Re: [SLUG] Autorepeat broken after suspend

2003-02-13 Thread Ben de Luca
I replied of list before,

But ill relate my problems now, I remeber a little bit more now. I was using
a toshiba laptop last year whilst I was on a contract job. I was running
redhat 7.3 and after installing gnome 2 through ximian desktop. I found the
described problem. I also installed redhat 8.0 on the machine and still had
the problem.

I found that I could make it go away by restarting the xserver (this happens
when you logout). I also found that some times, whilst messing with the
gnome-controlcenter's controls for key repeats I could get it working again
(some times) or messing with the setting for key repeat with gconf-editor. I
had to give up the laptop untill I figured it out.


I dont think I saw the problem whilst using kde on the machine. I would be
willing to be its gnome.

Ben de Luca


- Original Message -
From: Myles Byrne [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, February 13, 2003 4:35 PM
Subject: Re: [SLUG] Autorepeat broken after suspend


 On Wed, 2003-02-12 at 15:31, Bruce Badger wrote:

  Ben de Luca suggested that fiddling with the Repeat Keys options in the
  Keyboard Preferences dialog fixed a similar problem for him in the
  past.  It didn't work for me though.  Have you tried that?

 what dialog?

  I'm wondering at what level this is a problem.  e.g. IBM hardware, Video
  card driver, X, Metacity, Gnome ...

 I don't know but repeat keys works for me from the login screen (gdm) if
 i log out after suspend.

  It's a nuisance, that's for sure.

 Yeah I had just given up and learnt to hit the backspace key really fast
 :)

 --
 Myles Byrne [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 ByrneWebServices

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[SLUG] apt failure

2003-02-13 Thread Adam Hewitt
Hi All,

I have tried over the last few weeks to install various packages from
unstable and although some packages download, most of them give me the
following errors:

Err http://ftp.iinet.net.au unstable/main libc6-dev 2.3.1-11
  404 Not Found
Err http://ftp.iinet.net.au unstable/main locales 2.3.1-11
  404 Not Found
Err http://ftp.iinet.net.au unstable/main libc6 2.3.1-11
  404 Not Found
Err http://ftp.iinet.net.au unstable/main gnome-libs-data 1.4.2-11
  404 Not Found
Err http://ftp.iinet.net.au unstable/main libgnome-pilot1 0.1.71-5
  404 Not Found
Err http://ftp.iinet.net.au unstable/main libgnomeui32 1.4.2-11
  404 Not Found
Err http://ftp.iinet.net.au unstable/main libpisock8 0.11.7-2
  404 Not Found
Err http://ftp.iinet.net.au unstable/main libpisync0 0.11.7-2
  404 Not Found
Err http://ftp.iinet.net.au unstable/main gnome-pilot 0.1.71-5
  404 Not Found
Failed to fetch
http://ftp.iinet.net.au/debian/debian/pool/main/g/glibc/libc6-dev_2.3.1-11_i386.deb  
404 Not Found
Failed to fetch
http://ftp.iinet.net.au/debian/debian/pool/main/g/glibc/locales_2.3.1-11_all.deb  404 
Not Found
Failed to fetch
http://ftp.iinet.net.au/debian/debian/pool/main/g/glibc/libc6_2.3.1-11_i386.deb  404 
Not Found
Failed to fetch
http://ftp.iinet.net.au/debian/debian/pool/main/g/gnome-libs/gnome-libs-data_1.4.2-11_all.deb
  404 Not Found
Failed to fetch
http://ftp.iinet.net.au/debian/debian/pool/main/g/gnome-pilot/libgnome-pilot1_0.1.71-5_i386.deb
  404 Not Found
Failed to fetch
http://ftp.iinet.net.au/debian/debian/pool/main/g/gnome-libs/libgnomeui32_1.4.2-11_i386.deb
  404 Not Found
Failed to fetch
http://ftp.iinet.net.au/debian/debian/pool/main/p/pilot-link/libpisock8_0.11.7-2_i386.deb
  404 Not Found
Failed to fetch
http://ftp.iinet.net.au/debian/debian/pool/main/p/pilot-link/libpisync0_0.11.7-2_i386.deb
  404 Not Found
Failed to fetch
http://ftp.iinet.net.au/debian/debian/pool/main/g/gnome-pilot/gnome-pilot_0.1.71-5_i386.deb
  404 Not Found

