Linux-Setup Digest #826, Volume #20 Wed, 14 Mar 01 12:13:12 EST
Contents:
Re: How to disable screen blanker (Michael Heiming)
Re: How to disable screen blanker (Michael Heiming)
Re: How to disable screen blanker ("Wayne Howarth")
Mad old Monitor ("ColinR")
'bad magic number in superblock' error ("Wayne Howarth")
Re: Boot partition? (The_saint)
Re: How to disable screen blanker ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: 'bad magic number in superblock' error ("Eric")
Re: How to disable screen blanker ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: 'bad magic number in superblock' error ("Wayne Howarth")
Problem with rpc.lockd [lockd] process (Helmut Kreiser)
Problem with rpc.lockd [lockd] process (Helmut Kreiser)
Linux Virgin ("keith migdal")
sound on vaio laptop (Hajo Drescher)
Attn: Bill Unruh About sendmail (HateLinux)
Re: Linux w/ tv-out ? ("Christopher H")
Re: Gnome/Enlightenment & Virtual Screens (Craig Kelley)
Re: Bootable backup CDs ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: Red Hat 7.0 jumpy cursor in Xfree 4 (Craig Kelley)
Re: 2.4.2 missing mod; mkinitrd error (Craig Kelley)
Re: Compiling GD on Linux failes test? (Craig Kelley)
Lilo with RH 7.0 Won't Enter Linux Automatically Anymore ("Meron Lavie")
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2001 16:08:48 +0100
From: Michael Heiming <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: How to disable screen blanker
Paul Weber wrote:
>
> I have a client who wants the screen blanker disabled. I have never
> been asked this question before and can't seem to find the right switch.
>
> It is a server, no X, sitting at a login prompt. He doesn't want to
> push the shift key to make the screen show up.
>
> Where is the magic key?
man setterm
Michael Heiming
>
> Thanx!
>
> -Paul
> Linux Guru wannabe
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2001 16:07:23 +0100
From: Michael Heiming <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: How to disable screen blanker
Paul Weber wrote:
>
> I have a client who wants the screen blanker disabled. I have never
> been asked this question before and can't seem to find the right switch.
>
> It is a server, no X, sitting at a login prompt. He doesn't want to
> push the shift key to make the screen show up.
>
> Where is the magic key?
man setterm
Michael Heiming
>
> Thanx!
>
> -Paul
> Linux Guru wannabe
------------------------------
From: "Wayne Howarth" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: How to disable screen blanker
Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2001 15:10:27 -0000
I found the following in the Red Hat FAQ:
If you have a screen saver running, you may want to turn that off. In text
mode, the kernel will "screen-save" your system unless you use:
setterm -powersave off -blank 0
Otherwise, if you hear disk drives speed up or other sounds, this is
probably APM kicking in. Disable APM from starting at boot time by logging
in as root and typing:
ntsysv
then deselect APM. Leave ntsysv and you will need to reboot the machine
(this is one of the few services that you have to restart the system as APM
is so deeply connected to the kernel that a full reset is needed.)
Regards,
Wayne.
"Paul Weber" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> I have a client who wants the screen blanker disabled. I have never
> been asked this question before and can't seem to find the right switch.
>
> It is a server, no X, sitting at a login prompt. He doesn't want to
> push the shift key to make the screen show up.
>
> Where is the magic key?
>
> Thanx!
>
> -Paul
> Linux Guru wannabe
>
------------------------------
Reply-To: "ColinR" <colinr@DON'TSPAMMEntlworld.com>
From: "ColinR" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Mad old Monitor
Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2001 15:13:08 -0000
A little background:
We just set up a dedicated server for playing first person shooters and I
found I had a few gig leftover on it which I used to setup Linux on. I'm a
total Newbie, but everything works fine apart from the refresh on the
monitor. I have an S3 Virge graphics card (if that helps).
The monitor is a tiny 9" "IBM Personal System 2 Monochrome Display" Looking
round the back I can see that its an 8503 revision 3, but this was from
decoding a string of numbers.
Now, I realise this is a crap monitor, but I don't have a spare at the
moment. The problem I have is that Linux will only boot into an unknown
resolution or refresh. I want to force it into 640x480 at 50Hz or 60Hz (I'm
not sure if it'll take 60Hz).
"Failsafe" boots me okay once I've gone to "Start with Graphics and Network"
but I'm sure there's some way of telling X to run at set levels (flicking
through posts here told me about resolutions, but not refresh rates). If I
have to resort to cmd lines, I'll be screwed (someone will need to take me
by the hand). Not that I'm afraid of the command line, just that I don't
know the name of a text editor! Last used Unix at University about 6 years
ago and we had no configuration rights (obviously).
