Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Modelling software - free - preferably easy to install under Gentoo.
On Sat, Jun 16, 2007 at 05:22:47PM +, James wrote: > Matlab is the standard for mathematical analysis of all sorts of > phenomenon, from a mathematical perspective. I'm familiar with Matlab... you're the second person to mention Octave... > > I would like to do some analysis on these signals to see if there are > > any interesting things that can be demonstrated - for example, if I > > could show a strong correlation in the signals between two times, but > > none at other times, I might be able to conclude that there was > > communication of some description, but only for a fixed duration. > > Very unclear what you are saying. Are these signals related to events in > your network? More information will help. I agree - Not only was my post unclear, but I'm unclear about what I want too. :-) My data, in reality, consists national statistics - and my self-appointed challenge is to establish if, subject to appropriate analysis, they will expose undocumented trends or other anomalies. I don't know what trends or anomalies I want to find until I discover them... but I suspect that, once found, they'd be interesting. :-) > 'exi octave' reveals: Octave is a good suggestion - but probably not what I need. I've been pointed at "R" ( http://www.r-project.org/ ) which looks more hopeful, though I can't find it in portage. If there were an interactive GUI to apply standard statistical analyses to data as a front-end to R, then that would likely be just what I want. Failing that - just finding R in portage would be a step forwards. I'd be very interested to know if R has competition... -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
[gentoo-user] Modelling software - free - preferably easy to install under Gentoo.
I have some (say 100) discrete data sequences sampling a single analogue system with time-stamp data. I would like to do some analysis on these signals to see if there are any interesting things that can be demonstrated - for example, if I could show a strong correlation in the signals between two times, but none at other times, I might be able to conclude that there was communication of some description, but only for a fixed duration. At the moment I'm open minded about what kind of software I'd want to employ - and also about what I'd like to prove. Essentially, I'd like to analyse the data for features - then ask if they correspond with system events I'm already broadly aware about (rather than vice-versa.) Can anyone point me in the right direction, please? -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
[gentoo-user] Gentoo and Emacs in a terminal and "intellisense"-like functionality.
I've a few vaguely related questions. I'm an Emacs user from a decade ago - and have recently returned to using it... I'm trying to set it up as a useful modern development environment. I'd have chosen Eclipse, or something like that, if it wasn't for a constraint that I need it to work remotely (in a terminal) without resorting to X; VNC etc. There are two things I'd like to do, but on which I'm not getting very far very fast... I'd be interested to know if other Gentoo users have any hints or tips. I'd really like to have "Intellisense"-like behaviour - i.e. I've entered an object name when editing C++ - and I want to see a list of methods/attributes for that object... then, having chosen one, I want to see the arguments and types it requires. I'm aware of [CE]tags - though understand this facility to be somewhat more basic. I've read a little about Semantic, and I've installed app-emacs/semantic from portage... but can't see how to encourage it to do what I want. Any hints? The other thing I'd like to do is allow cursor positioning by clicking with a mouse. I realise that this isn't traditionally considered possible... but I'd like a facility in my terminal window a bit like gpm on the linux console. Is this viable today? -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
[gentoo-user] Weird high-level question about an ad-hoc wiki-like database
I am looking for a client-server package (preferably with the server on gentoo from portage) which provides something which is vaguely like CRM... but in reverse - and for personal as opposed to corporate use. One requirement is for it to act as an address book that will allow me to associate: Contact name, phone number, mobile number, email address etc. Company name, location, notes Communication time-stamp; notes; associated documents. I'd like to be able to search all that for keywords... and to be able to find out at a glance from, say, a phone number when I was last contacted and what happened. I'd also like to be able to tell quickly if I've talked to other contacts at the same company - and, if so, how recently - and about what. Of primary importance is the idea that I want to be able to resolve these kinds of things as quickly as possible (so it looks as if I'm not yet senile because I don't remember who someone is.) It would be great if it would integrate with my postfix email server and tag incoming mails if they are referenced by my inverse CRM system. :-) I think it would be invaluable when getting quotes for things, for example, when you ask a dozen companies - forget who is who... but then get quotes by phone... and you wish you knew what they had promised on the previous call. Does anyone use anything that might fit the bill? Any other suggestions? Does anyone use a good address book (preferably one which integrates with Thunderbird via LDAP)? I hope this isn't too off-topic. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Clamassassin - does anyone know what is wrong?
#emerge clamassassin Calculating dependencies... done! >>> Emerging (1 of 1) mail-filter/clamassassin-1.2.3 to / * clamassassin-1.2.3.tar.gz RMD160 ;-) ... [ ok ] * clamassassin-1.2.3.tar.gz SHA1 ;-) ... [ ok ] * clamassassin-1.2.3.tar.gz SHA256 ;-) ... [ ok ] * clamassassin-1.2.3.tar.gz size ;-) ... [ ok ] * checking ebuild checksums ;-) ... [ ok ] * checking auxfile checksums ;-) ... [ ok ] * checking miscfile checksums ;-) ...[ ok ] * checking clamassassin-1.2.3.tar.gz ;-) ... [ ok ] >>> Unpacking source... >>> Unpacking clamassassin-1.2.3.tar.gz to /var/tmp/portage/mail-filter/clamassassin-1.2.3/work >>> Source unpacked. >>> Compiling source in /var/tmp/portage/mail-filter/clamassassin-1.2.3/work/clamassassin-1.2.3 ... ./configure --prefix=/usr --host=i686-pc-linux-gnu --mandir=/usr/share/man --infodir=/usr/share/info --datadir=/usr/share --sysconfdir=/etc --localstatedir=/var/lib --disable-subject-rewrite --disable-clamdscan --build=i686-pc-linux-gnu checking for rm... /bin/rm checking for cat... /bin/cat checking for sed... /bin/sed checking for echo... /bin/echo checking for formail... /usr/bin/formail checking for mktemp... /bin/mktemp checking for sigtool... /usr/bin/sigtool checking for clamscan... /usr/bin/clamscan checking for clamdscan... /usr/bin/clamdscan checking for /tmp/clamd... no configure: ClamAV version 0.90 detected. configure: Using scanner /usr/bin/clamscan configure: Using scanner options --no-summary --stdout --mbox configure: Using virus signature file dir /var/lib/clamav configure: Signature version reporting is off. configure: Scanner name adding is on. configure: Using temporary directory /var/tmp/portage/mail-filter/clamassassin-1.2.3/temp configure: Subject header rewriting is off. configure: creating ./config.status config.status: creating clamassassin config.status: creating Makefile >>> Source compiled. --- ACCESS VIOLATION SUMMARY --- LOG FILE = "/var/log/sandbox/sandbox-mail-filter_-_clamassassin-1.2.3-11762.log" open_wr: /var/lib/clamav/.dbLock open_wr: /var/lib/clamav/.dbLock -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Spamassassin 3.1.8: sa-update
Thomas Rösner wrote: Dan Farrell schrieb: I'm surprised to find that sa-update now doesn't work for me. [snip] Is there some "obvious" bit of configuration I'm overlooking? perl-cleaner? I'd not thought of that but... "perl-cleaner all" has not made any difference... I still get: -- Can't locate object method "finish" via package "Mail::SpamAssassin::Timeout" at /usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8.8/Mail/SpamAssassin/PluginHandler.pm line 187. -- -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Spamassassin 3.1.8: sa-update
I've used portage to upgrade from Spamassassin 3.1.4 to 3.1.8, and I'm surprised to find that sa-update now doesn't work for me. # whoami root # sa-update Can't locate object method "finish" via package "Mail::SpamAssassin::Timeout" at /usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8.8/Mail/SpamAssassin/PluginHandler.pm line 187. # equery list spamassassin [ Searching for package 'spamassassin' in all categories among: ] * installed packages [I--] [ ] mail-filter/spamassassin-3.1.8 (0) [I--] [ ~] mail-filter/spamassassin-fuzzyocr-2.3b (0) [I--] [ ] mail-filter/spamassassin-ruledujour-20051123 (0) $ Is there some "obvious" bit of configuration I'm overlooking? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] AFS...
When following: http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/openafs.xml I get as far as # fs setacl -dir /vicepa -acl rl fs:'/vicepa': Function not implemented Why is that? I've googled and can find someone who says that the instructions did not work for him - for the same reason - but there is no hint as to how to resolve the issue. Any ideas? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] [Off Topic] screen configuration...
I'm frustrated... I want to use screen, but my emacs-afflicted fingers automatically type "control-a" to go to the beginning of the line in my shell - which is somewhat unfortunate for screen. I assume from the manual that I can re-bind keys to avoid this problem... my first guess was to bung "bind '^a'" into my .screenrc - but that doesn't do the trick. Does anyone here have the correct incantation? Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] spamassassin-ruledujour failing...
Norberto Bensa wrote: Steve [Gentoo] wrote: Does everyone who has ruledujour execute daily get these faults reported? Nope. But I've disabled AntiDrug in /etc/rulesdujour/config because for a few days, I was getting a warning about antidrug's maintainer losing it's domain/host/isp or something like that. And BTW: I've followed your lead... much more pleasant. :-) Lint output: [22610] warn: config: unparseable chars in 'if you are running SA 3.0.0 or higher, you already have antidrug and this file': '3.0.0' ^ ;-) Yes... but... I'd have hoped that the default configuration would not generate errors like this. If the error is caused by my specific configuration... then I'd understand that it is all my fault... (as they say) - but it seems a bad idea to have a broken rule-set included in the defaults... (which, to me, it appears to be.) Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] spamassassin-ruledujour failing...
I'm getting these three emails every day from ruledujour... I'm using the latest stable ebuild of each i.e.: mail-filter/spamassassin-3.1.8 mail-filter/spamassassin-ruledujour-20051123 Does everyone who has ruledujour execute daily get these faults reported? -- Subject: RulesDuJour/gifu: Matt Kettler's AntiDrug RuleSet has been updated Matt Kettler's AntiDrug has changed on gifu. Version line: # rev 0.65 10/01/2006 - updated URL, etc -- Subject: RulesDuJour/gifu: Catch German language spam. Maintained by Michael Monnerie RuleSet has been updated Catch German language spam. Maintained by Michael Monnerie has changed on gifu. Version line: # Version: 01.21.08 # Anti Raucher Gesetze SPA -- -- -- Subject: RulesDuJour/gifu: lint failed. Updates rolled back. ***WARNING***: spamassassin --lint failed. Rolling configuration files back, not restarting SpamAssassin. Rollback command is: mv -f /etc/spamassassin/antidrug.cf /etc/spamassassin/RulesDuJour/antidrug.cf.2; mv -f /etc/spamassassin/RulesDuJour/antidrug.cf.20070221-0313 /etc/spamassassin/antidrug.cf; mv -f /etc/spamassassin/70_zmi_german.cf /etc/spamassassin/RulesDuJour/70_zmi_german.cf.2; mv -f /etc/spamassassin/RulesDuJour/70_zmi_german.cf.20070221-0313 /etc/spamassassin/70_zmi_german.cf; Lint output: [22610] warn: config: unparseable chars in 'if you are running SA 3.0.0 or higher, you already have antidrug and this file': '3.0.0' [22610] warn: lint: 1 issues detected, please rerun with debug enabled for more information -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] [Fwd: RulesDuJour/gifu: 404 errors]
Does anyone else have this problem with RulesDuJour? -- To: root Subject: RulesDuJour/gifu: 404 errors Date: Thu, 18 Jan 2007 17:32:40 + (GMT) From: root (root) The following rules had errors: TripWire had an unknown error: --15:18:15-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Resolving www.rulesemporium.com... 209.177.149.122 Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --15:21:28-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf (try: 2) => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --15:24:39-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf (try: 3) => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --15:27:51-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf (try: 4) => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --15:31:04-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf (try: 5) => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --15:34:18-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf (try: 6) => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --15:37:33-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf (try: 7) => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --15:40:49-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf (try: 8) => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --15:44:06-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf (try: 9) => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --15:47:24-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf (try:10) => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --15:50:43-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf (try:11) => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --15:54:02-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf (try:12) => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --15:57:21-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf (try:13) => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --16:00:40-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf (try:14) => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --16:03:59-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf (try:15) => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --16:07:18-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf (try:16) => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --16:10:37-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf (try:17) => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --16:13:56-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf (try:18) => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --16:17:15-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf (try:19) => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --16:20:34-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf (try:20) => `99_FVGT_Tripwire.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Giving up. EvilNumber had an unknown error: --16:23:44-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/70_sare_evilnum0.cf => `70_sare_evilnum0.cf' Resolving www.rulesemporium.com... 209.177.149.122 Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --16:26:56-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/70_sare_evilnum0.cf (try: 2) => `70_sare_evilnum0.cf' Connecting to www.rulesemporium.com|209.177.149.122|:80... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. --16:30:08-- http://www.rulesemporium.com/rules/70_sare_evilnum0.cf (try: 3) => `70_sare_evilnum0.c
[gentoo-user] OT "DirectPush" email and Windows Mobile 5...
