On Mon, 12 Feb 2001 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On 12 Feb 2001, at 18:41, Jack Coates wrote:
>
> > Just want to solicit some feedback on my dedicated server
> > appliance.
>
> > Everything is built into a single root.lrp with centralized
> > configuration (i.e. linuxrc does everything necessary to
Everyone,
I placed the web site in CVS today. Follow the instructions in these faqs,
and use the command that follows to check out a copy (replace loginname
with your SF unix user name).
https://sourceforge.net/docman/display_doc.php?docid=765&group_id=1
https://sourceforge.net/docman/display_
A serial line computer shutdown button and LED
This may be of use to the intended users of LEAF machines.
We could include this on the site FAQ or in distribution documents.
I will look into creating a .lrp or apkg package for it.
http://mercury.chem.pitt.edu/~tiho/LinuxFocus/English/January2001
On 12 Feb 2001, at 18:41, Jack Coates wrote:
> Just want to solicit some feedback on my dedicated server
> appliance.
> Everything is built into a single root.lrp with centralized
> configuration (i.e. linuxrc does everything necessary to initialize
> hardware and configure the system, then an
Hi,
Just want to solicit some feedback on my dedicated server appliance.
Development is proceeding pretty well on these image ideas:
Boot-disk -- a stripped 2.2.18 kernel based on Oxygen and optimized for
providing minimal services on a single NIC. SSH and PortSentry built in,
but ipchains is no
you might find this useful:
http://www.fish.com/security/hide-n-seek.html
--
Jack Coates
Monkeynoodle: It's what's for dinner!
On Mon, 12 Feb 2001, Scott C. Best wrote:
>
> Heyaz. So...if you broke into a system, left yourself
> a backdoor, and wanted to cover your traces, what files wou
Heyaz. So...if you broke into a system, left yourself
a backdoor, and wanted to cover your traces, what files would
would you affect doing so? There are some obvious ones, so
I wanted to start there and develop a thorough list. Thinking
out loud, for my Deb potato, I'd affect:
/etc/passw