Kevin,
I'd like to force that connection to drop so that
Mozilla will start checking that account again. And I like to do this
without having to stop and restart Mozilla.
Perhaps the attached script will do the trick? My version of Mozilla
doesn't seem to object to this sort of chicanery.
Excelle
>> jesus H!! I can smell that one all the way over here!
>
>Does it smell like lilacs?
>
>I suppose if you had done this, you would have checked the return
>value from close and called perror() if -1 was returned. (-:
Sir, I would not presume to "improve" on this hack -
it is a Hacker's hack
"Michael ODonnell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> jesus H!! I can smell that one all the way over here!
Does it smell like lilacs?
I suppose if you had done this, you would have checked the return
value from close and called perror() if -1 was returned. (-:
Hahahahaha.
--kevin
_
> for fd in $FDS ; do
>echo "call close($fd)" >>"$GDBX"
> done
> echo detach >>"$GDBX"
>
> gdb -batch -x "$GDBX"
jesus H!! I can smell that one all the way over here!
___
gnhlug-discuss mailing list
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http://mail.gnhlug.or
Larry Cook <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> What you're asking for is kindof weird
>
> Yes, I guess it is. Let me explain:
>
> A POP3 server I use doesn't send a response on occasion. This causes
> Mozilla to stop checking that POP3 account because the connection is
> still up. And the connectio
What you're asking for is kindof weird
Yes, I guess it is. Let me explain:
A POP3 server I use doesn't send a response on occasion. This causes Mozilla
to stop checking that POP3 account because the connection is still up. And
the connection just stays up, with no traffic, as far as I can tell
Larry Cook <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Does anyone know of or have a utility that can drop TCP connections
> without killing the process that made the connection?
Warning: Cisco's sleek black gunships are speeding towards your office
right now. Ha ha. At least they're not sending th
At 2:12 PM -0400 5/24/04, Larry Cook wrote:
Does anyone know of or have a utility that can drop TCP connections
without killing the process that made the connection?
Hi Larry.
Strangely enough, we've been doing precisely this type of testing
lately by pulling the plug out of the back of the machi
Does anyone know of or have a utility that can drop TCP connections without
killing the process that made the connection?
I'm trying dsniff/tcpkill and hunt, but both need to see some traffic first.
Either there's no keep-alive packets being sent on the connection, or I'm not
setting the filter