I apologise in advance for this question being tenuously related to Gentoo... My justification is only that I really like my Gentoo-based Postfix /dovecot mail-server... but I also want to push emails to a connected Windows Mobile 5 PDA/phone. Historically mobile devices have polled for email - which kind-of worked... but was far from ideal as it introduced unnecessary delays if the poll-interval was too long - and killed battery life if the poll interval is too short (as well as running up bandwidth bills). Windows Mobile 5 touts a new "Direct Push" technology - which, as far as I can tell, is an Internet-based protocol which alerts the mobile device to establish a tcp connection and then listen on it waiting for a new message. I understand that push-email in the past was synchronised using SMS messages to force a poll - but that (expensive) option is now considered deprecated. The problem I have with "Direct Push" is that documentation is extremely scarce; frequently contradictory - and, it seems, always Microsoft centric and assuming closed-shop IT. The sales pitch from phone/network providers seems usually to be "We envision all of our potential customers already have Microsoft Exchange, and can apply the 'Direct Push' option pack." - which is bizarre and infuriating... Is there a way to do "Direct Push" with Gentoo? While I'm aware of the standard techniques to interact from traditional email client hosts, email access from PDAs introduces the additional complexity of managing battery life on the mobile device. I'd like to use the supplied Windows Mobile 5 software on the mobile device is there an open source alternative to avoid me having to switch to Exchange for my mailserver? Do other Gentooists use push-email to a mobile device? Is the best option to plumb for more proprietary client-side software such as "ChatterMail" [ http://www.chatteremail.com/ ] ? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Spamassassin / fcron / RulesDuJour
Last night my default gentoo RulesDuJour for Spamassassin acquired new Adult and General rule-sets from SARE. Thereafter spamd refused all connections and subsequently received mail was not spam filtered. Issuing '/etc/init.d/spamd restart' as root resolved the situation... but I don't want to have to do this every time a rule-set is automatically updated overnight. This is a (sanitised) extract from /var/log/messages : -- Nov 15 03:20:00 svr fcron[5328]: process already running: root's /usr/bin/test -x /usr/sbin/run-crons && /usr/sbin/run-crons Nov 15 03:20:14 svr postfix/pickup[11065]: ...: uid=0 from= Nov 15 03:20:14 svr postfix/cleanup[11232]: ...: message-id=... Nov 15 03:20:15 svr spamd[7808]: spamd: connection from localhost [127.0.0.1] at port 1125 Nov 15 03:20:15 svr spamd[7808]: spamd: setuid to foouser succeeded Nov 15 03:20:15 svr spamd[7808]: spamd: processing message .. for foouser:1000 Nov 15 03:20:18 svr spamd[7808]: spamd: clean message (-2.9/5.0) for foouser:1000 in 3.1 seconds, 647 bytes. Nov 15 03:20:18 svr spamd[7808]: spamd: result: . -2 - AWL,BAYES_00 scantime=3.1,size=647,user=foouser,... Nov 15 03:20:18 svr postfix/local[11237]: ... Nov 15 03:20:18 svr postfix/qmgr[5607]: ...: removed Nov 15 03:20:19 svr spamd[5462]: prefork: child states: II Nov 15 03:20:26 svr postfix/pickup[11065]: ...: uid=0 from= Nov 15 03:20:26 svr postfix/cleanup[11232]: ... Nov 15 03:20:27 svr spamd[7808]: spamd: setuid to foouser succeeded Nov 15 03:20:27 svr spamd[7808]: spamd: processing message ... for foouser:1000 Nov 15 03:20:29 svr spamd[7808]: spamd: clean message (-2.2/5.0) for foouser:1000 in 2.7 seconds, 612 bytes. Nov 15 03:20:29 svr spamd[7808]: spamd: result: . -2 - AWL,BAYES_05 scantime=2.7,size=612,user=foouser,uid=1000,... Nov 15 03:20:29 svr postfix/local[11237]: EEA5F3B945: to=<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, orig_to=, relay=local, delay=3, status=sent (delivered to command: /usr/bin/proc Nov 15 03:20:29 svr postfix/qmgr[5607]: EEA5F3B945: removed Nov 15 03:20:30 svr spamd[5462]: prefork: child states: II Nov 15 03:21:05 svr spamd[5462]: spamd: server killed by SIGTERM, shutting down Nov 15 03:21:11 svr rc-scripts: Failed to stop spamd Nov 15 03:30:00 svr fcron[5328]: process already running: root's /usr/bin/test -x /usr/sbin/run-crons && /usr/sbin/run-crons Nov 15 03:40:00 svr fcron[11746]: Job /usr/bin/test -x /usr/sbin/run-crons && /usr/sbin/run-crons started for user root (pid 11747) Nov 15 03:50:00 svr fcron[11759]: Job /usr/bin/test -x /usr/sbin/run-crons && /usr/sbin/run-crons started for user root (pid 11760) Nov 15 03:50:24 svr postfix/smtpd[11772]: connect from localhost[127.0.0.1] Nov 15 03:50:24 svr postfix/smtpd[11772]: ...: client=localhost[127.0.0.1] Nov 15 03:50:24 svr postfix/cleanup[11775]: ...: message-id=... Nov 15 03:50:24 svr postfix/qmgr[5607]: 73FAA3B4FB: from=... Nov 15 03:50:24 svr postfix/smtpd[11772]: disconnect from localhost[127.0.0.1] Nov 15 03:50:24 svr spamc[11779]: connect(AF_INET) to spamd at 127.0.0.1 failed, retrying (#1 of 3): Connection refused Nov 15 03:50:25 svr spamc[11779]: connect(AF_INET) to spamd at 127.0.0.1 failed, retrying (#2 of 3): Connection refused -- Does anyone else have this problem? Can it be attributed to Fcron or RulesDuJour or something peculiar to my setup? I don't understand the "process already running" messages from fcron - my cron jobs all seem to be executed normally. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] "User services" best practice?
While system-level services are typically managed by /etc/init.d/* in Gentoo, these are maintained by root for all users. I'm interested in an end-user without root access who wants to 'run a service-like process' (for example, fectmail to poll remote accounts...) While an end user can easily run a daemon process or kill one, this doesn't persist across a reboot. I've tried using fcron to schedule user processes to re-start after a re-boot... but this feels like a hack. Is there a standard Gentoo way to solve this (I presume common) task? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] sys-apps/kbd-1.12-r8
Bo Ørsted Andresen wrote: > If you look at the configure script you will see that it's is testing if you > are on a sparc64. The test shows you aren't which appears to be unrelated to > your problem. Line 153 which appears to be failing is this: > > echo "ARCH=${TARGET_ARCH/i?86/i386}" >> make_include > > which is supposed to substitute i686 with i386 in your case and store it in > make_include as "ARCH=i386". I have no clue why that would fail. The only > thing that I can think of is to remerge your shell (probably > app-shells/bash). If noone else has a clue and that doesn't help I guess your > best option is to file a bug with the info you've posted now... Thanks for your help, and while it might not have been obvious to you (or anyone else reading along)... everything that was confusing before is clear now... to me at least. While I can see what is wrong, it isn't 100% clear if it constitutes a bug or not. The problem is that the configure script starts '#!/bin/sh' - but goes on to depend upon Bash specific features... specifically substitution. I expect this would not be a problem for most users where /bin/sh is a sym-link to /bin/bash but, for me, /bin/sh was a sym-link to /bin/ash... and, for that shell, line 151 is invalid. What is less clear is whether or not, in a Gentoo context, it is 'correct' to have /bin/sh being Borne-like but not Bash-like. By preference I'd prefer /bin/sh to be the minimal shell that will execute Borne-shell scripts... but I recognise the Linux-world normality of /bin/sh actually being bash. As at-least a temporary fix I replaced my /bin/sh->/bin/ash with a /bin/sh->/bin/bash... and everything now emerges smoothly... From a prissy perspective I'd have hoped that the configure script would specify that it needed bash functionality by demanding evaluation by bash instead of whatever /bin/sh happens to be... Thanks again, Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] sys-apps/kbd-1.12-r8
Bo Ørsted Andresen wrote: > # cd /var/tmp/portage/sys-apps/kbd-1.12-r8/work > # sed -i -e '141 aset -x\n' -e '152 aset +x\n' kbd-1.12/configure > # ebuild `portageq portdir`/sys-apps/kbd/kbd-1.12-r8.ebuild compile > I've followed your suggestion - I was surprised to see sparc64 mentioned - my gentoo box really is an aged PII (Celeron). >>> Compiling source in /var/tmp/portage/kbd-1.12-r8/work/kbd-1.12 ... Configuring for PREFIX=/usr Configuring for DATADIR=/usr/share Configuring for MANDIR=/usr/share/man checking for gcc + uname -m + HOST_ARCH=i686 + gcc -O -dumpmachine + awk -F- {print $1} + TARGET_ARCH=i686 + test i686 = sparc64 ./configure: 153: Syntax error: Bad substitution !!! ERROR: sys-apps/kbd-1.12-r8 failed. Call stack: ebuild.sh, line 1546: Called dyn_compile ebuild.sh, line 937: Called src_compile kbd-1.12-r8.ebuild, line 93: Called die !!! (no error message) !!! If you need support, post the topmost build error, and the call stack if relevant. > Also might be a good idea to post the output of: > > # emerge --info > # emerge --info Portage 2.1.1-r1 (default-linux/x86/2006.1, gcc-4.1.1, glibc-2.4-r3, 2.6.17-gentoo-r8 i686) = System uname: 2.6.17-gentoo-r8 i686 Celeron (Mendocino) Gentoo Base System version 1.12.6 Last Sync: Mon, 06 Nov 2006 10:30:01 + app-admin/eselect-compiler: [Not Present] dev-java/java-config: [Not Present] dev-lang/python: 2.3.5-r3, 2.4.3-r4 dev-python/pycrypto: 2.0.1-r5 dev-util/ccache: [Not Present] dev-util/confcache: [Not Present] sys-apps/sandbox:1.2.17 sys-devel/autoconf: 2.13, 2.60 sys-devel/automake: 1.4_p6, 1.5, 1.6.3, 1.7.9-r1, 1.8.5-r3, 1.9.6-r2 sys-devel/binutils: 2.16.1-r3 sys-devel/gcc-config: 1.3.13-r4 sys-devel/libtool: 1.5.22 virtual/os-headers: 2.6.17-r1 ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="x86" AUTOCLEAN="yes" CBUILD="i686-pc-linux-gnu" CFLAGS="-O2 -march=pentium2 -pipe" CHOST="i686-pc-linux-gnu" CONFIG_PROTECT="/etc /var/bind" CONFIG_PROTECT_MASK="/etc/env.d /etc/gconf /etc/revdep-rebuild /etc/terminfo" CXXFLAGS="-O2 -march=pentium2 -pipe" DISTDIR="/usr/portage/distfiles" FEATURES="autoconfig distlocks metadata-transfer sandbox sfperms strict" GENTOO_MIRRORS="http://gentoo.blueyonder.co.uk http://www.mirrorservice.org/sites/www.ibiblio.org/gentoo/"; PKGDIR="/usr/portage/packages" PORTAGE_RSYNC_OPTS="--recursive --links --safe-links --perms --times --compress --force --whole-file --delete --delete-after --stats --timeout=180 --exclude='/distfiles' --exclude='/local' --exclude='/packages'" PORTAGE_TMPDIR="/var/tmp" PORTDIR="/usr/portage" PORTDIR_OVERLAY="/usr/local/portage" SYNC="rsync://rsync.gentoo.org/gentoo-portage" USE="x86 berkdb bitmap-fonts cli cracklib crypt cups dlloader dri elibc_glibc fortran gdbm gpm iconv input_devices_evdev input_devices_keyboard input_devices_mouse ipv6 isdnlog kernel_linux libg++ ncurses nls nptl nptlonly pam pcre perl ppds pppd python readline reflection session spl ssl tcpd truetype-fonts type1-fonts udev unicode userland_GNU video_cards_apm video_cards_ark video_cards_ati video_cards_chips video_cards_cirrus video_cards_cyrix video_cards_dummy video_cards_fbdev video_cards_glint video_cards_i128 video_cards_i740 video_cards_i810 video_cards_imstt video_cards_mga video_cards_neomagic video_cards_nsc video_cards_nv video_cards_rendition video_cards_s3 video_cards_s3virge video_cards_savage video_cards_siliconmotion video_cards_sis video_cards_sisusb video_cards_tdfx video_cards_tga video_cards_trident video_cards_tseng video_cards_v4l video_cards_vesa video_cards_vga video_cards_via video_cards_vmware video_cards_voodoo xorg zlib" Unset: CTARGET, EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS, INSTALL_MASK, LANG, LC_ALL, LDFLAGS, LINGUAS, MAKEOPTS, PORTAGE_RSYNC_EXTRA_OPTS -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] sys-apps/kbd-1.12-r8
