On Wed, Oct 09, 2002 at 02:05:49PM -0400, Eric B Kiser wrote:
I am looking for the most recent versions of nmap.lrp and snort.lrp. I
checked the CVS packages repository and the only thing I found was an older
version of nmap and no snort.
I'm the one who's probably responsible for those
On Thu, Oct 10, 2002 at 03:27:03AM +0200, ArisB wrote:
I've followed the install instructions on the website, it still isn't
working.
but when i install a ssh client on the firewall and then try to connect to
the sshd (wich is allso on the firewall) i still can't connect, then i get
On Tue, Aug 20, 2002 at 09:40:57AM -0700, Cass Tolken wrote:
Arin is for American IPs, you can further modify my script modifications to
include European, Asian, etc. IPs as an exercise ;)
Why not just use jwhois (or other whois client)?
Jwhois is a GNU project and automatically knows which
On Sun, Aug 18, 2002 at 11:30:55PM +0200, Manfred Schuler wrote:
in the last few weeks I discovered some unknown traffic on my firewall.
I inserted a rule to log all traffic on the input and output chains and found that
the
incoming packet is neither rejected nor denied, but answered by the
On Sat, Aug 17, 2002 at 08:19:13PM -0700, Jeff Newmiller wrote:
On Fri, 16 Aug 2002, Kory Krofft wrote:
Cass,
Did you enter the line as presented in the /etc/crontab file?
* * * * * root /bin/date /tmp/mycrontest.txt
Make sure that the root entry is required (that is old syntax);
is
On Fri, Jul 05, 2002 at 10:25:23AM -0500, Charles Steinkuehler wrote:
I've tried about fifteen ways to get the prompt to look like this:
[root@firewall /usr/sbin]# --- where /usr/sbin is a current
working directory
To get PWD as part of the prompt in ash, you have to intercept the cd
On Mon, Aug 05, 2002 at 12:48:13PM -0500, Russ Price wrote:
I finally found a copy at
http://leaf.sourceforge.net/devel/ddouthitt/packages/
Suggestion: we need a better way of indexing/cataloging LRP packages.
That directory would be my package repository...
That particular directory
On Thu, Jun 20, 2002 at 11:35:54AM -0400, Akom wrote:
I'm getting a bit concerned about what's going in my logs for the past couple
of days. I'm running Bering 1.0 rc2 with Shorewall 1.3.1, standard run of the
mill setup:
external eth0: dhcp, norfc1982, noping, routefilter, blacklist
On Thu, Jun 06, 2002 at 10:03:21PM -0500, guitarlynn wrote:
On Thursday 06 June 2002 21:28, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
EXTERN_UDP_PORTS=ip.ad.dr.es/32_tftp
EXTERN_PROTO0=69 ip.ad.dr.es/32
I would presumably also need a line for the x-server, but I
don't know of-hand what it is.. at any
On Monday 03 June 2002 12:54 pm, Jeff Newmiller wrote:
On Mon, 3 Jun 2002, Ant Ken wrote:
how would i go about getting make and gcc and any other
development tools on to lrp?
You don't.
is there a package avalible?
No.
There is, actually, a make.lrp - make is good for a lot of
--On Monday, May 27, 2002 10:00 AM -0400 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm still wondering how to tunnel my http traffic thought ssh to my
internal web server. I use Putty to connect to a RH box behind LEAF from
outside giving me a comand line interface. Is the tunneling done by
somehow
--On Wednesday, May 22, 2002 4:15 PM -0500 Omar D. Samuels
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can my LRP box make use of dial-up in any way if I have
an ISA telephone modem in there?
This is how I use my Oxygen installation the most - it is configured for
dialup any of three Internet connections
a ipcalc wrapper for ipmask if you Really Must...
It's available as an LRP package already, too.
# ipmask
ipmask version 0.33, Copyright (C) 2001 David Douthitt [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ipmask comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details see the COPYING file
that accompained this distribution
On Monday 20 May 2002 02:53 am, Stephen Lee wrote:
On Sun, 2002-05-19 at 12:28, David Douthitt wrote:
On Saturday 18 May 2002 11:14 am, Stephen Lee wrote:
I tunnel imap and smtp all the time except I use stunnel.