I have tried running 'apt-get update' heaps of times, and even changed
my source list to point to another server (ftp.au.debian.org or whatever
it is) and they were still failing...Does anyone know what the hell it
could be??

Cheers,

Adam.


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RE: [SLUG] Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread Matt M


At 16:54 13/02/2003, David wrote:


yes.. but what about reliability? is there a difference? I need two new
drives, but I much prefer reliability to size (I'm told that size isn't
everything ;-)

David



I've got two of those Seagate drives (60GB). They're a little slower than, 
say, the newest Western Digital's, but they're very quiet and seem to be 
quite reliable. I also put an 80GB one into a friend's system, and it also 
seems to quite reliable.

Of course, there's no way it compares to a SCSI drive. If you've got the 
money, it's always the way to go.

Software RAID1 (mirror) is also great, but, the likelihood of failure is a 
small amount higher than some would have you believe -- a pair of drives 
from the same batch are more likely to fail with the same problem, at the 
same time than two drives purchased independently. (moral: always keep backups)

Cheers,

Matt

P.S. WD is supposed to be releasing a 10,000rpm IDE drive sometime later 
this month.

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[SLUG] apt failure

2003-02-13 Thread Peter Chubb
 Adam == Adam Hewitt [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

Adam Hi All, I have tried over the last few weeks to install various
Adam packages from unstable and although some packages download, most
Adam of them give me the following errors:

This happens when the mirror is not quite up-to-date.  The Packages
files that say what *should* be there have been mirrored, but the
.debs they refer to aren't there yet.

As the various mirrors are often broken in different ways, the best
plan is to have more choices...  I suggest ftp.aarnet.edu.au for a
more-or-less fast local mirror and mirror.cse.unsw.edu.au if you're
near (in network terms) UNSW.

deb ftp://mirror.aarnet.edu.au/pub/debian unstable main non-free contrib
deb ftp://mirror.cse.unsw.edu.au/debian unstable contrib main non-free


You can have more than one deb line in /etc/apt/sources.list --
apt-get tries each, if the first one gives a 404 it just tries the
next.

Peter C
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RE: [SLUG] apt failure

2003-02-13 Thread James_Gray
Adam,

Not sure if this will help, but try setting http_proxy and/or ftp_proxy to your 
gateway address (or ip.ip.ip.ip:port if you do actually have a proxy server on your 
network) - it fixed the same problem I was having behind a NAT'ing firewall.

In other words:

bash/korn/sh
# export http_proxy=123.123.123.123
# export ftp_proxy=123.123.123.123

csh/tcsh
# setenv http_proxy 123.123.123.123
# setenv ftp_proxy 123.123.123.123

Where 123.123.123.123 is your default gateway.  If this works, maybe add it to root's 
profile.  Other than this try man sources.list and man apt as there are _heaps_ of 
configuration options you can specify for apt to work with all sorts of weird network 
environments (like a place I was doing some consultancy for where http/https MUST go 
via a proxy on port 8080 but ftp goes via a different proxy on port 3128!).