Does anyone else have problems like this? > # emerge -uDNav world > > These are the packages that would be merged, in order: > > Calculating world dependencies... done! > [ebuild U ] sys-apps/kbd-1.12-r8 [1.12-r7] USE="nls" 0 kB > > Total size of downloads: 0 kB > > Would you like to merge these packages? [Yes/No] yes > > >>> Emerging (1 of 1) sys-apps/kbd-1.12-r8 to / > * kbd-1.12.tar.gz MD5 ;-) > ...[ ok ] > * kbd-1.12.tar.gz RMD160 ;-) > ... [ ok ] > * kbd-1.12.tar.gz SHA1 ;-) > ... [ ok ] > * kbd-1.12.tar.gz SHA256 ;-) > ... [ ok ] > * kbd-1.12.tar.gz size ;-) > ... [ ok ] > * svorakln.tar.gz MD5 ;-) > ...[ ok ] > * svorakln.tar.gz RMD160 ;-) > ... [ ok ] > * svorakln.tar.gz SHA1 ;-) > ... [ ok ] > * svorakln.tar.gz SHA256 ;-) > ... [ ok ] > * svorakln.tar.gz size ;-) > ... [ ok ] > * checking ebuild checksums ;-) > ... [ ok ] > * checking auxfile checksums ;-) > ... [ ok ] > * checking miscfile checksums ;-) > ...[ ok ] > * checking kbd-1.12.tar.gz ;-) > ... [ ok ] > * checking svorakln.tar.gz ;-) > ... [ ok ] > >>> Unpacking source... > >>> Unpacking kbd-1.12.tar.gz to /var/tmp/portage/kbd-1.12-r8/work > >>> Unpacking svorakln.tar.gz to /var/tmp/portage/kbd-1.12-r8/work > * Applying kbd-1.08-terminal.patch > ... [ ok ] > * Applying kbd-1.12-configure-LANG.patch > ... [ ok ] > * Applying kbd-1.12-find-map-fix.patch > ... [ ok ] > * Applying kbd-1.12-kbd_repeat-v2.patch > ... [ ok ] > * Applying kbd-1.12-debian.patch > ... [ ok ] > * Applying kbd-1.12-unimap.patch > ... [ ok ] > * Applying kbd-1.12-cz-qwerty-map.patch > ... [ ok ] > * Applying kbd-1.12-jp-escape.patch > ... [ ok ] > * Applying kbd-1.12-Meta_utf8.patch > ... [ ok ] > * Applying kbd-1.12-alias.patch > ... [ ok ] > * Applying kbd-1.12-setfont-man.patch > ...[ ok ] > * Applying kbd-1.12-xcompile.patch > ... [ ok ] > * Applying kbd-1.12-kbio.patch > ... [ ok ] > >>> Source unpacked. > >>> Compiling source in /var/tmp/portage/kbd-1.12-r8/work/kbd-1.12 ... > Configuring for PREFIX=/usr > Configuring for DATADIR=/usr/share > Configuring for MANDIR=/usr/share/man > checking for gcc > ./configure: 151: Syntax error: Bad substitution > > !!! ERROR: sys-apps/kbd-1.12-r8 failed. > Call stack: > ebuild.sh, line 1546: Called dyn_compile > ebuild.sh, line 937: Called src_compile > kbd-1.12-r8.ebuild, line 93: Called die > > !!! (no error message) > !!! If you need support, post the topmost build error, and the call > stack if relevant. > -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] [OT] Secure remote backup
Dan Johansson wrote: > cross-site-remote-backups Erm, "Me too..." My first attempt centred on Duplicity - which, on the surface, seemed to be exactly what I wanted... but, unfortunately, it is unusably buggy... and is no longer in avtive development. My second (in-progress) attempt is with BoxBackup - which seems far more robust... and promises the benefits of a 'continuous' backup - which I now consider significant. The BoxBackup distribution instills a greater sense of confidence - but documentation remains thin... and I'm wrestling with configuring the backup daemon on a remote server (for which I do not have root access...) I'd be interested to hear other annecdotes about BoxBackup - is anyone here using it and happy with their setup? Is there a good HowTo anywhere? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] IMAP servers
Régis Décamps wrote: > On 10/17/06, Steve [Gentoo] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> I'm no longer so sure about when imap processes are spawned or >> terminated - but there seem to >> be a non-deterministic "lots" of them for each Thunderbird session. > There is one process create each time Thunderbird opens a new > connection, up to a limit which should be configured in your imap > server (MAXPERIP for courier-imap) I couldn't find a setting for this in dovecot... > Thunderbird opens a connection each time a new folder is accessed, and > closes them when it has reach a limit which is configured in "Account > Setting", , "Server settings", "Advanced", "maximum unmber of > connections to cache" ...but, given that gem, it doesn't matter to me any longer. I've reduced the setting in Thunderbird to something sensibly small and things are running far more smoothly now. Thanks! -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] IMAP servers
Roman Zilka wrote: > On Mon, Oct 16, 2006 at 11:26:23AM +0100, Joost Roeleveld wrote: > >>> it appears that there is one connection per folder >>> and one process per connection... which seems (to me at least) to be >>> overkill. >>> >> Having never used dovecot, I can't comment on this. But maybe this can be >> changed in a configuration file somewhere? >> > Confirm. There are a few settings regarding exactly this > issue. Check out all the "login_process*" and "login_max*" options at least. > This sounded very promising... and I've now spent some time tweaking those parameters (I'm not sure why I'd previously overlooked them.) The parameter login_processes_count seems to control the number of /usr/libexec/dovecot/imap-login processes that are run (when idle) awaiting connections. The parameter login_max_processes_count appears to relate to the same imap_login process. It was not the imap_login processes which concern me from a scalability perspective - but rather the imap (/usr/libexec/dovecot/imap) processes. I'm no longer so sure about when imap processes are spawned or terminated - but there seem to be a non-deterministic "lots" of them for each Thunderbird session. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] IMAP servers
This is not so much a problem as an 'I wonder'... I currently use dovecot imap with maildir to support several dozen folders containing several gigabytes of mail using Thunderbird as a mail client. This "works" - but I am surprised by the number of imap processes that the mail server is running to support a single Thunderbird client... it appears that there is one connection per folder and one process per connection... which seems (to me at least) to be overkill. I'm aware that there are lots of IMAP clients I might have chosen - Courier; UWImap, Cyrus and dovecot... but I'm finding it difficult to establish details which would help me choose the most appropriate server for my purposes. In order of importance, I'm interested in: 1. Stability and reliability. 2. Scalability to handle a very large number of 'folders' for a relatively small number of end-users. 3. Performance (primarily with respect to 'new mail' notifications, but also, to a lesser extent, with searching archived messages. I'd be interested to hear any anecdotes from Gentooists who have addressed a similar question recently... Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: procmail, formail and maildir for digests...
Moshe Kamensky wrote: > The -s option of formail allows you to specify an argument, which is a > program name. This program will be run for each message, with the > message on the stdin. So if you have such a program that delivers to a > maildir, you can use it. procmail itself is one such program, so you > should be able to do something like > > | formail +1 -ds procmail .procmailrc.gentoo > > and then have .procmailrc.gentoo say something like > > :0 > gentoo-user/ > That works perfectly... Thanks! I'd overlooked that -s had an optional argument with formail - and while I'd realised I probably wanted procmail to deliver messages, I hadn't realised that I could have separate configurations as easily as that. I'm surprised this example is neither one of the convenient examples in the man procmailex man page... nor widely cited in the online howtos I've seen. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] procmail, formail and maildir for digests...
Rasmus: I've had a look at mb2md, and this seems close to what I'd need - though I'm dubious about two aspects: 1.It doesn't seem to have a filter mode (i.e. It always takes file as input as opposed to stdin, which would allow it to slot more neatly into a procmail based solution. 2.The documentation suggests that it is intended to transform whole mbox files into maildir directories - whereas I'd need it to take an mbox file and append it to a maildir directory which would likely already contain messages from the previous digest. Am I missing something obvious (to someone else)? Reader at Newsguy: While I don't really understand why your suggestion should work...I tried it anyway. It didn't work... and delivered the digest to my inbox and to my gentoo folder, but didn't in split the digest. -- >From [EMAIL PROTECTED] Wed Oct 11 14:40:21 2006 Subject: Digest of gentoo-user@gentoo.org issue 950 (52678-52727) Folder: .Mailing.Gentoo.ThisMonth/new/1160574057.17594_0.server 161160 procmail: Extraneous filter-flag ignored procmail: Skipped "* ^List-Id:.*" procmail: Skipped "| formail +1 -ds " -- It seems strange that this should be tricky to set-up - procmail obviously intends to address digest splitting and to support both mbox and maildir delivery... Surely there's a simple solution? Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: Re: [gentoo-user] procmail, formail and maildir for digests...
Kevin Fullerton wrote: > Here's the procmail recipe I use with maildir folders and the Gentoo lists - > I think as long as procmail is setup with maildir support you just need to > set your MAILDIR var and use a trailing slash and it knows it'd delivering to > a MailDir. > A, I guess I hadn't been as clear as I could have been. I have an almost identical setup to yours right now and that allows me to use procmail to deliver to maildir... The problem I have is that I want to use formail to split my digests into individual messages (because large digests play havoc with IMAP, and to make replies easier) - but I can only find documentation showing how to use formail to split digests into mbox format. Unsurprisingly the silly attempt below doesn't work (as "| formail..." is interpreted by /bin/sh.) : -- :0 * ^List-Id:.* | formail +1 -ds >> gentoo_user/ -- Is formail the right tool for me to use here? Is there a tool to deliver an mbox of messages to a maildir that I can use in place of '>> gentoo_user/' above? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] procmail, formail and maildir for digests...
I'm familiar with this procmail recipe: -- :0 * ^List-Id:.* | formail +1 -ds >> gentoo_user -- However... I need to use maildir is there a straightforward way to deliver directly to maildir folders with formail from procmail? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Can anyone tell me where I've loused-up this apache config?
This time a bamboozling Apache/vhost/https problem. I have a working vhost configuration for several domains in apache2 (latest stable from portage - 2.0.58) and I want to support not only http services, but, for one domain name at least, I want to support an https service. The working configuration for http has a 00_default_vhost.conf file:- -- NameVirtualHost *:80 DocumentRoot /var/www/vlan.mydomain.net ServerName vlan.mydomain.net ServerName temporary.mydomain.net DocumentRoot /var/www/temporary.mydomain.net -- I updated this (following a how-to as closely as I could...) to this: -- NameVirtualHost *:80 NameVirtualHost *:443 DocumentRoot /var/www/vlan.mydomain.net ServerName vlan.mydomain.net ServerName temporary.mydomain.net DocumentRoot /var/www/temporary.mydomain.net DocumentRoot /var/www/ssl.mydomain.net ServerName ssl.mydomain.net SSLCipherSuite HIGH:MEDIUM SSLProtocol all -SSLv2 SSLCertificateFile /etc/apache2/ssl.crt/ssl.mydomain.net.crt SSLCertificateKeyFile /etc/apache2/ssl.crt/ssl.mydomain.key SSLCertificateChainFile /etc/apache2/ssl.crt/mydomain.crt SSLCACertificateFile /etc/apache2/ssl.crt/mydomain.crt -- I believe that I've put valid crt and key files in /etc/apache2/ssl.crt/ - and I'd have expected an error message at least if this is, in fact, the fault. When I parse this configuration with apache2 and the flags from /etc/conf.d/apache2 (i.e. SSL ) this is how it goes : -- # apache2 -D SSL --lint # apache2 -D SSL -S VirtualHost configuration: wildcard NameVirtualHosts and _default_ servers: *:443 is a NameVirtualHost default server ssl.mydomain.net (/etc/apache2/vhosts.d/00_default_vhost.conf:12) port 443 namevhost ssl.mydomain.net (/etc/apache2/vhosts.d/00_default_vhost.conf:12) *:80 is a NameVirtualHost default server vlan.mydomain.net (/etc/apache2/vhosts.d/00_default_vhost.conf:24) port 80 namevhost vlan.mydomain.net (/etc/apache2/vhosts.d/00_default_vhost.conf:24) port 80 namevhost temporary.mydomain.net (/etc/apache2/vhosts.d/00_default_vhost.conf:37) Syntax OK -- Unfortunately, when I attempt to connect to the SSL service on http://ssl.mydomain.net/ using Firefox I get an immediate error : "The connection was interrupted The connection to ssl.shic.dynalias.net was interrupted while the page was loading." Links (the text browser) gives the somewhat less helpful error message : "Error loading https://ssl.mydomain.net/: SSL error" Nothing seems to be written to /var/log/apache2/error_log or access_log. I've read reports that I must be explicit about which IP address I want to vhost on - which is undesirable as I want to serve both over Ethernet and Wireless (i.e. I have two network adaptors) - but seems to make no difference if I experimentally substitute my ethernet IP address for * in the vhost configuration. What's wrong? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Wacky ssh X11 question...