Presumably you are pointing your host1 mail client to localhost:110
On Monday 20 May 2002 03:28 pm, Stephen Lee wrote:
On Mon, 2002-05-20 at 10:13, David Douthitt wrote:
Maybe I should try stunnel - I just fumbled my way through using
cyrus-sasl to generate some sort of *.pem file. Now if I only knew for
sure if cyrus-imap was using it
You could
On Monday 20 May 2002 04:52 pm, you wrote:
ssh -L 110:host2:110 -L 143:host2:143 user@host2
(I am trying to use IMAP only - but it's hard)
Maybe I am just dense but I am wondering why you don't just use
SSL/TLS to connect to your IMAP service. I believe this is a
documented
On Monday 20 May 2002 04:37 pm, Stephen Lee wrote:
On Mon, 2002-05-20 at 13:43, David Douthitt wrote:
Actually, the *.pem file was used, but an error generated:
May 20 13:54:47 lena imapd[80986]: TLS engine: cannot load CA
data May 20 13:54:47 lena imapd[80986]: error initializing TLS
On Saturday 18 May 2002 11:14 am, Stephen Lee wrote:
I tunnel imap and smtp all the time except I use stunnel.
Presumably you are pointing your host1 mail client to localhost:110
or localhost:143 and then ssh tunnelling those corresponding ports
to host2:some_other_port_for poporimap? How
On Sunday 19 May 2002 02:28 pm, David Douthitt wrote:
On Saturday 18 May 2002 11:14 am, Stephen Lee wrote:
I tunnel imap and smtp all the time except I use stunnel.
Presumably you are pointing your host1 mail client to
localhost:110 or localhost:143 and then ssh tunnelling those
On Sunday 19 May 2002 11:24 pm, you wrote:
David Douthitt wrote:
On Saturday 18 May 2002 11:14 am, Stephen Lee wrote:
I tunnel imap and smtp all the time except I use stunnel.
Perhaps ssh -g option?
Don't use that:
dgd $ slogin -L 143:lena:143 -L 110:lena:110 dgd@lena
I always liked
On Saturday 11 May 2002 04:48 am, Enchufa2.com wrote:
What I would like to do is prevent users from changing the browser proxy
configuration at their workstations and then bypass the proxy/cache and
also to prevent unauthorized users to change their e-mail app configuration
and become able
On Wednesday 08 May 2002 03:13 pm, you wrote:
If you care to read this mess and comment, cool.
If not, if you could suggest someone to send this
problem to, that would be great.
This is not exactly a bug report, more a mystery report.
linuxrc is not executing when booting on an STPC
match - as well as the ability to write to a NEW disk.
Another thing: Define The Problem. I don't see backing up to this
disk or that a problem. What Problem does all this extra code solve?
--
David Douthitt
UNIX Systems Administrator
HP-UX, Unixware, Linux
[EMAIL PROTECTED
On 4/3/02 at 3:17 PM, Matt Schalit [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
David Douthitt wrote:
Packages will be backed up to whatever disk is in the
drive - make sure you put the appropriate disk in the
boot drive before backing up.
I have a small request that the backup scripts write
. Is this
possible to support? If so, any config assistance would
be appreciated.
As it happens, I've just begun work on setting up ppp. If memory
serves, you need Linux 2.4 and ppp 2.4.1 to make multilink work.
I've been working with ppp 2.4.1; if you want a copy let me know.
--
David Douthitt
UNIX Systems
that only those that are installed will be updated.
Another thing: make sure you don't run anything you don't need: go
through /etc/inetd.conf and remove everything that's unneeded. Do the
same through the use of ntsysv or chkconfig. Then reboot.
Hope this helps.
--
David Douthitt
UNIX Systems
you put the appropriate disk in the boot drive before backing up.
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conflict; I don't know FreeS/WAN. I do know Oxygen
though :) and since no one spoke up
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vulnerabilities to date. This vulnerability is in practically
everything that uses SNMP.
So check out that snmp first perhaps Charles can shed some light
on this...
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which responds to a connect
from port 80. It's also possible to steal the file-descriptors from
a running shell.
I'm not sure it's entirely likely this has happened to you, but I
wouldn't rule it out - and all those attempted connects are
interesting...
--
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: Connection refused
Another thing to check - don't use 127.0.0.1, but the actual IP of the
host.
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, you need to make sure you use the LRP patches -- or
DONT -- as is required by the distribution you use. Also, if you
switch from 2.0 to 2.2 or 2.2 to 2.4 this becomes NON-trivial.
4) David Douthitt had stated that the LRP patches were no
longer needed in some situations. It was my understanding
changes - relative to /mnt/loop...