Cheers,

James


 -Original Message-
 From: Adam Hewitt [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Thursday, 13 February 2003 8:59 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: [SLUG] apt failure
 
 
 Hi All,
 
 I have tried over the last few weeks to install various packages from
 unstable and although some packages download, most of them give me the
 following errors:
 
 Err http://ftp.iinet.net.au unstable/main libc6-dev 2.3.1-11
   404 Not Found
 Err http://ftp.iinet.net.au unstable/main locales 2.3.1-11
   404 Not Found
 Err http://ftp.iinet.net.au unstable/main libc6 2.3.1-11
   404 Not Found
 Err http://ftp.iinet.net.au unstable/main gnome-libs-data 1.4.2-11
   404 Not Found
 Err http://ftp.iinet.net.au unstable/main libgnome-pilot1 0.1.71-5
   404 Not Found
 Err http://ftp.iinet.net.au unstable/main libgnomeui32 1.4.2-11
   404 Not Found
 Err http://ftp.iinet.net.au unstable/main libpisock8 0.11.7-2
   404 Not Found
 Err http://ftp.iinet.net.au unstable/main libpisync0 0.11.7-2
   404 Not Found
 Err http://ftp.iinet.net.au unstable/main gnome-pilot 0.1.71-5
   404 Not Found
 Failed to fetch
 http://ftp.iinet.net.au/debian/debian/pool/main/g/glibc/libc6-
dev_2.3.1-11_i386.deb  404 Not Found
Failed to fetch
http://ftp.iinet.net.au/debian/debian/pool/main/g/glibc/locales_2.3.1-11_all.deb  404 
Not Found
Failed to fetch
http://ftp.iinet.net.au/debian/debian/pool/main/g/glibc/libc6_2.3.1-11_i386.deb  404 
Not Found
Failed to fetch
http://ftp.iinet.net.au/debian/debian/pool/main/g/gnome-libs/gnome-libs-data_1.4.2-11_all.deb
  404 Not Found
Failed to fetch
http://ftp.iinet.net.au/debian/debian/pool/main/g/gnome-pilot/libgnome-pilot1_0.1.71-5_i386.deb
  404 Not Found
Failed to fetch
http://ftp.iinet.net.au/debian/debian/pool/main/g/gnome-libs/libgnomeui32_1.4.2-11_i386.deb
  404 Not Found
Failed to fetch
http://ftp.iinet.net.au/debian/debian/pool/main/p/pilot-link/libpisock8_0.11.7-2_i386.deb
  404 Not Found
Failed to fetch
http://ftp.iinet.net.au/debian/debian/pool/main/p/pilot-link/libpisync0_0.11.7-2_i386.deb
  404 Not Found
Failed to fetch
http://ftp.iinet.net.au/debian/debian/pool/main/g/gnome-pilot/gnome-pilot_0.1.71-5_i386.deb
  404 Not Found

I have tried running 'apt-get update' heaps of times, and even changed
my source list to point to another server (ftp.au.debian.org or whatever
it is) and they were still failing...Does anyone know what the hell it
could be??

Cheers,

Adam.


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[SLUG] make menuconfig ncurses

2003-02-13 Thread Daniel Harper

I have just installed Redhat 8.0 professional on a Dell PowerServer, however
I am having problems with make menuconfig.

Now make menuconfig works, however what is displayed is a jumbled mess, and
the selection displays (The thing in the *) aren't being displayed
properly.

Any ideas? A ncurses problem or perhaps some colour or display settings???

Any help would be appreciated as redhat technical support won't help as it
is not classified as a 'installation support' problem.

Daniel

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Re: [SLUG] Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread John Clarke
On Thu, Feb 13, 2003 at 06:24:00PM +1100, David wrote:

 I went to the trouble of installing a hardware RAID card (anyone want to
 buy it?). When the data on one drive was corrupted by a drive fault, the
 other drive dutifully mirrored it so I had TWO corrupted sets of data.

Software RAID will do that too.

 The moral of this story is: backup with RAID is better than RAID without
 backup.

ITYM backup *without* RAID is better than RAID without backup.


Cheers,

John
-- 
I expect them to say the data is on a RAID, therefore you don't need
backups.  Because they are all fucking idiots.
-- Paul Tomblin
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RE: [SLUG] Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread Adam W
  The moral of this story is: backup with RAID is better than RAID 
  without backup.
 