I've three independent hosts - imaginatively called A, B and C. Firewall rules dictate that A can be directly accessed from B, but not from C... A and B run the openssh sshd, and C is a terminal with a working X-Windows display. C has a ssh session opened with B which tunnels port 22 on C to 22 on A. Thereafter, it is possible to ssh to localhost on C and get a ssh connection to A, which in turn I successfully use to tunnel IMAP, SMTP, Squid - etc. I'd have expected to be able to tunnel X11 over this link from C to A - but it fails... I'm unclear if the reason for the failure is the additional tunnelling... Is this technique incompatible with X11 tunnelling? Is there a way to make it work with a reverse-tunnel or something like that? Am I barking up the wrong tree entirely? -- HostC# echo $DISPLAY :0.0 HostC# cat .ssh/config ForwardX11 yes HostC# ssh localhost -X HostA# echo $DISPLAY HostA# exit HostC# ssh localhost -Y HostA# echo $DISPLAY HostA# exit HostC# -- If I use -v -v I get this output... Curiously I have /usr/X11R6/bin/xauth on HostC, but xauth in in /usr/bin on host A. -- HostC# ssh localhost -Y OpenSSH_4.3p2, OpenSSL 0.9.8b 04 May 2006 debug1: Reading configuration data /home/user/.ssh/config debug2: ssh_connect: needpriv 0 debug1: Connecting to localhost [127.0.0.1] port 22. debug1: Connection established. debug1: identity file /home/user/.ssh/identity type -1 debug1: identity file /home/user/.ssh/id_rsa type -1 debug2: key_type_from_name: unknown key type '-BEGIN' debug2: key_type_from_name: unknown key type '-END' debug1: identity file /home/user/.ssh/id_dsa type 2 debug1: Remote protocol version 2.0, remote software version OpenSSH_4.3 debug1: match: OpenSSH_4.3 pat OpenSSH* debug1: Enabling compatibility mode for protocol 2.0 debug1: Local version string SSH-2.0-OpenSSH_4.3 debug2: fd 4 setting O_NONBLOCK debug1: SSH2_MSG_KEXINIT sent debug1: SSH2_MSG_KEXINIT received debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha1,diffie-hellman-group14-sha1,diffie-hellman-group1-sha1 debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: ssh-rsa,ssh-dss debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: aes128-cbc,3des-cbc,blowfish-cbc,cast128-cbc,arcfour128,arcfour256,arcfour,aes192-cbc,aes256-cbc,[EMAIL PROTECTED],aes128-ctr,aes192-ctr,aes256-ctr debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: aes128-cbc,3des-cbc,blowfish-cbc,cast128-cbc,arcfour128,arcfour256,arcfour,aes192-cbc,aes256-cbc,[EMAIL PROTECTED],aes128-ctr,aes192-ctr,aes256-ctr debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: hmac-md5,hmac-sha1,hmac-ripemd160,[EMAIL PROTECTED],hmac-sha1-96,hmac-md5-96 debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: aes128-cbc,3des-cbc,blowfish-cbc,cast128-cbc,arcfour128,arcfour256,arcfour,aes192-cbc,aes256-cbc,[EMAIL PROTECTED],aes128-ctr,aes192-ctr,aes256-ctr debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: aes128-cbc,3des-cbc,blowfish-cbc,cast128-cbc,arcfour128,arcfour256,arcfour,aes192-cbc,aes256-cbc,[EMAIL PROTECTED],aes128-ctr,aes192-ctr,aes256-ctr debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: hmac-md5,hmac-sha1,hmac-ripemd160,[EMAIL PROTECTED],hmac-sha1-96,hmac-md5-96 debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: hmac-md5,hmac-sha1,hmac-ripemd160,[EMAIL PROTECTED],hmac-sha1-96,hmac-md5-96 debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: none,[EMAIL PROTECTED],zlib debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: none,[EMAIL PROTECTED],zlib debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: first_kex_follows 0 debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: reserved 0 debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: diffie-hellman-group-exchange-sha1,diffie-hellman-group14-sha1,diffie-hellman-group1-sha1 debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: ssh-rsa,ssh-dss debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: aes128-cbc,3des-cbc,blowfish-cbc,cast128-cbc,arcfour128,arcfour256,arcfour,aes192-cbc,aes256-cbc,[EMAIL PROTECTED],aes128-ctr,aes192-ctr,aes256-ctr debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: aes128-cbc,3des-cbc,blowfish-cbc,cast128-cbc,arcfour128,arcfour256,arcfour,aes192-cbc,aes256-cbc,[EMAIL PROTECTED],aes128-ctr,aes192-ctr,aes256-ctr debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: hmac-md5,hmac-sha1,hmac-ripemd160,[EMAIL PROTECTED],hmac-sha1-96,hmac-md5-96 debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: hmac-md5,hmac-sha1,hmac-ripemd160,[EMAIL PROTECTED],hmac-sha1-96,hmac-md5-96 debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: none,[EMAIL PROTECTED] debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: none,[EMAIL PROTECTED] debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: first_kex_follows 0 debug2: kex_parse_kexinit: reserved 0 debug2: mac_init: found hmac-md5 debug1: kex: server->client aes128-cbc hmac-md5 none debug2: mac_init: found hmac-md5 debug1: kex: client->server aes128-cbc hmac-md5 none debug1: SSH2_MSG_KEX_DH_GEX_REQUEST(1024<1024<8192) sent debug1: expecting SSH2_MSG_KEX_DH_GEX_GROUP debug2: dh_gen_key: priv key bits set: 121/256 debug2: bits set: 483/1024 debug1: SSH2_MSG_KEX_DH_GEX_INIT sent debug1: expecting SSH2_MSG_KEX_DH_GEX_REPLY debug1: Host 'localhost' is known and matches the RSA host key. debug1: Found key in /home/user/.ssh/known_hosts:4 debug2: bits set: 540/1024 debug1: ssh_rsa_verify: signature correct debug2: kex_derive_keys debug2: set_newkeys: mode 1 debug1: SSH2_M
[gentoo-user] Backups... a very general question...
I've recently been thinking about backup strategy... following a painful re-install after dropping a clanger during a kernel upgrade. While this seems a very basic topic, I can find surprisingly little documentation about this on-line. I need to address several entirely different kinds of backup: 1. A backup of my root & boot partitions in a working state. This should be a backup to DVD-RW(s) - and would not contain any user-data... but would provide a recovery point to get a working server as quickly as possible in the event of a drive failure. It would be fantastic if, in addition to this. there were some means to track which packages had been merged/updated since the backup was made - and a copy to be made of any configuration changes... The list of updated packages (and the versions to which they've been updated) and any changes to configuration files would be tiny and hence easy to backup via another approach. It would be fantastic if the backup DVDs were bootable and doing so would restore the backup. 2. I've many gigabytes of MP3 files stored in Artist/[year]Album/*.* hierarchy... which I extend sporadically. I'd like a backup of this (as organising it took lots of time) but a different approach is necessary here... I'd like to pack as many whole albums onto DVDRs as would fit, which I'd then number, and given a list detailing which albums are on which DVDs, I could also play albums from a DVD player attached to a hi-fi. I'd like to be prompted to backup each time N-Mb of new data has been added to my MP3 directory - and that the most recent DVD-R should be authored with minimum user intervention. 3. My home directory; subversion repositories and DBMS catalogues are backed-up to a remote account. I currently do this with a cron-job which takes dumps; creates tar files; AES encrypts then uploads using SSH to the remote site... which manages a history of 3 backups using a simple shell-script. This works OK, but it is very ad-hoc... and it won't scale as every backup requires that I upload a new copy - even if I've only made a trivial change to my data. It would be far better if an incremental update were possible - though I'm not willing to give up encryption of data I send off-site. Are there any packages which would make any (or all) of these tasks more straightforward or more efficient? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] emerge tinyca fails...
After getting into a real pickle with a kernel upgrade (causing me to corrupt my /dev) I opted to re-install from the latest minimal install CD rather than try to unpick the mess. My gentoo box is used almost exclusively used remotely as a mail/web server - however I find tinyca a very useful tool which I use occasionally (remotely over SSH/X11) - tinyca is the only GUI application I need to install. In the past I've run emerge tinyca and all the dependencies were sorted out for me... However, with the latest portage, and only apache/zope/postfix/dovecot/openssh installed from it, when I emerge tinyca, gnome-base/gnome-libs-1.4.2 is identified as a dependency - and this does not compile (error messages below.) As far as I am aware, I've set no USE flags that should affect this package... Any ideas? -- gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I. -I. -I.. -I.. -I./.. -I/usr/include -I/usr/include/gtk-1.2 -I/usr/include/glib-1.2 -I/usr/lib/glib/include -DWITH_GTK -DDEBUG -DGNOME_LIB -I/usr/include/gtk-1.2 -I/usr/include/glib-1.2 -I/usr/lib/glib/include -O2 -march=pentium2 -pipe -I/usr/include/db1 -Wall -Wunused -c readXPM.c -fPIC -DPIC -o .libs/readXPM.lo readXPM.c:138:21: error: X11/xpm.h: No such file or directory readXPM.c:148: error: expected declaration specifiers or '...' before 'XpmImage' readXPM.c:164: error: expected declaration specifiers or '...' before 'XpmImage' readXPM.c: In function 'doXpm': readXPM.c:189: error: 'xpm_image' undeclared (first use in this function) readXPM.c:189: error: (Each undeclared identifier is reported only once readXPM.c:189: error: for each function it appears in.) readXPM.c:240: warning: implicit declaration of function 'my_x_query_colors' readXPM.c:282: warning: implicit declaration of function 'XpmFreeXpmImage' readXPM.c: In function '_XmHTMLReadXPM': readXPM.c:299: error: 'XpmImage' undeclared (first use in this function) readXPM.c:299: error: expected ';' before 'xpm_image' readXPM.c:300: error: 'XpmInfo' undeclared (first use in this function) readXPM.c:300: error: expected ';' before 'foo' readXPM.c:303: error: 'xpm_image' undeclared (first use in this function) readXPM.c:304: error: 'foo' undeclared (first use in this function) readXPM.c:306: warning: implicit declaration of function 'XpmCreateXpmImageFromBuffer' readXPM.c:307: error: 'XpmSuccess' undeclared (first use in this function) readXPM.c:311: warning: implicit declaration of function 'XpmGetErrorString' readXPM.c:314: warning: implicit declaration of function 'XpmFreeXpmInfo' readXPM.c:322: error: too many arguments to function 'doXpm' readXPM.c: In function '_XmHTMLCreateXpmFromData': readXPM.c:338: error: 'XpmImage' undeclared (first use in this function) readXPM.c:338: error: expected ';' before 'xpm_image' readXPM.c:339: error: 'XpmInfo' undeclared (first use in this function) readXPM.c:339: error: expected ';' before 'foo' readXPM.c:342: error: 'xpm_image' undeclared (first use in this function) readXPM.c:343: error: 'foo' undeclared (first use in this function) readXPM.c:345: warning: implicit declaration of function 'XpmCreateXpmImageFromData' readXPM.c:345: error: 'XpmSuccess' undeclared (first use in this function) readXPM.c:360: error: too many arguments to function 'doXpm' make[2]: *** [readXPM.lo] Error 1 make[2]: Leaving directory `/var/tmp/portage/gnome-libs-1.4.2/work/gnome-libs-1.4.2/gtk-xmhtml' make[1]: *** [all-recursive] Error 1 make[1]: Leaving directory `/var/tmp/portage/gnome-libs-1.4.2/work/gnome-libs-1.4.2' make: *** [all-recursive-am] Error 2 !!! ERROR: gnome-base/gnome-libs-1.4.2 failed. Call stack: ebuild.sh, line 1546: Called dyn_compile ebuild.sh, line 937: Called src_compile gnome-libs-1.4.2.ebuild, line 64: Called die !!! (no error message) !!! If you need support, post the topmost build error, and the call stack if relevant. -- -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Spamassassin
I have (the latest) spamassassin 3.1.0 (on Perl 5.8.7) installed on my not-extremely-powerful small-scale Gentoo server (P2-450 with 256Mb RAM and 500Mb swap - not running X) and I'm experiencing a recurring fault... I'm running spamd and using the spamassassin client to re-direct email to it from my systemwide procmail setup (using the recommended | /usr/bin/spamc -f approach with a size limiter to avoid over-burdening spamassassin with any massive emails.) Everything seems to work well for a fair while, then the spamd process gets "wedged" - and in spite of there being a near-0 load, and dozens and dozens of messages reported by mailq, none of my mail gets processed in a hurry - and after a long while (maybe every half-an-hour, say) an email is delivered from the head of my mail queue - which has not passed through spamd (according to the headers) - and has no spam-score attached. I read some suggestions a long while ago which said that "--round-robin" as an option was a work-around for a bug with the same consequences. My /etc/conf.d/spamd currently has the options: SPAMD_OPTS="-m 5 -c -H -l --round-robin" However, I still get this problem. I thought that it was related to the length of time the spamd process had been running - so I set a cron job to re-start the server at an unusual time early every morning... but this hasn't been an successful work around either. It now seems that to be triggered by an increased system load - today I ran # emerge apache squirrelmail then left... when I returned the emerge had long-since completed by my spamd remained "stuck." Is this a problem everyone is having? I had no problem like this with the elder (3.0.4) version of spamassassin I had installed previously on the same hardware. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Fetchmail
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: The advantage of daemon mode here is that I neither end up with a huge polling delay nor any risk of a collision where two processes attempt to access the same POP account at the same time (which I'd expect to cause aggravation.) Running from cron will not cause the later, since fetchmail will not run with an instance already running. Ah, ha - I hadn't realised... sounds reasonable to me. But... I suppose this would mean I loose my minute's gap between connections and end up doing a fixed delay between connection initiations... I suppose that wouldn't be the end of the world... if it meant I eliminated the potential for locking-up... but I'm now wary that if one invocation blocks (as seems to have happened to my fetchmail daemon) then this would block successive cron invoked fetchmail processes too... I can give it a try but, as I don't know how to reproduce the fault, I won't be able to test the idea in any meaningful way. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Fetchmail