I have only had the OS installed since last night, and I'm learning a lot,
but the learning curve is like a brick wall at the moment.
Many thanks in advance.
------------------------------
From: "Wayne Howarth" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: linux.redhat
Subject: 'bad magic number in superblock' error
Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2001 15:18:16 -0000
Hi,
Just installed Linux alongside Win ME. I have the following config:
/dev/hda1 Linux boot partition (20MB)
/dev/hda2 FAT32 (9GB)
/dev/hda5 Linux (10GB)
/dev/hda6 Linux Swap (120MB)
Upon booting from the boot disk the kernel starts up but I get the above
error message when the 'fsck.ext2' program is run.
What can I do?
Wayne.
------------------------------
From: The_saint <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Boot partition?
Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2001 23:18:59 +0800
In article <Pine.LNX.4.33.0103132104540.3269-100000@7812-
grignard.amagerkollegiet.dk>, [EMAIL PROTECTED] says...
> No. The floppy will be the boot disk and you do not need to boot from a
> fixed disk.
>
>
I'm not sure,sorry I'm not remembering. but Mandrake 7.0 and RH 6.1 they
pretend to make one.
Anyhow, I'm gonna try it later. Thanks!
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: How to disable screen blanker
Date: 14 Mar 2001 15:23:30 GMT
Paul Weber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have a client who wants the screen blanker disabled. I have never
> been asked this question before and can't seem to find the right switch.
I think that you have to tinker with the virtual terminal
configuration, in the man console_codes I found:
ESC [ 9 ; n ] Set screen blank timeout to n minutes.
I haven't tryied it.
Davide
------------------------------
From: "Eric" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: linux.redhat
Subject: Re: 'bad magic number in superblock' error
Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2001 16:29:16 +0100
Please post the question in the body too, not just in the header.
> Just installed Linux alongside Win ME. I have the following config:
>
> /dev/hda1 Linux boot partition (20MB)
> /dev/hda2 FAT32 (9GB)
> /dev/hda5 Linux (10GB)
> /dev/hda6 Linux Swap (120MB)
>
> Upon booting from the boot disk the kernel starts up but I get the above
> error message when the 'fsck.ext2' program is run.
>
This is a bad sign.
It means that the filesystem isn't correct.
It can have several reasons.
So we need more info.
On what partition does it fail.
Did it function before?
Can you boot your linux system? Perhaps through a rescue system?
can you show the exact partitiontable?
from linux `fdisk -l /dev/hda` would give that.
Eric
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: How to disable screen blanker
Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2001 15:09:45 +0000
Reply-To: no_replyto@oursite
This message has been posted by: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Dave Ewart)
On Wed, 14 Mar 2001 08:34:13 -0600, Paul Weber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I have a client who wants the screen blanker disabled. I have never
>been asked this question before and can't seem to find the right switch.
>
>It is a server, no X, sitting at a login prompt. He doesn't want to
>push the shift key to make the screen show up.
Checkout 'setterm'
Dave.
--
P.S. Apologies for the spam-trapped headers - they are added by my
outgoing news server and I have no control over them.
--
Dave Ewart
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Computing Manager
ICRF Cancer Epidemiology Unit, Oxford UK
------------------------------
From: "Wayne Howarth" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: linux.redhat
Subject: Re: 'bad magic number in superblock' error
Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2001 15:41:14 -0000
> So we need more info.
> On what partition does it fail.
It is at the stage where fsck.ext is run on the /dev/hda1 partition. The
exact error it gives is follows:
"Checking filesystems
fsck.ext(null):
The superblock could not be read or does not describe a correct ext2
filesystem. If the device is valid and it really contains an ext2 filesystem
(and not swap or ufs or something else), then the superblock is corrupt, and
you might try running e2fsck with an alternative superblock: e2fsck -b 8193
<device>
: Bad magic number in super-block while trying to open /dev/hda1 [FAILED]"
> Did it function before?
Yes it did. Then I reinstalled Win ME and now it doesn't work.
> Can you boot your linux system? Perhaps through a rescue system?
I'm currently using the Linux boot floppy that the installation created. At
the LILO prompt I use 'linux 3' to get the system to run in console mode.
Wayne.
------------------------------
From: Helmut Kreiser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup,comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: Problem with rpc.lockd [lockd] process
Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2001 16:49:05 +0100
Hi,
we have a cluster of some linux systems, which are connected via nfs
to a server. On this server the process [lockd] (rpc.lockd) doesn't
exist any more. After reboot, the process vanish. Now, mailing has problems
to send mail locally that serversystem.
does anybody no,
- what this process does
- why (perhaps) this process stops working
- and where some documantation exists ?
