On Wed, Aug 19, 2009 at 7:10 AM, John Cremona wrote:
>
> Progress report.
>
> After succesfully logging into my own notebook as admin, I started to
> set up a few user accounts. I followed the instructions in the
> notebook? docstring:
>
> accounts -- (default: False) if True, any v
One more thing I just noticed. When I run notebook(...) to start up
the notebook server, the last line displayed is
https://selmer.warwick.ac.uk:8000/?startup_token=634498ad5f3559f3b0121beeb6e0beb8:
No such file or directory
and this may be a clue to the problem.
On 19 Aug, 15:10, John Cremona
Progress report.
After succesfully logging into my own notebook as admin, I started to
set up a few user accounts. I followed the instructions in the
notebook? docstring:
accounts -- (default: False) if True, any visitor to
the
website will be able to
I now can connect to that sage server (running on ubuntu, by the way,
and administered by Bill Hart and myself) but this is from another
machine on the university network so I'll have to try form home too.
I started the server using exactly notebook
(address="selmer.warwick.ac.uk", port=8000, se
Ah, OK, thanks for clearing that up.
Bill.
On Aug 17, 7:04 pm, William Stein wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 4:27 AM, Bill Hart wrote:
>
> > It's ubuntu and we can open the port as we have root access (assuming
> > John is talking about the same machine - which I am pretty sure he
> > is).
>
>
On Mon, Aug 17, 2009 at 4:27 AM, Bill Hart wrote:
>
> It's ubuntu and we can open the port as we have root access (assuming
> John is talking about the same machine - which I am pretty sure he
> is).
>
> How secure is the notebook server these days. Is it still advised to
> set it up in a chroot j
Actually, to keep everything in the same place, here is a message I
tried to send but which bounced because I hadn't subscribed yet,
relevant to the same machine John is trying to set up a server on.
I'm trying to set up a chroot_jail for sage to run in so I can get a
notebook working on my new m
It's ubuntu and we can open the port as we have root access (assuming
John is talking about the same machine - which I am pretty sure he
is).
How secure is the notebook server these days. Is it still advised to
set it up in a chroot jail (see my other post about problems I had
doing that).
Bill.
On Sun, Aug 16, 2009 at 4:45 PM, Kevin Horton wrote:
>
> Actually, I probably spoke out of turn. The ":8000" at the end of the
> url specifies the port to use, so https shouldn't be using the default
> port. But, there could be a firewall preventing port 8000 from
> working, or a port forwarding
Actually, I probably spoke out of turn. The ":8000" at the end of the
url specifies the port to use, so https shouldn't be using the default
port. But, there could be a firewall preventing port 8000 from
working, or a port forwarding problem if your server is hiding behind
a router.
I r
Thanks Kevin -- do you know how to test that? On the sever, netstat -
a starts
Active Internet connections (servers and established)
Proto Recv-Q Send-Q Local Address Foreign Address
State
tcp0 0 *:8000 *:*
LISTEN
tcp0 0 *:58244
John Cremona wrote:
> Thanks for the replies.
>
> It's on the big wide internet, not local.
>
> On 16 Aug, 19:27, William Stein wrote:
>
>> On Sun, Aug 16, 2009 at 6:49 AM, John Cremona wrote:
>>
>>
>>> In the docstring for notebook() it says " More documentation is available
>>> in the
Thanks for the replies.
It's on the big wide internet, not local.
On 16 Aug, 19:27, William Stein wrote:
> On Sun, Aug 16, 2009 at 6:49 AM, John Cremona wrote:
>
> > In the docstring for notebook() it says " More documentation is available
> > in the
> > Sage installation guide, in the "Runnin
On Sun, Aug 16, 2009 at 6:49 AM, John Cremona wrote:
>
> In the docstring for notebook() it says " More documentation is available in
> the
> Sage installation guide, in the "Running the Sage Notebook Securely"
> chapter" but there is not such chapter. Has this documentation
> moved? There is
The answer really depends on if your server is on an intranet LAN
(inaccessible from
the rest of the world) or on a (public) internet web server. In the
former case, the answer
is very easy and even I can answer your question!
On Sun, Aug 16, 2009 at 9:49 AM, John Cremona wrote:
>
> In the docst
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