 ITYM backup *without* RAID is better than RAID without backup.
Although, it does protect you from a blown motor in one of the drives -
without losing a day/week/months data.

Then again - you may find your tapes are buggered and cant retrieve any
data off that either!

I guess it all depends how expensive your data is.

Cheers!

AW.

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Re: [SLUG] Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread Christopher Samuel
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-

On Friday 14 Feb 2003 10:09 am, John Clarke wrote:

 ITYM backup *without* RAID is better than RAID without backup.

Agreed. And backup *with* RAID'ed SCSI disks is better still.

Jon, I am *so* thankful for that Netstrada of yours!

cheers,
Chris
- -- 
Chris SamuelWollongong, NSW

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Re: [SLUG] Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread John Clarke
On Fri, Feb 14, 2003 at 10:14:19AM +1100, Adam W wrote:
 
   The moral of this story is: backup with RAID is better than RAID 
   without backup.
  
  ITYM backup *without* RAID is better than RAID without backup.

 Although, it does protect you from a blown motor in one of the drives -
 without losing a day/week/months data.

True, but at least you can recover most of your data.  A corrupted RAID
array without backups means you're stuffed.

RAID increases availability but reduces reliability.

 Then again - you may find your tapes are buggered and cant retrieve any
 data off that either!

That's why you test them regularly.


Cheers,

John
-- 
Doesn't RAID stand for Random Array of Incompatible Drives?
-- Joe Zeff
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Re: [SLUG] Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread Terry Collins
Adam W wrote:

 
 Then again - you may find your tapes are buggered and cant retrieve any
 data off that either!

Shhez People! It is a standard part of admin work to regularly test your
backup is working. You should run a restore at least monthly.


-- 
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http://www.woa.com.au  
   Wombat Outdoor Adventures Bicycles, Computers, GIS, Printing,
Publishing

 People without trees are like fish without clean water
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RE: [SLUG] For that guy that asked about firewall products on Linux

2003-02-13 Thread dazza
On Sun, 9 Feb 2003, Jon Biddell wrote:

 Also take a look at www.shorewall.net - and the config file comments...

I can vouch for that one - I just installed Mandrake 9 {off an APC disk -
sue me} which comes with Shorewall installed - I have to say I'm damn
impressed with its flexibility and versatility.

I'm a little less than impressed with its documentation as supplied, but I
managed to make it work anyway. :-)

DaZZa

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Re: [SLUG] clicky clicky firewalls

2003-02-13 Thread dazza
On 9 Feb 2003, James Gregory wrote:

 I was just asked for recommendations of a good linux distro to run as a
 router/firewall. The user in question wants a gui type thing to
 configure it with. He has been using IPCop, and says it has some
 shortcomings. I was a little surprised that the shortcomings he cited,
 so I suspect it's actually the UI that is bad.

 Annnyway, I'm looking for something I can suggest to him which will
 setup a good iptables firewall and is clicky. Can be a firewall app that
 runs on another distro or a complete distro, I don't really mind.

Install redhat and buy Checkpoint Firewall1.

Remote administration via GUI - even from WindoZe workstations.

DaZZa

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Re: [SLUG] make menuconfig ncurses

2003-02-13 Thread Ian Wienand
On Fri, Feb 14, 2003 at 09:18:38AM +1100, Daniel Harper wrote:
 
 I have just installed Redhat 8.0 professional on a Dell PowerServer, however
 I am having problems with make menuconfig.
 
 Now make menuconfig works, however what is displayed is a jumbled mess, and
 the selection displays (The thing in the *) aren't being displayed
 properly.
 
 Any ideas? A ncurses problem or perhaps some colour or display settings???

are you running this from a console or on a x terminal window?

if it's a terminal window, do you have some wacky font selected that
isn't fixed width or has some other strange properties?  try running
it from just a plain xterm (i.e. type xterm at your prompt and run
in that) or run it on a console (ctrl-alt-f1 usually to switch).