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Maybe if you took `set daemon 60' out of .fetchmailrc and ran it from cron? Thanks for the suggestion, but the reason I've avoided the cron approach is that I've two objectives: 1. To minimise latency in delivery of messages as far as is practical (without placing stupid demands on the resources of the POP3 servers) 2. To cope with very large emails (several MB) which may be present at any POP account and must be downloaded over a potentially extremely congested relatively low-bandwidth link. The advantage of daemon mode here is that I neither end up with a huge polling delay nor any risk of a collision where two processes attempt to access the same POP account at the same time (which I'd expect to cause aggravation.) I've used fetchmail for several years too - and this is the first time I've been sure it's let me down... I was wondering if it was a known (obscure) bug with the latest version... maybe, for example, one that only arises in the context of a TCP error or, maybe, a remote server failing mid-transaction? Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Fetchmail
I've recently experienced a bizarre failure... and I wondered if anyone else has experienced something similar or has a suggestion to avoid a similar annoyance in future. I run fetchmail to poll 3 servers every minute... and while this has worked fine for weeks, last night it froze at 2am and stopped polling. When I killed the fetchmail process and ran fetchmail again this afternoon, things jumped to life again and appear back to normal... but I wished I didn't have to make the manual intervention. Fetchmail is version "6.2.5.2+RPA+NTLM+SDPS+SSL+INET6+NLS" from portage and has the following in ~/.fetchmailrc -- set postmaster "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" set no bouncemail set no spambounce set logfile .fetchmail.log set properties "" set daemon 60 poll pop3.host1.net with proto POP3 user 'user1' there with password 'pass1' is 'me' here options stripcr poll pop3.host1.net with proto POP3 user 'user2' there with password 'pass2' is 'me' here options stripcr poll mail.host2.org with proto POP3 user 'user3' there with password 'pass3' is 'me' here with options stripcr -- The tail of the trace file read: -- fetchmail: awakened at Tue Dec 13 01:59:58 2005 fetchmail: 1 message for user2 at pop3.host1.net (5449 octets). fetchmail: reading message [EMAIL PROTECTED]:1 of 1 (5449 octets) fetchmail: flushed fetchmail: sleeping at Tue Dec 13 02:00:12 2005 fetchmail: awakened at Tue Dec 13 02:01:12 2005 fetchmail: 2 messages for user2 at pop3.host1.net (11540 octets). fetchmail: reading message [EMAIL PROTECTED]:1 of 2 (5020 octets) fetchmail: flushed fetchmail: reading message [EMAIL PROTECTED]:2 of 2 (6520 octets) fetchmail: flushed -- Can anyone tell me why this happened? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Spamassassin 3.1 now fails...
A few days I 'updated world' and spamassassin 3.04 was replaced by spamassassin 3.1 - after a few minutes spent migrating my configuration (to enable Razor,Pyzor and DCC) all seemed to be working well... but then, after running fine for a day or two, the spamd daemon stopped responding and started writing an error about "syswrite(7) to the system log every few seconds: -- Nov 24 00:31:12 gifu postfix/qmgr[3563]: 9ADC2137F91: removed Nov 24 00:31:12 gifu spamd[26279]: prefork: child states: BBBII Nov 24 00:31:14 gifu postfix/smtpd[24866]: disconnect from localhost[127.0.0.1] Nov 24 00:32:40 gifu spamd[26279]: prefork: syswrite(7) failed, retrying... at / usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8.6/Mail/SpamAssassin/SpamdForkScaling.pm line 554. Nov 24 00:32:45 gifu spamd[26279]: prefork: syswrite(7) failed, retrying... at / usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8.6/Mail/SpamAssassin/SpamdForkScaling.pm line 554. -- Subsequently mail was (as far as I can tell) delivered without tagging messages. When I restart spamasssassin (i.e. /etc/init.d/spamd restart) the problem disappears - at least temporarily This is not a one-off occurrence - but I do not know what triggers the failure. On this occasion spamassasssin failed reporting syswrite(7) last time it reported syswrite(8) but otherwise behaviour was similar. The time at which the failure occurred does not seem to be relevant as while this time it was at just past midnight, previously it failed at 15:30. Does anyone else have this problem with Spamassassin 3.1? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Ruby Rails and Rake - strange error on Gentoo...
I've recently started playing around with Ruby and rails under Gentoo. I've installed everything using emerge as opposed to the using ruby gems. While I seem to be able to use my rails application, I get a puzzling error message when I try to verify it using the default generated rakefile and rake: -- $ rails myapp $ cd myapp $ rake /usr/lib/ruby/site_ruby/1.8/rake.rb:658:in `private': undefined method `have_opt ion?' for class `Object' (NameError) from /usr/lib/ruby/site_ruby/1.8/rake.rb:658 from /usr/lib/ruby/site_ruby/1.8/rake.rb:657 from /usr/bin/rake:3 -- I would not expect this error message. I get the same error message if I've introduced controllers and views (as suggested in the tutorials) before running make. I've asked on both the ruby and rails mailing lists without any suggestions arising... it seems this might be peculiar to Gentoo. Do other users (more familiar than I am with Ruby, rails and rake) have the same problems? Is this a problem with my generated application, Rails - or (as the error message suggests) an error in the implementation of rake? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Devices to stream music.
Christoph Gysin wrote: Check out http://www.slimdevices.com The server software is opensource, written in perl. IIRC the firmware of the device is also opensource! They certainly look cool - though they are a far more expensive option - especially once I've taken into account shipping and duty... It would be far easier for me to buy a unit on-sale here in the UK... assuming I can get it to suck tunes from my Gentoo box. Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Devices to stream music.
b.n. wrote: * Phillips Streamium [ http://en.streamium.com/products/sl50i/ ] * Netgear MP101 [ http://www.netgear.com/products/details/MP101.php ] Whoa. I didn't even know such devices existed! What kind of receivers do you need? I played with the Streamium in PC World where they had a rigged demo... the device itself was a bit flimsy (the front fell off when I picked it up) but it looked as if it would do the job in a physical sense. You don't need a "receiver" - just some sort of amplifier and speakers. The one I saw being demoed in the shop was connected directly to a £100ish set of powered speakers for PC gaming and/or DVD surround sound. If I had one I'd plug one into my hi-fi amplifier - the Streamium would be just like an external CD player as far as the rest of my hi-fi is concerned... it has two phono connectors at the back as far as I can remember. I can't comment on the user interface as I wasn't able to make the demonstration unit do anything - that might have been due to batteries in the remote or it might have been because there was only one MP3 on the server locked in the back room. [£99 asking price] I've not seen an MP101 in-the-flesh... but they're cheaper - retailing at about £80 and I've seen them at £50 on ebay. I prefer the appearance of the MP101 over the Streamium too. I'm sure there are other more expensive options out there too. Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Devices to stream music.
Has anyone any experience in setting up a wireless music streaming device to read MP3 files from a Gentoo installation? These are the kind of devices I have in mind: * Phillips Streamium [ http://en.streamium.com/products/sl50i/ ] * Netgear MP101 [ http://www.netgear.com/products/details/MP101.php ] I've seen vague hints that these devices might be supported by UPNP - for which there is a package in portage... but it seems as if the manufacturers expect the PC storing the MP3s to run Windows... and presumably some proprietary server software. I'd far prefer to use my Gentoo box which is on all the time.Can either of these devices be convinced to work against Gentoo - and if not - can any anyone suggest an alternative device which is supported? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] About a proxy-like idea... (was Shell through the web)
Dave Nebinger wrote: On Tuesday 11 October 2005 07:37 am, Steve [Gentoo] wrote: I'm also vaguely hopeful that there may be a more efficient lower-level solution which wouldn't require the overhead of a process to 'pass-on' the tcp data... maybe integrated with ipchains or pf or similar? If you choose to roll your own solution, that would be difficult. Youve already accepted the connection, so the firewall is now configured to allow the packets back and forth only when related to your connection. I realise that the idea would necessarily be substantially more challenging than just writing a proxy... but I'm sure it is possible. I'm guessing I'd need to interact at the IP packet level, recognise the start of a TCP stream (buffering packets as necessary) then re-play them to the right port and force the packet filter to re-direct that TCP stream. It would not be worth my time to try and make this work if it isn't already available for me to just compile and use. Technically the proxy development is not difficult, but for newbies it can be frustrating working out the nuances of processing asynchronous data arriving on one pipe let alone two. I'm confident that I could write a proxy that would do this... as you suggest - it's not rocket science. Conversely, I'm lazy enough to just use one that's already written if one exists... which, I'm guessing, is likely as I doubt I'm the first person to tackle this. Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Shell through the web
W.Kenworthy wrote: Move the sshd instance on your server to port 443 (if you are not running an ssl aware webserver that is ...) This is (pretty much) what I do- I mapped port 443 to 22 at my NAT/Firewall/router - that way I only have to deal with a peculiar port when using SSH from remote locations. I found that corkscrew ( http://www.agroman.net/corkscrew/ ) was useful where I was forced to use a proxy which required authentication at remote locations. A question that I've recently been mulling is how I can retain this invaluable capability to accept remote SSH connections on port 443 - but also run a standard HTTPS website without needing another public IP address. I fiddled with netcat and discovered that the two protocols (SSH and HTTPS) behave quite differently in spite of both being encrypted. As far as I could tell SSH required an initial message from the server to the client, whereas HTTPS started with the client sending the start of the request. Given that I wouldn't mind waiting a few seconds to establish a SSH connection, it occurred to me that it should be possible to intercept both SSH and HTTPS connections arriving on port 443; distinguish between them (by waiting to see if an HTTP request arrives pretty quickly after the connection is established) then forwards the data to the correct service... +---+ +-+---443-->[apache] O---443-->|NAT-BOX|--1443-->| ? | +---+ +-+---22--->[sshd] Is anyone aware of something I can use to implement the box labelled "?"? I suppose I could write a simple proxy myself... but don't really want to re-invent the wheel... I'm also vaguely hopeful that there may be a more efficient lower-level solution which wouldn't require the overhead of a process to 'pass-on' the tcp data... maybe integrated with ipchains or pf or similar? Any ideas? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Bridge confusion
Patrick Marquetecken wrote: I hope that someone on this list can help me to clarify bridging. I'll give that a go... someone is bound to correct me if I give you a partial truth. :-) I'll start by saying that the point of a bridge (in the context of Ethernet networks at least) is to allow packets of any protocol type to be copied between two otherwise separate networks. A bridge is a low-level software strategy to copy all packets from one broadcast network to another. When working with IP, it is important to have a consistent addressing scheme - which, from your diagram, it seems you haven't. I'll try a bit of ASCII art too to describe a sane situation in which GW_PC might be required to implement a bridge.: LAN1(10.32.1.0/8) LAN2 (10.32.2.0/8) | +--PC1A(10.32.1.4) | +--PC1B(10.32.1.3) PC2A(10.32.2.1)--+ | | +--PC1C(10.32.1.2) PC2B(10.32.2.1)--+ | | +-(10.32.1.1)---GW_PC---(10.32.2.1)-+ Here I've illustrated 2 subnets - LAN1 : 10.32.1.0/8 (i.e. 256 addresses starting 10.32.1) and LAN2 : 10.32.2.0/8 (i.e. 256 addresses starting 10.32.2.) LAN1 has PC1A, PC1B, PC1C and GW_PC as connected hosts. LAN2 has PC2A, PC2B and GW_PC as connected hosts. GW_PC might be a Gentoo box (or pretty much any computer you like, or a single-purpose device. If GW_PC is a computer it will have two network cards - (for example, eth0 and eth1) and the GW_PC retransmits all packets from LAN1 ont LAN2 and vice-versa - hence allowing the two otherwise separate subnets to behave as if they were a single subnet. I use this strategy to bridge between my wired and wireless networks at home with my Gentoo PC participating in both wired and wireless networks. It is important to realise that in copying LAN1's packets to LAN2 (and vice versa) that this will increase network load for both subnets - so strategic care is required before deciding to bridge. An alternative is to route packets between the two subnets LAN1 and LAN2 - GW_PC would inspect the packets and decide if the destination PC is on the other LAN before transmitting the packet again and consuming bandwidth on both LANs. Routing works well for many things (for example TCP based protocols) but not for all broadcast services which (without a bridge) are often restricted to a single subnet. I hope that helps? Steve This is the setup i want: Lan 1 Lan 2 eth1---brigdeeth1 || 10.32.0.0/22 10.32.0.0/22 || eth0 (10.32.3.10)---eth0 (10.32.3.11) So the questing is, must i add eth0 and eth1 of the same machine to the same bridge device to get it working, or is eth1 enough ? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Document management solution [possibly a bit off-topic...]