Thanks in advance
Helmut
--
========================================================================
G S I -- Gesellschaft fuer Schwerionenforschung
Dr. Helmut Kreiser e-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-DV&EE- Computing
System Manager DEC/OpenVMS and Linux
========================================================================
------------------------------
From: Helmut Kreiser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup,comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: Problem with rpc.lockd [lockd] process
Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2001 16:49:05 +0100
Hi,
we have a cluster of some linux systems, which are connected via nfs
to a server. On this server the process [lockd] (rpc.lockd) doesn't
exist any more. After reboot, the process vanish. Now, mailing has problems
to send mail locally that serversystem.
does anybody no,
- what this process does
- why (perhaps) this process stops working
- and where some documantation exists ?
Thanks in advance
Helmut
--
========================================================================
G S I -- Gesellschaft fuer Schwerionenforschung
Dr. Helmut Kreiser e-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-DV&EE- Computing
System Manager DEC/OpenVMS and Linux
========================================================================
------------------------------
From: "keith migdal" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.networking
Subject: Linux Virgin
Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2001 16:00:11 GMT
Dear Group:
I am a novice to this O/S. I'd like to talk about what I want to do, what I
have to do it with, and solicit advice on how to get there.
I want to set up a Linux box to be (not sure if I have the right
terminology):
a proxy server, and/or
a router, and/or
an internet server
I have Roadrunner internet service to my house. I want to use the Linux box
to take in from the cable modem , and then go out to an Ethernet hub, so all
the PCs/Macs in the house can have simultaneous internet access.
I have an old Pentium, 100MHZ, 16 meg RAM, 240 meg HD, with CDROM. It has
Windows 95 now, but I intend to use all of the HD for Linux - I do not need
Windows on this box.
I have the Caldera Linux circa 1998.
My first question - is what I want to do - doable?
Assuming the answer is yes, my next question - I assume I need 2 NIC cards -
one for input FROM the cable modem, one for output TO the Ethernet hub. I
have 2 identical NIC cards, but I have not installed them yet. Should I:
install the cards first in Windows? or
physically install the cards in the box (but not the drivers) then load
Linux and let Linux recognize them and then install drivers? or
get the Linux installed correctly and stable, and then put in the
cards/drivers??
Thanks,
Keith
------------------------------
From: Hajo Drescher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: sound on vaio laptop
Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2001 10:58:51 -0500
Hi
did anyone succeed to get the sound run
on a vaio laptop f630 with Redhat 7.0 ?
I tried sndconfig, but it says my soundcard
is not supported.
thanx,
Hajo
------------------------------
From: I_like_2B@home (HateLinux)
Subject: Attn: Bill Unruh About sendmail
Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2001 14:28:59 GMT
OK , 18 hours reading docs since yesterday, still have not managed to
send a single mail. Am dog tired. I reinstalled redhat 7.0 (4th time
in 3 days - just to make sure there were no mistakes from previous
attempts, and logged EVERYTHING I did.
Here is what I did :
backed up my files, so would not have to reinstall again !:
[root@localhost /etc]# cp sendmail.cf sendmail.cf.ori
[root@localhost mail]# cp sendmail.mc sendmail.mc.ori
added to /etc/mail/sendmail.mc:
define(`SMART_HOST',`smtp.ig.com.br')dnl
MASQUERADE_AS(ig.com.br)dnl
FEATURE(`allmasquerade')dnl
FEATURE(masquerade_envelope) FEATURE(genericstable, `hash -o
/etc/mail/genericstable')dnl
GENERICS_DOMAIN_FILE(`/etc/mail/genericsdomain')dnl
compiled sendmail.mc
m4 sendmail.mc > sendmail.cf
made a symbolic link to /etc/mail/sendmail.cf in /etc
(deleted /etc/sendmail.cf first) to keep all my mail config files in
one directory
made a /etc/mail/genericstable:
myname [EMAIL PROTECTED]
root [EMAIL PROTECTED]
made the db:
makemap -r hash genericstable.db < genericstable
made a /etc/mail/genericsdomain:
localhost
made a new /etc/mail/aliases:
root: myname
news: root
postmaster: root
mail: root
www: root
nobody: /dev/null
MAILER-DAEMON: nobody
compiled it with:
newaliases
finally, restarted sendmail:
kill -HUP `head -1 /var/run/sendmail.pid`
Wrote a letter to my *other* email address using mutt
Started ppp using wvdial
downloaded mail using fetchmail from my two email providers, no
errors occurred
invoked sendmail like this:
sendmail -q
this is my "tail"of my maillog:
Mar 14 09:35:04 localhost sendmail[933]: f2ECUjS00911:
[EMAIL PROTECTED], ctladdr=myname (500/500), delay=00:04:19,
xdelay=00:00:01, mailer=relay,
pri=180386, relay=smtp.ig.com.br. [200.226.132.151], dsn=4.0.0,
stat=Deferred: Connection refused by smtp.ig.com.br.