-i
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.gelato.unsw.edu.au
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RE: [SLUG] For that guy that asked about firewall products on Linux

2003-02-13 Thread Jon Biddell
Hey - download the two interfaces example, uncomment ONE line in the
'rules' files, and you have a fully functional firewall...

So it's not PERFECT, but it's a damn sight better than what a lot of
people have been using, like ZoneAlarm...:-(

And it's a LOT easier to understand than iptables for newbies and me
!!!

 On Sun, 9 Feb 2003, Jon Biddell wrote:
 
  Also take a look at www.shorewall.net - and the config file comments...
 
 I can vouch for that one - I just installed Mandrake 9 {off an APC disk -
 sue me} which comes with Shorewall installed - I have to say I'm damn
 impressed with its flexibility and versatility.
 
 I'm a little less than impressed with its documentation as supplied, but I
 managed to make it work anyway. :-)
 
 DaZZa
 
 


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[SLUG] Backup!, was Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread David

I'm currently using CD's for backup. Has anyone any experience using DVD
for the same purpose? Is there any way to get around tar'ing so that
permissions are properly preserved on CD/DVD? Is there any reason that DVD
is a bad idea?

On Fri, 14 Feb 2003, Terry Collins wrote:

 Adam W wrote:

 
  Then again - you may find your tapes are buggered and cant retrieve any
  data off that either!

 Shhez People! It is a standard part of admin work to regularly test your
 backup is working. You should run a restore at least monthly.


 --
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 http://www.woa.com.au
Wombat Outdoor Adventures Bicycles, Computers, GIS, Printing,
 Publishing

  People without trees are like fish without clean water
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RE: [SLUG] For that guy that asked about firewall products on Linux

2003-02-13 Thread Alan L Tyree
On Fri, 2003-02-14 at 11:16, Jon Biddell wrote:

And if you download Bering from the leaf.sourceforge.net site you have
an excellent Shorewall-based one floppy firewall that runs neat on an
old 486.

 Hey - download the two interfaces example, uncomment ONE line in the
 'rules' files, and you have a fully functional firewall...
 
 So it's not PERFECT, but it's a damn sight better than what a lot of
 people have been using, like ZoneAlarm...:-(
 
 And it's a LOT easier to understand than iptables for newbies and me
 !!!
 
  On Sun, 9 Feb 2003, Jon Biddell wrote:
  
   Also take a look at www.shorewall.net - and the config file comments...
  
  I can vouch for that one - I just installed Mandrake 9 {off an APC disk -
  sue me} which comes with Shorewall installed - I have to say I'm damn
  impressed with its flexibility and versatility.
  
  I'm a little less than impressed with its documentation as supplied, but I
  managed to make it work anyway. :-)
  
  DaZZa
  
  
 
 
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[SLUG] Firewalls

2003-02-13 Thread mkraus
G'day all,

I've noticed that there are a number of firewall products discussed on 
this list.

I've been using straight iptables rules for firewalling. I'm educated in 
security, and am wondering how firewall rules applied straight to the 
kernel via iptables/netfilter compare and contrast with using a firewall 
product.

All the best.

Mike
---
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Administration
Capital Holdings Group (NSW) Pty Ltd
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
phone (02) 9955 8000 fax (02) 9955 8144
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[SLUG] Re: Backup!, was Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread Terry Collins
David wrote:

...snip..

Is there any reason that DVD is a bad idea?

My current understanding is that there isn't a common DVD writer
standard at the moment. So you are going to be bound to a proprietary
DVD writer, which if it looses out and disappears from the means that
your backups are only as good as your device lives.

Stick to Cd for the really important stuff, especially stuff you might
want to access in 10 years+. Use a DVD for bulk if you like.

-- 
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http://www.woa.com.au  
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RE: [SLUG] make menuconfig ncurses

2003-02-13 Thread Daniel Harper

Running it from a console (no X installed)

Turns out that if I ssh using putty it works sort of fine.