When done...
5. Unmount image: umount /mnt/loop
6. Compress image: gzip -c - root.ima root.gz
7. Copy back to boot disk
I'll work on a script to do this.
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.
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get this. There's no server listening
on that port.
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of data (of
whatever you've specified).
LCDd is finicky about options, as it's option parsing is pretty bad -
if things act strange, then move the options from one side of the
command line to the other...
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David Douthitt
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don't have DNS. If telnet
hangs and times out with no connection - you have no connectivity.
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to local time, not GMT.
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these two
problems is -- should I be trying to put code into
multicron-d, or do I need to write a separate script?
(I've never done that either)
To be compatable with future versions, you're better off writing your
own script from scratch and not using multicron.
--
David Douthitt
UNIX Systems
On 2/5/02 at 7:55 AM, Jack Coates [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
And how; there's a xntpd package out there, but I haven't
seen ntpdate. xntpd's binary is 175,832 bytes; the whole
package is 88,007 bytes compressed.
ntpdate is 33k uncompressed (and stripped).
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UNIX Systems
be better to use...
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be difficult to put together;
I've just not done it. Using a generic unpatched Linux kernel proved
to be too attractive :)
If there is call for one I can put one together
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and fdformat.lrp just for this purpose.
It would also help to know what the error messages or warnings are -
you didn't say - more details, please.
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which modules are needed for your setup.
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panicking when the
disk runs out of space... and you find out too late...
* Control system kernel parameters with sysctl
Available from the download area at http://leaf.sf.net/
--
David Douthitt
UNIX Systems Administrator
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.
You might want to note that ash is now incorporated into busybox for
about the last two versions or so - makes it much easier as ash had
splintered into many divergent versions, not to mention that the
official ash distribution did NOT use GNU make... it used something
odd and strange.
--
David
is to hard code the actual locations. Some programs look
like this:
#!/bin/sh
RM=/bin/rm
GZIP=/usr/bin/gzip
$GZIP xx $RM
...and so forth. I think that setting your own PATH is easier - and
probably also more secure.
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David Douthitt
UNIX Systems Administrator
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; could be a hardware problem. If this is
an actual router with two interfaces, if one is working and uses the
same driver, I'd just swap the two cable to the two cards and try
again.
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system; currently Dachstein and Oxygen are the two main LEAF
variants. The system you set up sounds like it was likely Eigerstein
or Dachstein; however, Oxygen is very powerful and capable also...
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On 12/28/01 at 5:41 PM, Jan Linders [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is there a way to find out which kernel version I'm running
on my LRP Router ?
Try one of these:
# uname -r
# cat /proc/sys/kernel/osrelease
# sysctl kernel.osrelease
the '#' is your shell prompt; don't type it...
--
David
kernel.org comes to mind...)
If you could set up host_1, host_2, etc. to be rsync recipients, why
not tunnel rsync via ssh through the firewall?
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think Oxygen is any harder than Red Hat, say, and it certainly
has a lot more documentation in the configuration files.
As for what is in it it has a lot more than Dachstein, but then
it's more of a general distribution than Dachstein is.
--
David Douthitt
UNIX Systems Administrator
HP-UX
to be missing.
Use netstat -nr where you would otherwise use route -n.
In Oxygen, netstat is also missing; use ip route show instead.
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others; make sure the packages don't conflict; perhaps you can
manipulate the package contents to make them work out.
Pete Dubler
Fort Collins, CO
How IS Fort Collins these days?
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Matt Schalit wrote:
That's what I did for a friend. We had Oxygen
running on his @Home rigged as a static IP setup
even though it's dhcp.
Then when they choked and became attbi (they never
should have merged with the white elephant Excite),
their dhcp is so touchy that I couldn't rely
Charles Steinkuehler wrote:
- is it possible to change the root
ramdisk size and still booting from
the CD ??
Yes, but you have to burn a new CD, with a different boot-floppy image.
I thought you COULD change it. Hold down the left shift, and at the
boot: prompt type
linux
Ewald Wasscher wrote:
Sergio Morilla wrote:
Thanks for the package and the dependecies info!!
Just one more question, I would like to move the cache to an HD I have
on the computer, is this a paremeter on squid.conf?
IIRC it's CacheDirectory. The manual at http://www.squid-cache.org/
Todd Pearsall wrote:
I grabbed it from the Oxygen packages, but I don't know and can't currently
check what version it is.
It's the same one.