[root@localhost /root]#
What on earth am I doing wrong ?? I THINK I understood most of the man
sendmail, the redhat sendmail FAQ, the RE-Address HOWTO, the ISP
HOWTO, and some dozen other docs I picked up.
TIA
PS my login name substituted by "myname", to avoid spam, all the other
information is exact. I get 30 spams a day in my hotmail account.
That's with max filters active.
Flames=OFF
------------------------------
From: "Christopher H" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.questions,comp.os.linux.hardware
Subject: Re: Linux w/ tv-out ?
Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2001 16:26:03 GMT
Thanks Colin !
That's exactly what I was looking for.
"Colin G." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:GEDr6.566291$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Christopher:
>
> I found this on the Creative open source site. Might try giving it a shot:
>
> ftp://opensource.creative.com/pub/snapshots/dxr2-20010313.tar.gz
>
> Colin G.
>
>
> "Christopher H" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:3iyr6.441541$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Hi everyone,
>
> I have a Creative decoder card (DXR2) and I can play DVDs/VCDs/MPGs on my
TV
> through Win2k with no problem. But now I want to take out the card and put
> it in my P166 box (which is closer to my bigger TV).
>
> Would it be possible to have the decoder card working along with the
tv-out
> capability ? What software would be needed (if possible a console soft.)
>
> Thanks,
> Christopher H
> remove NOSPAM to email.
>
>
>
>
------------------------------
From: Craig Kelley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Gnome/Enlightenment & Virtual Screens
Date: 14 Mar 2001 09:41:23 -0700
Jeffrey Scott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Thanks a bunch, I'm an idiot with limited time...two strikes against me.
>
> Next stoopid question. My 'iconized' windows disappear...that is, they go
> somewhere I can't retrieve. They are not on the panel at the bottom, and
> there is no 'icon box' in the panel that holds them. I assume this is as easy
> to fix as my last question, but once again I can't find it. The 'help' system
> seems more useless that a typical Bill Gates app...scary.
:)
It ususally means it's on another desktop. You should get a listing
of all open applications by clicking on the little triangle thingy
next to the deskguide.
--
It won't be long before the CPU is a card in a slot on your ATX videoboard
Craig Kelley -- [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.isu.edu/~kellcrai finger [EMAIL PROTECTED] for PGP block
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: Re: Bootable backup CDs
Date: 14 Mar 2001 16:45:49 GMT
On Mon, 12 Mar 2001 02:15:05, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Dances With Crows)
wrote:
> On 12 Mar 2001 00:56:48 GMT, Ed Ohsone staggered into the Black Sun and said:
> >I would like to make backups of my hard drives on multiple CDs.
> >It seems there are some tools for linux, like cdrecord, but
> >I do not know if there exist tools which can create bootable CDs.
> >
> >MS Windows world has some tools capable of this task.
> >Are there any in linux world?
> >Since my system is mutiboot with win95, linux6.1, freeBSD, Solarisx86, etc,
> >each of them taking about 2GB, ideal tool should be able to create bootable
> >CDs for all of the OSs.
> >
> >I am not familiar with booting mechanism. So there may be some
> >special way of creating bootable CDs with cnventional tools like cdrecord.
> >
> >I would appreciate any pointer/comment.
>
> cdrecord does not create a bootable CD; it just takes an ISO9660 image
> and writes it to a CD. Check the man page for mkisofs, paying attention
> to the -b and -c options.
Well, what does the bios look for on the cd when 'boot from cd' is
enabled and 'atapi cdrom found' is issued? Is there a separate small
image of some sort that provides a root image and maybe atapi cdrom
drivers for immediate use by the otherwise bare system?
> The basic idea is that you create a 1.4 or
> 2.8M floppy image, then specify the name of that image to mkisofs in the
> -b option. I don't think you can specify more than one boot image
> though. However, if you get the 2.8M image of Tom's RootBoot, you can
> make a bootable CD that will boot into a Linux rescue system that has
> enough stuff to recover any Linux installation. If you choose an
> appropriate format for your backups, you can probably use Tom's to
> restore Win9x, *BSD, and Solarisx86 installations as well.