Daniel

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Ian Wienand
Sent: Friday, 14 February 2003 11:09 AM
To: Daniel Harper
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [SLUG] make menuconfig  ncurses


On Fri, Feb 14, 2003 at 09:18:38AM +1100, Daniel Harper wrote:

 I have just installed Redhat 8.0 professional on a Dell PowerServer,
however
 I am having problems with make menuconfig.

 Now make menuconfig works, however what is displayed is a jumbled mess,
and
 the selection displays (The thing in the *) aren't being displayed
 properly.

 Any ideas? A ncurses problem or perhaps some colour or display settings???

are you running this from a console or on a x terminal window?

if it's a terminal window, do you have some wacky font selected that
isn't fixed width or has some other strange properties?  try running
it from just a plain xterm (i.e. type xterm at your prompt and run
in that) or run it on a console (ctrl-alt-f1 usually to switch).

-i
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.gelato.unsw.edu.au
--
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[SLUG] make menuconfig ncurses

2003-02-13 Thread Daniel Harper

I have just installed Redhat 8.0 professional on a Dell PowerServer, however
I am having problems with make menuconfig.

Now make menuconfig works, however what is displayed is a jumbled mess, and
the selection displays (The thing in the *) aren't being displayed
properly.

Any ideas? A ncurses problem or perhaps some colour or display settings???

Any help would be appreciated as redhat technical support won't help as it
is not classified as a 'installation support' problem.

Daniel

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Re: [SLUG] make menuconfig ncurses

2003-02-13 Thread Carl G Lewis

See:
http://info.ccone.at/INFO/Mail-Archives/redhat/Dec-2002/msg00514.html

Actually my /etc/sysconfig/i18n now looks like:

LANG=en_US
SUPPORTED=en_US:en:pt_BR:pt
SYSFONT=iso01.16

#LANG=en_AU.UTF-8
#SUPPORTED=en_AU.UTF-8:en_AU:en:en_US.UTF-8:en_US:en
#SYSFONT=latarcyrheb-sun16

HTH


On Friday 14 February 2003 09:18, Daniel Harper wrote:
 I have just installed Redhat 8.0 professional on a Dell PowerServer,
 however I am having problems with make menuconfig.

 Now make menuconfig works, however what is displayed is a jumbled mess, and
 the selection displays (The thing in the *) aren't being displayed
 properly.

 Any ideas? A ncurses problem or perhaps some colour or display settings???

 Any help would be appreciated as redhat technical support won't help as it
 is not classified as a 'installation support' problem.

 Daniel

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Re: [SLUG] Re: Backup!, was Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread Jon Biddell
If you want to go DVD, you could look at a Sony DRU500A - writes ALL
formats (+-R/RW)

Jon

 David wrote:
 
 ...snip..
 
 Is there any reason that DVD is a bad idea?
 
 My current understanding is that there isn't a common DVD writer
 standard at the moment. So you are going to be bound to a proprietary
 DVD writer, which if it looses out and disappears from the means that
 your backups are only as good as your device lives.
 
 Stick to Cd for the really important stuff, especially stuff you might
 want to access in 10 years+. Use a DVD for bulk if you like.
 
 -- 
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 http://www.woa.com.au  
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Re: [SLUG] Re: Backup!, was Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread mlh
On Fri, Feb 14, 2003 at 01:33:58PM +1100, Jon Biddell wrote:
 If you want to go DVD, you could look at a Sony DRU500A - writes ALL
 formats (+-R/RW)

Does it run under linux ok?  For all formats?

Matt
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[SLUG] In need of servers

2003-02-13 Thread evilbunny
Hello slug,

  Slightly not about linux, but I'm currently trying to source
  reasonably priced 1RU servers in Sydney (which will run debian)
  however I don't seem to be able to get any anymore for less then
  about $2.5k to $3k...