I've compiled Squid 2.4 STABLE3 to run under glibc 2.0; it should work
in any system. I also compiled it with SNMP enabled. It requires the
libm
Todd Pearsall wrote:
On a related note, I was having problems after I started using squid on a
dachstein CD (default RAM disk size) on a P75 with 32MB of RAM. After
installing squid it would work fine for a while and then I'd start
periodically seeing messages like:
VM Process Killing:
I tried everything to compile SquidGuard. The stable version requires
libdb 2.6.4+ and won't work with any libdb 3 less than 3.4+ something.
It won't work with libdb 4 at all apparently. It also has bugs that
keep it from compiling, and hasn't been updated in almost two years.
The development
Kevin Kropf wrote:
Thanks for your trouble. I will read up on it and perhaps give it a try.
Probably best way to go is to do the following:
1. Use Red Hat 5.2 or Mandrake 5.2 or Debian 2.1 distributions - all
glibc 2.0 based.
2. Get libdb v3 probably - v4 may not yet be supported, and v3
David Douthitt wrote:
# Remove package from packages list:
PKGD=/var/lib/lrpkg
mv $PKGD/packages $PKGD/pkg.old
grep -v $PKGD/pkg.old $PKGD/packages
This has an error; should be:
# Remove package from packages list
PKGD=/var/lib/lrpkg
mv $PKGD/packages $PKGD/pkg.old
grep -v
Matt Schalit wrote:
I agree here with the pci-scan loading before the nic module(s)
and that Dachstein is the simplest and most surefire release to get
you up an running with little effort. There are two major things to setup:
1) # echo 'export EDITOR=e3vi' /etc/profile
#
Dr. Richard W. Tibbs wrote:
I had the same problem (t:t:t:t:) at the boot prompt with the latest
oxygen release
loading on a Gateway 2000 pentium-1 machine.
A serial port (actually two) are certainly present on the Gateway --
so no serial port present shouldn't be the issue,
unless having
Dr. Richard W. Tibbs wrote:
I am trying to use the latest Oxygen with the firewall data disk as a
second disk.
Everything boots up fine (using IBM aptiva doorstop as my firewall
device, with 2 netgear ethernet NICs).
When asked to configure the system, I answer yes, and I get an edit
Kevin Kropf wrote:
I have Squid running on dachstein-rc2-1680.exe and would like to redirect
all internal port 80 requests to the default Squid port of 3128 on the LRP
box.
I have read through the archives and found very little of use.
What is the best way to do this?
This is in the
Jeff Newmiller wrote:
On Tue, 11 Dec 2001, David Douthitt wrote:
[...]
grep -v '^'$PKGNAME'$' $PKGD/pkg.old $PKGD/packages
why the rigamarole with the single quotes?
grep -v ^$PKGNAME$ $PKGD/pkg.old $PKGD/packages
I was playing chicken :)
The first breaks down this way
Dr. Richard W. Tibbs wrote:
OK, per some other advice, dachstien is easier to use as basic
firewall.
I built a boot disk based on rc1. Loaded up on doorstop IBM Aptiva.
Several questions:
What is the difference between the various dachstein .bin's? (rc1,
rc2, pr1pr4)?
Versions.
How
Patrick Benson wrote:
Firewalk uses a traceroute method with UDP and ICMP pings, gathering
information of the network and hosts(s) with the TTL fields, very
interesting, indeed...:
http://www.packetfactory.net/Projects/Firewalk/firewalk-final.html
Been a package for quite a while:
Michael D. Schleif wrote:
However, how do I silently deny anything from any source that is
destined for 255.255.255.255 ???
Since ATT Broadband moved me to the new network, I am flooded with this
crap:
PROTO=17 12.242.20.50:67 255.255.255.255:68
What do you think?
That's the
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have some basic SNMP monitoring of my Dachstein machines working using
the old SNMP package and MRTG. With these I keep a constant graph of the
activities of eth0, eth1 and ipsec0 on both ends of my test VPN tunnel. I
converted to net-snmp and everything is still
).
Then you can see what is filling your wtmp file.
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There is now a new package at
http://leaf.sourceforge.net/pub/oxygen/packages
ntpclient.lrp
It is a small NTP client used to set the clock from a reliable time
source on the Internet.
I also fixed many packages; about a dozen or so had errors...
