On 19/10/10 09:27, Simon O'Riordan wrote:
John,
Ran chkrootkit - had a lot of warnings about one application in
particular - Eclipse. Otherwise clean.
I guess eclipse is just a messy programme.
Simono
Yes, you will get some hidden directory warnings like Eclipse, it
doesn't know about but if
On 18/10/10 18:06, Tim wrote:
On Monday 18 October 2010 15:30:49 John Cooper wrote:
On 13/10/10 11:08, John Cooper wrote:
On 13/10/10 09:38, Robert Bronsdon wrote:
On Tue, 12 Oct 2010 20:26:30 +0100, John Cooper
l...@discoverlinux.co.uk wrote:
A very secure internal network can still be
On 13/10/10 09:38, Robert Bronsdon wrote:
On Tue, 12 Oct 2010 20:26:30 +0100, John Cooper
l...@discoverlinux.co.uk wrote:
A very secure internal network can still be snooped by a very secure
network employee and find your passwords! It really is bad practice/lazy.
Depending on the size of
On 12/10/10 17:16, Terry Coles wrote:
What we have decided to do is to install cygwin on a little used server on the
internal network and use terminal services to get to it via VPN. The server
isn't running a firewall and everything will be inside our secure netork, so
we think it will work.
On Tuesday 12 Oct 2010, John Cooper wrote:
Great news. Sounds like a good plan to use the internal network server.
Although I don't recommend using telnet to logon (unencrypted, password
in clear text), it is great for diagnostics, like telnet ipaddress
We're not too worried about using
Hi,
We need to do some work with our SparcStation again, but this time remotely from
a windows machine. I can telnet to it and carry out the usual shell type
activities, but one or two things we need to do with it, launch a dialog box
under X.
What is the simplest way to do this? I was
Presuming you have X installed on the SparcStation???
If not then this is your first step.
Is there a reason you cannot run a VNC or RDP server on the SparcStation?
If you absolutely _have_ to create an actual remote X instance from the
SparcStation then your going to have to use something
Hi Terry,
We need to do some work with our SparcStation again, but this time
remotely from a windows machine. I can telnet to it and carry out the
usual shell type activities, but one or two things we need to do with
it, launch a dialog box under X.
What is the simplest way to do this?Â
On 11/10/10 14:18, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
What is the simplest way to do this? I was initially advised to try
PuTTY, which was just as good at getting me into a shell as telnet,
but I couldn't get it to give me a graphical environment.
PuTTY won't help the X window from your client on the
On 11 October 2010 at 14:18 Ralph Corderoy ra...@inputplus.co.uk wrote:
We need to do some work with our SparcStation again, but this time
remotely from a windows machine. I can telnet to it and carry out the
usual shell type activities, but one or two things we need to do with
it,
Hi Terry,
6. In your telnet session type, DISPLAY=windows_hostname_or_ip_address:0.0
7. In your telnet session type, export DISPLAY
...
I'm OK until I get to step 6, when I get a 'Command not recognised'
error. Is sending that command via the telnet session causing the
problem or am I
On 11 October 2010 at 15:04 Ralph Corderoy ra...@inputplus.co.uk wrote:
Hi Terry,
6. In your telnet session type, DISPLAY=windows_hostname_or_ip_address:0.0
7. In your telnet session type, export DISPLAY
...
I'm OK until I get to step 6, when I get a 'Command not recognised'
On 11 October 2010 at 15:50 John Cooper l...@discoverlinux.co.uk wrote:
On 11/10/10 15:23, d-...@hadrian-way.co.uk wrote:
Excellent! A step forward. Unfortunately, there doesn't seem to be
an export command in the
csh. According to the man page it is available in sh and ksh, but
Hi Terry,
http://www.straightrunning.com/XmingNotes/ is one Windows X server,
and I tend to use xclock(1) as a simple test X client. You may want
to make sure it will display OK when sitting at the SparcStation's
screen before using it to test connecting to a remote X server.Â
X is
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