  They will be primarily used for web and email serving, and only
  needs to be a bare minimum P3 or equiv, in a 1 RU case with 1/2 gig
  of ram and 2 x 20+ IDE drives... looking to pay about ~$2k...

  If anyone knows of any can you please let me know, this isn't a 1
  off and we will be looking to purchase at least 1 every 1 to 2
  months... Initially looking to purchase 2, most likely 3 of them...

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Re: [SLUG] Re: Backup!, was Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread Jon Biddell
As far as I am aware, yes... Take a look at
www.programmersparadise.com.au, they have it on their front page...

Jon

 On Fri, Feb 14, 2003 at 01:33:58PM +1100, Jon Biddell wrote:
  If you want to go DVD, you could look at a Sony DRU500A - writes ALL
  formats (+-R/RW)
 
 Does it run under linux ok?  For all formats?
 
 Matt
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Re: [SLUG] Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread dazza
On 13 Feb 2003, Jon Biddell wrote:

 Bit expensive - check the prices on www.programmersparadise.com.au - I
 think that size is about $153.

 Jon

  OK so I am getting a new harddrive (as a second HD) from my local PC store, and
  am thinking of a 40gb (or 60gb) Seagate 7200rpm 3y for $179.00, what do people
  think, and what are their experiences.

Or go to the North Rocks computer market on Sunday - where I got an 80gig,
7200 RPM drive for $180.

And, BTW, Jon - top posting sucks. :-) :-)

DaZZa

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[SLUG] Top Posting [Was: Hard Drives]

2003-02-13 Thread Jeff Waugh
quote who=[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 And, BTW, Jon - top posting sucks. :-) :-)

  A: No.
  Q: Should I include quotations after my reply?
- Nick Moffitt

- Jeff

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Re: [SLUG] Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread Graeme Robinson
On Thu, 13 Feb 2003, David wrote:

 The moral of this story is: backup with RAID is better than RAID without
 backup..

RAID is not backup. RAID adds disk redundancy, no more.

-=-=-==-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Graeme Robinson - Graenet consulting
www.graenet.com - internet solutions
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-==---=-=--=-=-=


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Re: [SLUG] Backup!, was Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread Jamie Wilkinson
This one time, at band camp, David wrote:
for the same purpose? Is there any way to get around tar'ing so that
permissions are properly preserved on CD/DVD? Is there any reason that DVD

Use the -p option to tar to preserve stuff.. there's a few more options in
the tar manpage that do all sorts of preserving permissions, owners, types,
etc.

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Re[2]: [SLUG] Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread evilbunny
Hello Graeme,

 The moral of this story is: backup with RAID is better than RAID without
 backup..

GR RAID is not backup. RAID adds disk redundancy, no more.

Raid can also do mirroring... or any combination of a lot of things,
depending on the number of disks, the way you partition etc...

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Re: [SLUG] Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread Jeff Waugh
quote who=evilbunny

 GR RAID is not backup. RAID adds disk redundancy, no more.
 
 Raid can also do mirroring... or any combination of a lot of things,
 depending on the number of disks, the way you partition etc...

That has nothing to do with backup though. It's 100% about disk redundancy,
and that is all RAID does.

- Jeff

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Re[2]: [SLUG] Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread Graeme Robinson
On Fri, 14 Feb 2003, evilbunny wrote:

 Hello Graeme,
 
  The moral of this story is: backup with RAID is better than RAID without
  backup..
 
 GR RAID is not backup. RAID adds disk redundancy, no more.
 
 Raid can also do mirroring... or any combination of a lot of things,
 depending on the number of disks, the way you partition etc...

No, all RAID does is provide disk redundancy whether through disk
mirroring or disk spanning volumes. The acronym stands for Redundant
array of inexpensive disks.  Whatever RAID you choose is some form of
disk redundancy.  

Anyway the point is that RAID in any shape or form is not backup. This
is a common misconception that's worth taking time to dispell. Backup 
should be considered quite separately from RAID.

