> Basically I want to be sure I am not leaving "ORPHANS" behind when
> removing trial software.
>
> Thank you for any suggestions.
>
> --
> Colossians 4:6
Hello,
depends on how you're installing for rpm, read man rpm.
If you install from tarball, look what the makefile is doing (install)
Otherwise save /var/lib/locatedb to another file and run updatedb,
diff both files to see what has changed..:-)
Good luck
Michael Heiming
Sysadmin
--
__ __ __ Virtueller Bau-Markt AG
\ / [__) [__] [ __ Meerbuscher Strasse 64
\/ [__) | | [_./ 40670 Meerbusch
www.vbag.de Michael Heiming ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Confucius say: He who play in root, eventually kill tree.
------------------------------
From: Thomas Dickey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: Re: Term emulator with *real* keypad emulation?
Date: 17 Jan 2001 12:34:26 GMT
In comp.os.linux.misc [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Do a web search for a program called Xkeyboard. This is a program that
> diplays a keyboard in a window that lets you asign keys the way you
> want.
all of the hits I find are for "xkb", which is not applicable.
perhaps you meant xkeycaps (which sets up xmodmap -- but that has problems).
--
Thomas E. Dickey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://dickey.his.com
ftp://dickey.his.com
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Marijan Peh)
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux.suse,comp.os.linux
Subject: Re: Upgrading to KDE2
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 12:30:52 +0000 (UTC)
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Costas Gavardinas writes:
>I downloaded the binary rpms from kde.org and I used YaST to install them. I
>haven't been able to start it, so I don't know if it is properly installed.
>If I run Startkde from within X-Windows, I get "another WindowManager is
>already running". If I change my .xinitrc setting from twm to startkde I
>still get kde1. Also if I run startkde from the command line, I get some
>errors about libjpg.so.62.... Any clues as to what is the problem?? Any
>library I need to update?? THANK YOU EVERYBODY FOR YOUR INTEREST AND
>SUPPORT!!!
Put in your .xinitrc full path to the 'startkde'
They are probably installed in /opt/kde2/bin dir.
--
You came of nowhere with drums of thunder and a heart of gold.
Welcome to the inner circle.
You're the king of the digital hill.
------------------------------
From: Steve Martin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: 3DFX Voodoo 2 drivers & 2.4.0 - does it work?
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 12:42:21 GMT
Bill LaGrue wrote:
> Hi all...I had a Voodoo 2 running perfectly under kernel 2.2.18, and
> upgraded to 2.4.0...now I just get core dumps whenever anything tries
> to use Glide. Ive re-installed Glide and the device driver from 3dfx
> (3dfx.o) bit still the same problem-i get a message about not having a
> Voodoo and the core dump, even just trying the Glide tests. Anyone
> have any ideas?
I would suggest two things... first, have you upgraded modutils
per the kernel documentation? The 2.4 kernel handles modules
differently than the older kernels, which requires the new
modutils.
Secondly, you might have to recompile the kernel and include the kernel
VooDoo module; the one from the 3dfx Web site probably won't work
with the new kernel.
Good luck.
BTW, you didn't say whether you're using XFree86 with this; if so,
you might upgrade to XF86 4.0.x and use the DRI module rather than
the one from 3dfx.com. Read the README.DRIcomp file in the XFRee86
docs for more info.
------------------------------
From: Ignasi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Problems mounting patitions
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 13:53:22 +0100
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Ignasi Villagrasa wrote:
> I'm trying to mount aditional partitions under RH6.2 and it seems to
> work fine, but I'm no able to write on them.
>
> What to do ?
>
> What am I going wrong ?
>
> Ignasi Villagrasa.
Correction. The partition was HPFS and it cannot be written from Linux.
I redefined the partition as ext2 (83). But when trying to mount,
following message appears onto screen:
'mount: wrong fs type, bad option, bad superblock on /dev/hda13,
or too many mounted file systems'
fs type is ext2. There are only two mounted file systems. So I think
the problem is superblock related.
When I reboot, the system informs me there's a problem with /dev/hda13
superblock. It's not found, and propose solving the problem running fsck
-b 8193 /dev/hda13 . But I get errors running that. The program cannot
set the superblock.
What to do ?
What's my problem ?
Could anyone help me ?
Ignasi Villagrasa.
------------------------------
From: Nick Condon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: moving subdirs
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 12:46:36 +0000
Nick Condon wrote:
> Assuming this is a valid description of your /dev/hda10 partition, then
> add this line to your /etc/fstab: (Note no '/usr' on the device name)
>
> /dev/hda10 /usr ext2 auto,rw,exec 1 1
I've looked at this more closely and realised this would be better:
/dev/hda10 /usr ext2 defaults 1 2
The "defaults" option includes "auto,rw,exec" along with some other sensible
options "suid,dev,nouser,async".
Only the root filesystem should have a 1 at the end, all the others should
be 2 or 0. That's the order they get checked in when the system starts, 0
means no-check.
One thing worth considering is the order of fstab. In gets processed in
order, so the root filesystem should be on the first line, with important
stuff like /boot and /usr straight after it. Normally I would only ever add
a new fstab line at the bottom, for /usr I would make an exception.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: moving subdirs
Date: Wed, 17 Jan 2001 12:54:15 GMT
In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, on 01/17/01
at 10:22 AM, Nick Condon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
>/dev/hda10 /usr ext2 auto,rw,exec 1 1
>The new partition shouldn't contain a 'usr' directory, it should
>have the contents of '/usr', i.e. ('lib', 'bin', 'sbin', etc).
>If your new partition contains a usr directory it will get
>mounted as '/usr/usr' (probably not what you want).
This is where I'm stumbling.
Essentially I'd be treating the whole partition as '/usr'?
Can't '/usr' be one directory amongst others (on the same level)
on this partition?
My hope was to have '/usr' on '/dev/hda10' as well as other stuff
(not all of which would be subdirs of '/usr').
I hope my question -- or my confusion -- is clear?
I appreciate the advice; thanks.
F.
===========================================================
Felmon John Davis
Union College / Schenectady, NY
os/2 - ma kauft koi katz em sack
===========================================================
------------------------------
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End of Linux-Setup Digest
******************************