On Thursday 05 July 2007 5:27:19 James wrote:
> What I'm looking for is a simple procedure I can use to set
> up all my gentoo systems so I can easily move this drive from
> machine to machine and have access to the files under gentoo
> and windoz (2k,xp,vista).
When I did this I just used ext3 an
Hey gang...
I was just looking for some opinions. I am replacing my current mail server.
Right now I am using courier-imap and I am happy with it. The only thing
that concerns me is that I have heard grumblings that courier has some
security issues. I was just curious which IMAP server ot
On Tuesday 27 June 2006 18:18, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> > Neil Bothwick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >> Did you emerge dovecot with the pop3d USE flag?
> >
> > Nope and Jean has explained a bit about that... sorry for the line noise
>
> Looks to be not the end of the
On Saturday 24 June 2006 12:49 pm, Lord Sauron wrote:
> I honestly am harbouring delusions of using the faster null modem
> stuff to directly sync my laptop with a future Linux CVS/Web server,
> so that I can have a update of the whole smash in my laptop once a
> day, rather than waiting for a slow
On Saturday 25 March 2006 21:58, Peter Ruskin wrote:
> On Saturday 25 March 2006 21:22, Lord Sauron wrote:
> > Found xinit! However... it's very... confusing.
>
> What you want is a file called .xsession in your home directory.
> Mine just contains:
>
> #!/bin/sh
> `which startkde`
Why not just:
On Friday 10 March 2006 18:05, Eric Bliss wrote:
> Before you do that... did you also edit /etc/mtab in addition to
> /etc/fstab?
>
> Just a thought, since we are talking about separate partitions to mount.
Don't touch mtab. mtab is auto-magically generated by mount.
Josh
--
gentoo-user@gent
On Wednesday 08 March 2006 22:04, Darryl Wagoner wrote:
> On 3/8/06, Josh Helmer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > man 2 mount is not going to help. If you had looked closer you would
> > realize
> > that the "data" argument is the last argument not the filesy
On Wednesday 08 March 2006 21:07, Petr Uzel wrote:
> IMHO it's easier to look at 'man 2 mount' :
>
> ...
> Values for the filesystemtype argument supported by the kernel are listed
> in /proc/filesystems (like "minix", "ext2", "msdos", "proc", "nfs",
> "iso9660" etc.).
man 2 mount is not going t
On Wednesday 08 March 2006 19:55, c.s.prakash wrote:
> when i mount the nfs through the system call
>
> mount("192.168.0.51:/root", "/mnt/9", "nfs", 0, "rw, async");
>
> it shows an invalid argument. but when i do this thru mount command it
> mounts without any problem
It's been about 4 years sinc
On Tuesday 29 November 2005 08:17 pm, Michael Sullivan wrote:
> Yeah. Each one has an entry that says
>
> 127.0.0.1 localhost.localdomain localhost
>
> and then it has an entry consisting of
>
> 192.168.1.? name.espersunited.com name
Looks correct to me.
Someone may have already sugge
> Yes, I see that on all our servers. Not much more than an annoyance unless
> you have stupidly obvious passwords, but annoying for sure. On customer
> servers that don't require access from the everywhere and anywhere I just
> configure hosts.allow and hosts.deny to drop traffic from all but kn
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