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Graeme Robinson - Graenet consulting
www.graenet.com - internet solutions
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Re: [SLUG] Backup!, was Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread dazza
On Fri, 14 Feb 2003, David wrote:

 I'm currently using CD's for backup. Has anyone any experience using DVD
 for the same purpose? Is there any way to get around tar'ing so that
 permissions are properly preserved on CD/DVD? Is there any reason that DVD
 is a bad idea?

Simple. Lack of standards for data DVD's

There's DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD-ROM, DVD+R, DVD+RW, DVD-RAM and probably
another one I can't remember.

There's one drive by Sony which does multiple - but not all - variants

SONY DVD±R/RW/CD-R/RW DRU-500A

Write
 DVD-R 4x
 DVD-RW2x
 DVD+R   2.4x
 DVD+RW  2.4x
 CD-R 24x

Read
 DVD   8x
 CD   32x

Buffer 8192kb (Burn-Proof)

That does what *appear* to be the 4 main DVD standards, but who knows if
they're going to win out?

DaZZa


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Re: [SLUG] Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread Jeff Waugh
quote who=Jeff Waugh

  GR RAID is not backup. RAID adds disk redundancy, no more.
  
  Raid can also do mirroring... or any combination of a lot of things,
  depending on the number of disks, the way you partition etc...
 
 That has nothing to do with backup though. It's 100% about disk redundancy,
 and that is all RAID does.

That was a bit of a sweeping statement. In context it was correct, but RAID
can serve other purposes - RAID-0 (stripe) doesn't give you any redundancy
at all, but can crank up your throughput. RAID-5 gives you a nice boost for
reads as well as redundancy, etc. That said, no one I know is insane enough
to run RAID-0 - RAID-0+1 (with redundancy) makes a lot more sense.

- Jeff

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Re: [SLUG] Firewalls

2003-02-13 Thread Christopher Samuel
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-

On Friday 14 Feb 2003 11:47 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 I've been using straight iptables rules for firewalling. I'm educated in
 security, and am wondering how firewall rules applied straight to the
 kernel via iptables/netfilter compare and contrast with using a firewall
 product.

A firewall is not so much a product or a feature as an architecture. You can 
build a firewall on one system, or you can build it out of a number of 
systems.

A firewall is usually made up of a packet filter of some sort (either stateful 
or stateless, it used to be the latter, usually the former these days) and a 
collection of proxies and services.  These days you can add an IDS of some 
sort on top of that as well.

The idea is that as many protocols as possible are forced to be proxied 
through the firewall system. These proxies are intended to constrain the 
protocol being transmitted to sane values, to control who can talk to who, to 
force extra authentication, etc.

So, for instance, a typical firewall would have proxies for HTTP, FTP, SMTP, 
Telnet, Real Audio, etc.  These could be colocated on the same system, or if 
you're really paranoid split across systems so a compromise of one would be 
contained to just that system.

Typically things like CyberGuard and Gauntlet combine all of these features 
onto one box, but people have built good firewalls with screening routers and 
some PC's to run as the proxies.

cheers!
Chris
- -- 
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Re: [SLUG] Backup!, was Hard Drives

2003-02-13 Thread Christopher Samuel
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-

On Friday 14 Feb 2003 3:20 pm, Jamie Wilkinson wrote:

 Use the -p option to tar to preserve stuff.. there's a few more options in
 the tar manpage that do all sorts of preserving permissions, owners, types,
 etc.

My understanding is that is only for extraction and not for creating the 
archive.  That information is saved anyway, check it with tar tvf foo.tar.

Chris
- -- 
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Re: [SLUG] Firewalls

2003-02-13 Thread Umar Goldeli
To add to this, and looking at it from a few steps back, one can summarize
the base functionality of a firewall as something which sits in between
various areas of a network (or networks) with differing levels of trust
and enforces the semantics of these levels.

//umar.

 A firewall is not so much a product or a feature as an architecture. You can 
 build a firewall on one system, or you can build it out of a number of 
 systems.

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