>
> Check freshmeat.net for CD-R backup tools. The 2.8M Tom's image is
> available at http://www.toms.net/rb/ .
>
--
------------------------------
From: Craig Kelley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Red Hat 7.0 jumpy cursor in Xfree 4
Date: 14 Mar 2001 09:47:56 -0700
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Genesis) writes:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Craig Kelley) wrote in
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> >
> >Does it work on the console with gpm?
> >
> Yes.
>
> >Does it still do that if you kill gpm before starting X11?
> >
> Yes.
Strange. Run mouseconfig as the root user and try a different mouse.
--
It won't be long before the CPU is a card in a slot on your ATX videoboard
Craig Kelley -- [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.isu.edu/~kellcrai finger [EMAIL PROTECTED] for PGP block
------------------------------
From: Craig Kelley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: linux.dev.kernel
Subject: Re: 2.4.2 missing mod; mkinitrd error
Date: 14 Mar 2001 09:51:29 -0700
Darren and Marla Welson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I have compiled 2.2.18 and 2.4.2 kernels with no problem, but when I
> went to mkinitrd, I was told I was missing the module for my SCSI device
> aic7xxx.o . I added this into the kernel, so I did not forget it. I
> ended up copying the module from my 2.2.14 /lib/modules directory and
> all is ok for 2.2.18. I did the same for 2.4.2, but when I mkinitrd I
> now get the error of 'all loopback devices are in use' and it stops
> there.
>
> Does anyonw know what may be happening? Any fix?
Just compile your SCSI driver into the kernel and forget about the
initrd image. The initrd is handy for a distribution that wants one
kernel to do everything -- it isn't a handy for a single user that
knows what he/she wants.
As for the loopback problem: you probably forgot to compile in
loopback support, or you are using many loopback devices already (df
should show them for you).
--
It won't be long before the CPU is a card in a slot on your ATX videoboard
Craig Kelley -- [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.isu.edu/~kellcrai finger [EMAIL PROTECTED] for PGP block
------------------------------
From: Craig Kelley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.lang.perl.modules
Subject: Re: Compiling GD on Linux failes test?
Date: 14 Mar 2001 09:57:41 -0700
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Ken Williams) writes:
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Dela Lovecraft <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>wrote:
> >Hi Ken,
> >
> >I think I see your problem:
> >
> >> /usr/lib/perl5/5.00502/i586-linux-thread/DynaLoader.pm line 168.
> > ^^^^^^^
> >
> >While trying to get GD installed on machines, I tried it on a RH 6.1
> >box, and got this same error. When I did the same thing on a machine
> >with perl 5.6 I got no errors. I can only think that this is the problem
> >- try downloading perl 5.6 (it is better anyway, IMHO) and there
> >shouldn't be so many problems.
> >
>
> If I upgrade to perl 5.6 will I have to reinstall all my modules?
Not all of them, but many of them. You can compile 5.6 such that it
has backward-compatibility with 5.005 modules.
The CPAN module makes this all automatic, though.
--
It won't be long before the CPU is a card in a slot on your ATX videoboard
Craig Kelley -- [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.isu.edu/~kellcrai finger [EMAIL PROTECTED] for PGP block
------------------------------
From: "Meron Lavie" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To:
alt.os.linux,alt.os.linux.redhat,alt.uu.comp.os.linux.questions,comp.os.linux,comp.os.linux.admin,comp.os.linux.help,comp.os.linux.misc,comp.os.linux.questions,comp.os.linux.redhat,linux.redhat,linux.redhat.install
Subject: Lilo with RH 7.0 Won't Enter Linux Automatically Anymore
Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2001 19:05:01 +0200
I installed RH7.0 a few months ago (it's the only OS on the machine).
Up until last week, when I booted the computer, the Lilo would display
"LINUX" (together with a picture of the man in the Red Hat in the corner),
and then I could either press ENTER immediately if I was inpatient, or could
just wait a few seconds and by default Linux would then boot.
Without warning, Linux is no longer brought up by default after a few
seconds. I now am forced to manually press ENTER. This is a problem for me
as Linux is my gateway, and we have power problems frequently - so I want to
be sure that my gateway will automatically come up if I;m not around to
press ENTER.
Any ideas?
TIA,
--
Meron Lavie
www.redmatch.com - World's Largest Hi-Tech Salary Site
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
NOTE: THERE ARE NO DIGITS IN MY REAL EMAIL ADDRESS (ANTI-SPAM)
------------------------------
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End of Linux-Setup Digest
******************************