A. Khattri wrote: On Thu, 29 Sep 2005, Steve [Gentoo] wrote: I think I want a "document management solution" - though I'm not sure that everyone understands the same idea by the term. This might be overkill: http://www.alfresco.org/ Alfresco is what I'd have called a content management system - as opposed to a document management system. I'm interested in managing archives of documents I have received from other people (in dead-tree format)... Or maybe something like ScrollKeeper would suffice? Scrollkeeper seems to target electronic manuals etc. (as far as I can tell) - It doesn't appear to be focused on scanned documents. The typical sort of documents I need to manage include monthly and quarterly invoices and statements etc. from a wide variety of vendors. Like Alfresco, I'd say that Scrollkeeper looks more like a content management system than a document management system... -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Document management solution [possibly a bit off-topic...]
I think I want a "document management solution" - though I'm not sure that everyone understands the same idea by the term. I've got a filing cabinet full of paperwork which is an absolute nightmare to cope with. One of the key problems is that the documents want to be indexed in different ways. All the documents are dated, but they can be further sub-divided by subjects - lots of documents appertain to several subjects. I frequently require to find either a specific document, a sequence of related documents or similar. I rarely need the original document - but often want a copy or just to check some detail or other. Some documents are multi-page, some single page... all can be easily scanned. I'm interested to establish software which minimises the burden of managing these documents - probably as scanned images. I'm familiar with the Dj-Vu Libre library and think that format is fantastic - though a less ambitious format would likely suffice (even at 200dpi grey scale jpegs I get ~10,000 pages without needing more than one DVD to back up...) A significant burden is in scanning and storing all these documents - and this makes a good UI essential - preferably allowing a single click to scan a document (incidentally can anyone recommend a good, cheap, sheet-fed scanner?) before page-preview (cropping/rotating) and assignment of "subject" classification and date-stamping. It would be useful if there was an OCR pass in order to extract plain-text and to index that - though this feature is not essential. There would need to be a friendly UI in order to establish all the documents matching a given subject classification (or group of classifications) - to preview on-screen and offer an option to print... preferably in-order... maybe with a watermark dating the copy? Is anyone aware of any existing packages - preferably for Gentoo, but any open-source solution would suffice. Thanks in advance for any suggestions :-) Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] NCFTP in passive mode...
Billy Holmes wrote: Steve [Gentoo] wrote: Can anyone see where I'm going wrong. I'm behind a NAT box which precludes my use of active-FTP but not passive. I have verified this both with Windows based FTP clients and with the latest unmasked "vanilla" ftp from portage. When I try to use ncftp, however, I run into difficulties: I think you need to set passive on before you do any data transfers. I know that with my copy, ncftp will hang while waiting on a active transfer to finish. I normally have to terminate the program (CTRL-Z ; jobs -l ; kill $PID). However, I've been able to set the passive option before I've transfered any files. You can also try "wget" if you know the file path, and just want to retreive a file. As far as I can tell I tried to enable passive mode before transferring any files. In the example I posted I called "set passive on" before I called "open ..." - I also tired setting passive on in the preferences file - which should have ensured that passive was on as soon as the process started. Both of these fail for me. I can't use wget - because I want to put files... I can use the classic "ftp" program (which works fine is passive mode) - however I dislike the user interface... ncftp worked fine for me in the past... I've discovered that ncftp keeps "trace" files - this is what it shows -- SESSION STARTED at: 2005-08-10 11:31:26 BST +0100 Program Version: NcFTP 3.1.8/167 Jul 27 2004, 03:31 PM Library Version: LibNcFTP 3.1.8 (May 26, 2004) Process ID: 388 Platform: linux-x86 Hostname: gifu.shic.lan (rc=3) Terminal: cygwin 11:31:26 Fw: firewall.shic.lan Type: 0 User: sjh Pass: Port: 21 11:31:26 FwExceptions: .shic.lan,localhost,localdomain 11:31:31 > set passive on 11:31:40 > open ftp.mirror.ac.uk 11:31:40 Resolving ftp.mirror.ac.uk... 11:31:40 Connecting to ftp.mirror.ac.uk... 11:31:40 LibNcFTP 3.1.8 (May 26, 2004) compiled for linux-x86 11:31:40 Uname: Linux|gifu|2.6.9-gentoo-r1|#5 Sat Apr 2 18:05:01 BST 2005|i686 11:31:40 Glibc: 2.3.5 (stable) 11:31:41 Logging in... 11:31:41 220: Welcome to the JISC National Mirror Service. 11:31:41 11:31:41 To discover more about the service, please visit: http://www.mirr or.ac.uk/ 11:31:41 11:31:41 The service is funded by HEFCE via the Joint Information Systems Committee 11:31:41 (JISC) and is intended to support the UK academic community with a portfolio of 11:31:41 useful technical mirrors directly on the Joint Academic Network ( JANET). 11:31:41 11:31:41 We welcome your feedback on the current service and suggestions f or new 11:31:41 mirrors. Please contact us via [EMAIL PROTECTED] 11:31:41 11:31:41 11:31:41 Connected to ftp.mirror.ac.uk. 11:31:41 Cmd: USER anonymous 11:31:41 331: Please specify the password. 11:31:41 Cmd: PASS NcFTP@ 11:31:41 Logging in... 11:31:41 230: Login successful. 11:31:41 Cmd: PWD 11:31:41 257: "/" 11:31:41 Logged in to ftp.mirror.ac.uk as anonymous. 11:31:41 Cmd: FEAT 11:31:41 211: Features: 11:31:41EPRT 11:31:41EPSV 11:31:41MDTM 11:31:41PASV 11:31:41REST STREAM 11:31:41SIZE 11:31:41TVFS 11:31:41 End 11:31:41 Cmd: HELP SITE 11:31:41 214: The following commands are recognized. 11:31:41ABOR ACCT ALLO APPE CDUP CWD DELE EPRT EPSV FEAT HELP LIST MDTM MKD 11:31:41MODE NLST NOOP OPTS PASS PASV PORT PWD QUIT REIN REST RETR RMD RNFR 11:31:41RNTO SITE SIZE SMNT STAT STOR STOU STRU SYST TYPE USER XCUP XCWD XMKD 11:31:41XPWD XRMD 11:31:41 Help OK. 11:31:41 Logged in to ftp.mirror.ac.uk. 11:31:41 Cmd: CLNT NcFTP 3.1.8 linux-x86 11:31:41 500: Unknown command. 11:31:43 > ls 11:31:43 Cmd: EPSV 11:31:43 229: Entering Extended Passive Mode (|||48795|) 11:32:03 Data connection timed out. 11:32:03 Cmd: LIST 11:33:03 425: Failed to establish connection. 11:33:03 > 11:33:27 Cmd: QUIT 11:33:27 221: Goodbye. SESSION ENDED at:Wed Aug 10 11:33:27 2005 -- Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] NCFTP in passive mode...
Can anyone see where I'm going wrong. I'm behind a NAT box which precludes my use of active-FTP but not passive. I have verified this both with Windows based FTP clients and with the latest unmasked "vanilla" ftp from portage. When I try to use ncftp, however, I run into difficulties: -- NcFTP 3.1.8 (Jul 27, 2004) by Mike Gleason (http://www.NcFTP.com/contact/). ncftp> set passive on ncftp> open ftp.mirror.ac.uk Resolving ftp.mirror.ac.uk... Connecting to ftp.mirror.ac.uk... Welcome to the JISC National Mirror Service. ... <> Logging in... Login successful. Logging in... Logged in to ftp.mirror.ac.uk. ncftp / > ls Data connection timed out. List failed. ncftp / > -- NCFTP also fails when I leave passive at the default "optional" (which allegedly automatically determines if passive ftp is required) - and when I set passive to on, off or optional in .ncftp/prefs_v3. Does ncftp work in passive mode for other people? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Simple HTTP servers question.
Oscar Carlsson wrote: I think lighttpd might be something like what you're looking for. It's pretty lightweight, fast enough and php/ruby/perl works with it (through fastCGI). http://www.lighttpd.net/ And of course it's in portage :) Oscar I've installed lighttpd - and while mostly impressed I'm finding problems with authentication support. I've set up two websites "extranet.mydomain.com" and "intranet.mydomain.com" - the idea being that extranet contains "public" information for which no password/username is required - whereas intranet requires a username and password (in future this page might be personalised.) I've read authentication.txt and I'm still baffled... Here's the relevant bits from my configuration in lighttpd.conf -- server.modules = ( "mod_access", "mod_auth", "mod_simple_vhost",) -- ... -- auth.backend= "plain" auth.backend.plain.userfile = "lighttpd.user" auth.require = ( "intranet.mydomain.com/" => ( "method" => "digest", "realm" => "Intranet", "require" => "user=fred" ) ) -- I placed lighttpd.user in /etc and it contains the single line "fred:foo" With this configuration, neither site asks for a password. If I replace "intranet.mydomain.com/" with "/" both sites ask for a password... but neither will accept "fred" password "foo". Then, if I change "digest" to "plain" then I don't get asked for a password for either site but get "Access denied" immediately. Have I discovered bugs - or is this a confiiguration problem? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Simple HTTP servers question.
Having recently had hassle with dependencies for Apache2 for my configuration, I had a sudden thought that I don't really need most of the Apache features... and there are many http servers available in portage. I can classify my priorities as essential and desirable: Essential : * Must be secure against remote attacks. * Must support username-and-password based authentication. Desirable : * Support to host multiple domains on a single public IP address (NAT'd to a single static IP address for my server) * As lightweight as possible (traffic volume would be minuscule - server would be heavily loaded and low capacity.) Can anyone make suggestions as to good packages to investigate? Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Peculiar... ssh / shell glitch...
Zac Medico wrote: Apparently the signal is being handled by cygwin on the client side (not a gentoo server problem). Something must have changed in your cygwin evironment. A quick search shows that this is a common problem: http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=%22Killed+by+signal+2%22+cygwin+ssh. In the first search result it suggested to "Switch off ForwardX11 in your .ssh/config". Thanks... I guess I suspected gentoo rather than cygwin as I first noticed just after an emerge -uD world... Cygwin it must be then. Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Peculiar... ssh / shell glitch...
I use cygwin openssh to connect to my Gentoo server... recently I've noticed a change in behaviour. When I press C I'd expect my gentoo shell (zsh) to abort the current empty statement and wait for another. These days, however, I see "Killed by signal 2" and then my ssh connection closes. Does anyone have any idea why this might have started to happen? Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Filesystem access to Gentoo from XP over SSH - suggestions?
Zac Medico wrote: >>> For remote X you should use nx (emerge nxserver-freenx)... >> That's new to me - looks very interesting... > There are native win32 clients (no cygwin required) for both. The tightvnc client is gpl. The nx client that I know of is commercial software but it's a freely downloadable from nomachine.com. I've had a look at this but I'm a bit stumped by the nomachine.com nx client. When I install their client, it takes out my Cygwin installation... presumably because it is linked against an old copy of the cywin DLLs (which I'd have thought would be a violation of the Cygwin licence terms.) --- # ls C:\usr\cygwin\bin\zsh.exe (3752): *** system shared memory version mismatch dete cted - 0x75BE0074/0x75BE0084. This problem is probably due to using incompatible versions of the cygwin DLL. Search for cygwin1.dll using the Windows Start->Find/Search facility and delete all but the most recent version. The most recent version *should* reside in x:\cygwin\bin, where 'x' is the drive on which you have installed the cygwin distribution. Rebooting is also suggested if you are unable to find another cygwin DLL. 159955652 [main] zsh 3288 fork_parent: child 3752 died waiting for longjmp before initialization zsh: fork failed: interrupt --- Uninstalling the nx client and rebooting fixes the fault which installing introduced. The knowledge base seems to gloss over this problem - claiming in separate articles that it is cosmetic or a known problem. I guess, given that I need cygwin, that my only option is to wait and hope the nx client for windows is fixed at some point? Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Daily dumb question... chron.
Bob Sanders wrote: Are thse system tasks supposed to be fired automatically by fcron? Yes. In the ebuild it says - einfo "To activate /etc/cron.{hourly|daily|weekly|montly} please run: " einfo "crontab /etc/crontab" I hadn't seen that message - but then again, when I installed fcron the /etc/cron.* stuff wasn't especially important to me... so I might easily have ignored it at the time. It's a pity this sort of "essential" warning isn't available for all packages as some kind of Gentoo knowledge base - I guess I could read the ebuild files - but it would be far more convenient to have tips/tricks/gotchas available annotated with each package - say on http://packages.gentoo.org/... Hmmm. In any case, thanks - "crontab /etc/crontab" seems the perfect resolution. Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Daily dumb question... chron.
Because I need my Gentoo server to perform periodic tasks on my behalf I new I needed some implementation of "cron" - and after a brief investigation I settled on fcron as I liked the idea that I could give flexible scheduling in order to allow the OS to delay processing in the event of heavy system load. I've written a couple of my own administration tasks (to be run as my own non-root user) and these work fine. I've noticed the directories /etc/cron.daily; /etc/cron.hourly; /etc/cron.monthly etc. and therein a bunch of non-user-specific administration tasks... For example, in ./etc/cron.daily I've logrotate.cron and rulesdujour - but none of these appear to have run in the last month. Are thse system tasks supposed to be fired automatically by fcron? What would be the easiest way to get all my periodic system administration tasks defined in these directories to be fired automatically? Did I make a sensible choice with fcron? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Filesystem access to Gentoo from XP over SSH - suggestions?
Thanks for the many suggestions... Lots of interesting ideas and different perspectives. Zac Medico wrote: Filezilla is an ftp client that supports file transfer over ssh: http://filezilla.sourceforge.net/ I'll give that a look - it's not really what I was after - while I suppose I wasn't really clear about my intentions, I really wanted FS-like access to enable me not only to edit text files, but also to use visual differencing tools etc. I'm suspecting that this wouldn't be supported using an ftp-like approach. For remote X you should use nx (emerge nxserver-freenx) or vnc (emerge tightvnc). That's new to me - looks very interesting... I'm guessing I'd need to get this working under cygwin for my XP client... Anything which improves the performance of remote X sessions would be very useful. To map a network drive, you should probably tunnel samba through ssh. Google for "samba tunnel putty". This is exactly what I wanted to know. I hadn't thought of googling with "putty" as I'm using OpenSSH on both client and server - but the techniques look the same. Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Filesystem access to Gentoo from XP over SSH - suggestions?
I was wondering if others have tackled this before me? I only have remote SSH access to my Gentoo box (everything else is fire walled) and I use this to map ports on my client machine to corresponding ports on my server machine - so, for example, I can access IMAP; SMTP, X applications etc. on the Gentoo server remotely. My remote client is WinXP, and I use Cygwin OpenSSH. Owing to low bandwidth. While Xwindows is usable it is very slow - command line interaction without X is acceptable for most tasks but imposes a very restrictive interface. If possible I would like to be able to edit (relatively small) configuration files remotely in a text editor running under windows. What would be the easiest way to somehow "map" a network drive on my Gentoo server from Windows given that I need to tunnel over SSH? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Subversion 1.2
Holly Bostick wrote: The thing is Portage doesn't *remember* ACCEPT_KEYWORDS, beyond the original compile in which it is used. So if you use it, and keep the package, as soon as you do an emerge -u world, Portage will try to downgrade the package to the last stable version, which is the only one that it knows to be allowed (because /etc/make.conf says "xarch", not "~arch", and no exception for this particular package and its dependencies has been made in /etc/portage/package.keywords). OK - now using package.keywords make far more sense to me. I'd always assumed (wrongly I guess) that "emerge -u" would only upgrade and never downgrade... Now I see why I'd need the entry in package.keywords. It's a beautiful system :-) . I'm closer to believing you. :-) The only way in which I'm not yet as convinced as you are is with respect to dependencies. I'm comfortable with the idea that I browse the bugs to verify that none of the issues affect my install directly - then to accept an unstable version of a specific package... but I'd prefer not to have to dig out the package dependencies and explicitly allow the unstable branch for those packages too (as seems to have been indicated earlier in this thread.) Is there a simple way to say, for example, "I'm willing to accept the unstable version of Subversion-1.2.1, and (naturally) the unstable version of any package on which Suversion-1.2.1 depends?" It was my wish to side-step explicitly dealing with package dependencies which prompted me to use ACCEPT_KEYWORDS with emerge -uD ... Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Subversion 1.2
Petteri Räty wrote: What criteria must be met in order for a masked package (and specifically for Subversion) to become unmasked? At least a month and there can't be any major bugs reported to bugs.gentoo.org. About specifics on Subversion you need to ask its maintainer. It will stay masked as long as needed for the maintainer to become sure that the package really is stable. Hmmm... I suppose that suggests there were some major bugs... using bugs.gentoo.org is new to me - it seems that's where I was missing a pointer. Thanks again. I didn't want to pester the maintainer with superfluous questions as to why packages are masked. It seems a pity that all the information isn't available on one page... using packages.gentoo.org and bugs.gentoo.org together gives the right info - even if it requires a little bit more effort. :-) I'll be sure to see if I can offer feedback to the bugzilla database if I find something relevant to add. Ideally I'd like to follow the natural upgrade cycle in future. Wouldn't putting those lines in my package.keywords file prevent me getting, say, version 1.3 automatically when I do an "emerge -uD world" in another few months? No it would not. You are just changing the accepted the keywords for Subversion. Portage always chooses the latest version with accepted keywords. If just add dev-util/subversion you say that you will accept every version marked as ~x86 or you can use =dev-util/subversion-1.2.1 to only mark one version. If you don't use version numbers, you will always update to the latest version. If you lock down the version number, the next time you will update if after there is a version greater then 1.2.1, which is marked stable (x86). Ah, ha. That sounds sensible - now I follow. My USE confusion is probably that I'd referred to some wrong/out-of-date documentation... when I use ACCEPT_KEYWORDS in place of USE it now behaves just how I had previously expected it should have done. # ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="~x86" emerge -uD subversion This does what I'd originally intended to try... (and doesn't force me to remember how to spell the dependencies.) I assume there's no significant advantage I've missed in preferring to use the package.keywords file instead? Hopefully I answered this. I think you did... Thanks! -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Subversion 1.2
Marco Matthies wrote: Gentoo leaves packages in unstable for a default period of time to make sure they work allright. If you want the newest version of a package, you must tell portage to do so by putting the appropriate stuff (subversion and it's dependencies) in /etc/portage/package.keywords. Hmmm - that all sounds sane, but what is this default period of time? What criteria must be met in order for a masked package (and specifically for Subversion) to become unmasked? Here, i just did it myself by putting this in my package.keywords (create this file if it doesn't exist) : =dev-util/subversion-1.2.1 ~x86 =dev-libs/apr-util-0.9.5~x86 =dev-libs/apr-0.9.5 ~x86 In one way this looks better than my fiddling with USE - however I'm reluctant to choose specific versions in a durable configuration file. Ideally I'd like to follow the natural upgrade cycle in future. Wouldn't putting those lines in my package.keywords file prevent me getting, say, version 1.3 automatically when I do an "emerge -uD world" in another few months? This was just info about portage, it is in no way any form of endorsement on the new version of subversion, as I haven't used it at all - and I don't know if you should be so impatient with a new version of a package that seems to be important to you and your data... I'm only impatient in so far as I'd prefer to use my gentoo server rather than some other platform. I'm already using Subversion 1.2 on other platforms and I've found no problems for my configuration so (other than possible gentoo specific issues) I'm happy to run the latest Subversion. [Disclaimer - please don't blame me if your requirements are more demanding than mine!. :-) ] Thanks for the reply - it at least convinces me that it is possible to get Subersion-1.2 installed... However, your solution raises more questions from me about Gentoo. I'm now unsure if I want to wait-out the default unstable time for packages (to minimise risk and to simplify systems management) - or if there is a more subtle way to declare that I'd like version 1.2.1 now and to have that upgraded when a future version newer than that which becomes unmasked. Am I missing some other obvious things? I found the Gentoo handbook a little opaque on the topic of masked packages... lots of info - just not the answers to the questions I was thinking. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Subversion 1.2
I'd have thought lots of people in the gentoo crowd would have been eagerly awaiting subversion 1.2.x with its substantial new "reserved checkout" - but nothing seems to have moved forward. Portage (by default) still gives me version 1.1.3... but version 1.2 has been available for a couple of months and 1.2.1 a fortnight... I wouldn't have considered this a difficult package to port to Gentoo - especially as just about every other platform is supported directly by the Subversion developers... I've tried using ~x86 as my USE flag - but the 1.2 ebuild still won't install reporting a "Problem in dev-util/subversion-1.2 dependencies"... I'm reluctant to use an unstable subverison port as it would cost me a fair bit of time if it scrambles my version controlled files. Does anyone know what the problems are and why its taking so long to get 1.2.x into the default portage tree? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] docbook-sgml-utils and jade...
Tim Igoe wrote: It seems to me that jade is linked against libsop.so.3, however I only appear to have a copy of libsop.so.4. I've not unmasked or otherwise tried to do anything fancy - in fact I'm not particularly interested in either Jade or Docbook-sgml - however it seems they are dependencies. Am I the only one getting this problem? It was mentioned only days ago on this very list. The fix is emerge openjade emerge -uD world Thanks... I'm not sure why my search of the list didn't turn up that discussion... that fixes things. As an asside, I'd have expected, assuming this is a simple issue that packages should now be dependent on openjade and not jade, that the portage tree would have been updated to reflect this? Is this planned? I wonder why it seems to have taken so long? Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] docbook-sgml-utils and jade...
I've recently discovered a problem doing my periodic "emrege -uD world" - which looks as if there is some general problem with jade [Attached below - output from the command.] It seems to me that jade is linked against libsop.so.3, however I only appear to have a copy of libsop.so.4. I've not unmasked or otherwise tried to do anything fancy - in fact I'm not particularly interested in either Jade or Docbook-sgml - however it seems they are dependencies. Am I the only one getting this problem? -- # emerge -uD world Calculating world dependencies ...done! >>> emerge (1 of 2) app-text/docbook-sgml-utils-0.6.14 to / >>> md5 files ;-) docbook-sgml-utils-0.6.12.ebuild >>> md5 files ;-) docbook-sgml-utils-0.6.12-r2.ebuild >>> md5 files ;-) docbook-sgml-utils-0.6.14.ebuild >>> md5 files ;-) ChangeLog >>> md5 files ;-) metadata.xml >>> md5 files ;-) files/docbook-sgml-utils-frontend.patch >>> md5 files ;-) files/docbook-sgml-utils-head-jw.patch >>> md5 files ;-) files/docbook-sgml-utils-backend.patch >>> md5 files ;-) files/digest-docbook-sgml-utils-0.6.12-r2 >>> md5 files ;-) files/docbook-sgml-utils-0.6.14-backend.patch >>> md5 files ;-) files/digest-docbook-sgml-utils-0.6.12 >>> md5 files ;-) files/digest-docbook-sgml-utils-0.6.14 >>> md5 src_uri ;-) docbook-utils-0.6.14.tar.gz >>> Unpacking source... >>> Unpacking docbook-utils-0.6.14.tar.gz to /var/tmp/portage/docbook-sgml-utils -0.6.14/work >>> Source unpacked. ./configure --prefix=/usr --host=i686-pc-linux-gnu --mandir=/usr/share/man --inf odir=/usr/share/info --datadir=/usr/share --sysconfdir=/etc --localstatedir=/var /lib configure: WARNING: If you wanted to set the --build type, don't use --host. If a cross compiler is detected then cross compile mode will be used. checking for a BSD-compatible install... /bin/install -c checking whether build environment is sane... yes checking for gawk... gawk checking whether make sets $(MAKE)... yes checking for i686-pc-linux-gnu-strip... i686-pc-linux-gnu-strip configure: creating ./config.status config.status: creating Makefile config.status: creating docbook-utils.spec config.status: creating bin/Makefile config.status: creating bin/jw config.status: creating bin/sgmldiff config.status: creating backends/Makefile config.status: creating backends/man config.status: creating backends/texi config.status: creating frontends/Makefile config.status: creating frontends/docbook config.status: creating helpers/Makefile config.status: creating doc/Makefile config.status: creating doc/version config.status: creating doc/refentry/Makefile config.status: creating doc/man/Makefile config.status: creating doc/HTML/Makefile Making all in backends make[1]: Entering directory `/var/tmp/portage/docbook-sgml-utils-0.6.14/work/doc book-utils-0.6.14/backends' make[1]: Nothing to be done for `all'. make[1]: Leaving directory `/var/tmp/portage/docbook-sgml-utils-0.6.14/work/docb ook-utils-0.6.14/backends' Making all in bin make[1]: Entering directory `/var/tmp/portage/docbook-sgml-utils-0.6.14/work/doc book-utils-0.6.14/bin' make[1]: Nothing to be done for `all'. make[1]: Leaving directory `/var/tmp/portage/docbook-sgml-utils-0.6.14/work/docb ook-utils-0.6.14/bin' Making all in doc make[1]: Entering directory `/var/tmp/portage/docbook-sgml-utils-0.6.14/work/doc book-utils-0.6.14/doc' Making all in refentry make[2]: Entering directory `/var/tmp/portage/docbook-sgml-utils-0.6.14/work/doc book-utils-0.6.14/doc/refentry' make[2]: Nothing to be done for `all'. make[2]: Leaving directory `/var/tmp/portage/docbook-sgml-utils-0.6.14/work/docb ook-utils-0.6.14/doc/refentry' Making all in man make[2]: Entering directory `/var/tmp/portage/docbook-sgml-utils-0.6.14/work/doc book-utils-0.6.14/doc/man' make[2]: Nothing to be done for `all'. make[2]: Leaving directory `/var/tmp/portage/docbook-sgml-utils-0.6.14/work/docb ook-utils-0.6.14/doc/man' Making all in HTML make[2]: Entering directory `/var/tmp/portage/docbook-sgml-utils-0.6.14/work/doc book-utils-0.6.14/doc/HTML' SGML_CATALOG_FILES=/etc/sgml/catalog \ SGML_SEARCH_PATH=../..:../../doc:.. \ jade -t sgml -i html -d ../../docbook-utils.dsl\#html \ -V '%use-id-as-filename%' ../../doc/docbook-utils.sgml SGML_CATALOG_FILES=/etc/sgml/catalog \ SGML_SEARCH_PATH=../..:../../doc:.. \ jade -t sgml -i html -d ../../docbook-utils.dsl\#html \ -V '%use-id-as-filename%' ../../doc/docbook-utils.sgml jade: error while loading shared libraries: libosp.so.3: cannot open shared obje ct file: No such file or directory make[2]: *** [api.html] Error 127 make[2]: *** Waiting for unfinished jobs jade: error while loading shared libraries: libosp.so.3: cannot open shared obje ct file: No such file or directory make[2]: *** [backend-spec.html] Error 127 make[2]: Leaving directory `/var/tmp/portage/docbook-sgml-utils-0.6.14/work/docb ook-utils-0.6.14/doc/HTML' make[1]: *** [all-recursive] Error 1 make[1]: Lea
Re: [gentoo-user] # ./CA.pl -newca certification problem
askar ... wrote: I'm trying to setup email system by reading the "Virtual Mailhosting System with Postfix Guide". I have a problem in section 5. When I do # ./CA.pl -newca have error "unable to load certificate 2319:error:0906D06C:PEM routines:PEM_read_bio:no start line:pem_lib.c:637:Expecting: TRUSTED CERTIFICATE". Googled, but couldn't find any hint to fix my problem. Please advice me smth. While not a direct answer to your question, have you tried using tinyca instead of CA.pl? I always found CA.pl something of a challenge with many chances to make a silly error. Using tinyca (under Xwindows) I found managing certificates was a breeze. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Online backups...
I admit that this is a pretty generic idea... but I hope no-one sees harm in me asking about it here... I plan to do this with gentoo... so if someone else has had a similar plan... maybe they could offer me the benefit of their wisdom :-) Assumptions: 1. There are two Linux Hosts connected to the internet by ADSL (512/256Kbps) and that for, say, 6 hours each night this bandwidth is mostly unused. 2. Each Linux Host has under 1GB of "current" files - and under 100Mb of this changes each day on each host. 3. The (different) administrators of each host do not want to take responsibility for keeping the others' data secret, and neither wants the responsibility of having access to the other's files. 4. A daily backup is desired by the administrator of each host. Any solution needs to operate transparently - reporting any failures to the administrator responsible for the data which has failed to be backed up. Furthermore, any solution must: 1. Manage disk usage and consume bandwidth subject to the constraints of the administrator. 2. Use strong encryption in order to eliminate fear that the backup copy my compromise secrecy of backup data. 3. Require the transmission only of the changed data (in order to minimise consumption of bandwidth) Is anyone familiar with any projects with these aims? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
One of the principle uses of my Gentoo box is to aggregate all of my disparate pop-3 accounts, filter spam and to provide access to the ham from my desktop and laptop using Thunderbird (both, I admit, under Windows.) In the most part I am happy with this setup (postfix, dovecot, procmail, spamassasin & ruledujour, razor, pyzor, DCC - with remote ssh tunnels for smtp and IMAP4) - this configuration successfully filters about 99.5% of my spam without having (yet) introduced a false positive - a fact I attribute to the advantage that my ham is extremely unlikely to be matched in DCC/razor/pyzor. Every day, however, I do receive a couple of spams which I don't automatically identify. These spams are easy enough to move out of my inbox or delete by hand, but I can't help thinking it would be better to report these spams back to DCC/razor/pyzor hoping to eliminate similar rubbish in future. I'm aware of the command line client razor-report, but to be honest using that directly is a bit of a pain...I really need a strategy to report spam which requires no more human intervention than at present is needed to manually remove the spam from my inbox. I wonder if it would be possible to set-up an "internal" account "spam" to which only local users (i.e. myself) can send mail... "bounce" all my spam there (using the "Mail Redirect" extension?) - and somehow use procmail to report it? Is there a neater solution? Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] XML Editor
Calvin Spealman wrote: Jaxe looks like a promising possibility, over at http://jaxe.sourceforge.net/. It can validate based on a schema, as you need. It is a Java-written project, so it will run on your linux boxes, or anything else, of course. I've had a brief "play" with Jaxe - but it didn't "feel" ideal... I found the interface a bit clumsy - though maybe I could configure that better with a little effort. There is a very large list of editors at http://www.xml.com/pub/pt/3 you can look through, as well. I'd found that list... (which was somewhat overwhelming) then realized that the majority of editors are either commercial and/or target WYSIWYG... I've had a look into komodo, and agree that it is sensibly priced... but it looks like severe overkill. If there were to be a gentoo-portage ebuild for a tool (even if it wasn't perfrect) I would prefer that as I'd at least get get the latest version when I emerge update. I think a significant part of my problem is that tool developers seem to all have a particular application in mind - and that application seldom seems to coincide with my ideas about neat interfaces to construct arbitrary XML data files... Thanks for the suggestions... at least it seems I'm not overlooking "the obvious"? Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] XML Editor
I have a few bespoke XML schema specs, and I want to find a generic tool to construct XML files which are syntactically valid with respect to the schema specs. The schemas represent data-structures for domain specific records with moderately complex structure. It would not make sense to use a WYSIWYG editor as the XML tags don't correspond to textual mark-up... I don't want to use a text-editor as it would be time-consuming to manually type the tag and attribute names... as well as being more error prone and less productive to batch validate. Are there any such tools available for Gentoo? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Fax & answerphone/voicemail server...
Stroller wrote: "Imminent" would not be a correct statement of the current status. See <http://www.altramelia.it/mess_6329_2353960.html> That rather clarifies plans then... My personal (and possibly ill-informed) hunch is that it should be possible to make faxing with a class-1 work at least as well as it did under Win2K but I stand corrected that vgetty isn't that solution at the moment. I would like to work out if it would be worth my while to look around for another cheap modem or wait... if sometime this year a usable (very small volume) support for Class 1 faxes becomes available then that would probably be fine - I've other (less convenient) options which can see me through until then. Look around for a cheap replacement. I have been very lucky with a 28.8k Hayes Accura that I got from a car-boot sale - it does UK CLID, fax & voice. I would expect that you could find something suitable for next to no $$$ if you keep your eyes open. I'll have a quick look at ebay (I don't know of any car boot sales or similar in my neck of the woods and the local "computer fair" is notoriously dodgey and more hassle than buying something new and top-spec. I don't suppose that there is a list of modems verified as solid performers with vgetty voice & fax are there? My other thought (though I realise Gert Doering probably wouldn't approve) might be to use hylafax for faxing - it certainly claims to work with class-1 modems... but it isn't obvious that it would be straightforward to merge that with a VOCP voice system. Thanks, Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Fax & answerphone/voicemail server...
James Hiscock wrote: This is a Class 1 faxmodem, which, AFAIR, doesn't work with m|vgetty. ...yeah... [vm]getty has no support for Class 1 fax, but it's (theoretically) still ok for voice... Hmmm - I've just looked out a manual and it seems to agree with you... and until this hint I'd no idea there even were two classes of fax support.. let alone that my pace only did Class 1 and I might need Class 2. There was an interesting bit in the vgetty faq about potential imminent support for class 1 fax modems... but there was no hint as to a timescale. I would like to work out if it would be worth my while to look around for another cheap modem or wait... if sometime this year a usable (very small volume) support for Class 1 faxes becomes available then that would probably be fine - I've other (less convenient) options which can see me through until then. Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Fax & answerphone/voicemail server...
James Hiscock wrote: You might want to check out vocp (http://vocpsystem.com/) as an alternative - there's a (horribly experimental - read: partially completed) ebuild for it on bugs.gentoo.org... I'm still trying to tweak stuff to get it working, but it's pretty straight-forward. That looks like exactly what I want... Though I'd prefer to wait until it is in the portage tree (assuming that will happen soon) - unless, of course, I'm that one critical person who is needed for testing in order to reach that stage. What kind of modem are you using? I've a Pace 56Voice External one (RS232 interface) which (as far as I remember) worked well with Talkworks under NT4 several years ago... and until recently performed robustly for dialup. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Fax & answerphone/voicemail server...
Stroller wrote: I've been doing this for about a year & a half now - it's very convenient. :-) It wouldn't be hard to be more convenient than my dodgey "Audioline" digital answerphone! understand that [vm]gety is a very low-level approach (which sounds a fair bit of work) and of Asterisk (which sounds as if it supports lots of functionality I don't need - as well as not explicitly stating that it can use my existing (voice/fax/modem hardware). I've been using vgetty - the version in Portage is pretty good, and once I actually sat down to configure it I had it mostly up & running over the course of an evening - I think it sounds much more complicated than it is. Many modems are more or less supported, but I don't remember the details - searching & reading the archives of the mgetty mailing list will see you right. If you decide to go this route I have scripts to mail the messages as .mp3 attachments that I can let you have; it does them as proper MIME, and they even play from the IMAP client on my new Windows CE mobile phone. :D I'm migrating to Asterisk Real Soon Now (tm), but it certainly won't support any of your current hardware - it's more appropriate if you want to do VoIP, probably involving routing all your telephone calls through it. If you have to ask, you probably don't want to use Asterisk yet. Several people have been adament that I should use Asterisk - but I remained rather unconvinced... as all the documents I see surrounding Asterisk are interested in VOIP devices - whereas I want a solution for a more ancient technology. Some scripts to munge vgetty interactions into emailed mp3 files sounds extremely useful (any chance of an emailed tgz - or putting them on an ftp site somewhere?) I was hesitating on vgetty not particularly because I was worried that I could manage to set up that sort of a system - but rather that I didn't want to divise a solution which wouldn't benefit from ongoing developments and that I'd want to change i a few months. I don't have much use for VOIP per se at the moment - though I do like the idea of being contactable via "free" Skype and tieing that into my overall solution. I might want to "phone" my answerphone from my mobile if I'm expecting a call at home and I'm cut off from the internet... but that (beyond a customised voice mail system) is all I really need. Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Fax & answerphone/voicemail server...
Joseph wrote: Asterisk - for answering system (might be overkill) Hylafax - for fax server Hmmm - That was my take on Asterisk too... if it really is the best way to do a voice-mail system - then I guess I should take the plunge... I'd still be interested to know if there are viable alternatives before I do... Steve -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Fax & answerphone/voicemail server...
I am looking at cobbling together a replacement for my antiquated hardware answer phone... Ideally I'd use my existing Voice/Fax Modem - and have voice mail messages delivered to me as emails in some appropriate attachment - that way I can retrieve them wherever I happen to be. I've heard of Bayonne (but can't find that in portage); understand that [vm]gety is a very low-level approach (which sounds a fair bit of work) and of Asterisk (which sounds as if it supports lots of functionality I don't need - as well as not explicitly stating that it can use my existing (voice/fax/modem hardware). My ideal solution would get a basic answer-phone service up and running pretty quickly - but let me tweak it as I find time over the medium term. What do other gentoo users do for answer phone and/or fax services for a POTS line? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list