___
Syed Irfan wrote:
i have downloaded oxygen cd iso and about to download dachstein-cd iso
the onygen iso is about 600M and dachstein-cd iso is about 18.9M
why is oxygen 600M, i dont understand
The reason the Oxygen CDROM is 600M is because it includes a lot of
things OTHER than just the
Sergio Morilla wrote:
The obvious question is...
Where can I get syslog-ng.lrp and some info about it??
I don't think I was successful at making a package it also requires
a library called libol. I've been running syslog-ng on several full
distributions here for some time.
I'm not
Dr. Richard W. Tibbs wrote:
I built a 1.680 MB boot floppy based on the latest oxygen release, and
I tried it out on a humble Packard-Bell Pentium-1 with 16MB ram.
That will be rather tight for Oxygen...
Syslinux 1.62 comes up and presents several options, but then I get the
subject line
.
This allows you to receive messages through a firewall that blocks UDP
syslog traffic (as it ought to).
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https
more I've missed; go read the FAQ at
http://leaf.sourceforge.net
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truncated.
That's one of the reasons Oxygen went to a configuration file.
Oxygen also checks to see if the command line is 255 chars (or
whatever the max is) - if so, it warns you about the possibility of
truncation.
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of Dachstein (or any LEAF) will be
rather noticeable
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Robert Williams wrote:
I have had a shell script that I got from Charles a long time ago
running on my router. It beeps when the router comes up so I don't
have to have a monitor connected to know that the system is up. It
used to get backed up in etc but apparently etc does not back up
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all and especially to David,
Hi!
I have downloaded some of the packages from the oxygen packages list
and tried them on my eigerstein beta2 but they all seem to segfault.
Some (many?) of these packages use glibc 2.1.
I am talking especially about ethereal and
Matt Schalit wrote:
I think it's because ethereal was compiled against
glibc-2.1.3, whereas your ES2B is a glibc-2.0.x.
Almost certainly.
Here's the info I can give you from installing it and
running it on Oxygen.
Ethereal brings a lot of libraries over.
Patrick Benson wrote:
Why not try:
Trinux - http://trinux.sourceforge.net/
All the tools you'll ever need you can find on a 3-disk setup...
Not LEAF-based - no login security. Specialized tool for network
security.
muLinux - http://mulinux.nevalabs.org/
Requires 1.72M disks... breaks
Jeff Newmiller wrote:
There are compatibility development packages for RedHat that allow you to
compile for glibc2.0, but in many cases it is not quite so simple. One
reason is that the makefiles or configure scripts provided to prepare the
makefiles require some amount hand-editing to get
Brent P. Gardner wrote:
It turns out
that e3 was in vi mode as suggested below. This confuses me because
both e3 and vi are in the list of options displayed when Oxygen asks
which editor you would like to use. Since I specified e3 I didn't think
to try vi commands.
The reason for this is
Mark Plowman wrote:
I know that the simplicity of setup and maintenance will be a
significant factor in the decisions about this project, together with
the fact that client would prefer it all to cost *nothing* - the
reason my boss quickly queried what LEAF could do ;-)
Well, I'm not sure
Mark Plowman wrote:
But...
grep doesn't do -v or (I think) -q.
This must be simple, could an expert out there help me please?
You could use sed, or use a new version of busybox (which acts as grep).
grep -v can be done with sed this way:
sed '/pat/d'
grep -q could be done this way:
Will wrote:
I was wondering if anyone is using xinetd instead of inetd?
When I compiled xinetd for a package, it was rather sizable - about 144k
for the binary, 67k for the package compressed. Not only this, but
you'd have to configure it - but that's not a hard thing to do if you're
willing.
I can't find anything on this - how would one go about setting up a PPP
server that didn't use proxy arp?
Our ISP changed our IP allocation and yanked almost 200 IP addresses -
and now we don't have enough addresses for proxy arp.
I had originally wanted to set up PPPd to use particular IPs and
Robert Williams wrote:
Thanks for the interest. I have now posted a new version that includes
cat /etc/hosts
cat /etc/resolv.conf
cat /etc/nsswitch.conf
It will also ping the IPs in /etc/hosts and /etc/resolv.conf
as well as INTERN_IP and eth0_DEFAULT_GW
You might also want
Matthew Schalit wrote:
Modular is cool.
I hope so. I recently booted LRP - and it has about 6 packages on
disk. Let's just say Oxygen has more :)
Ok. I'll try out 090601.
What are you going to name it? September 2001?
How about Nine of One? Heh heh.
Probably Oxygen 1.6pre1 ...sorry.
Oxygen development is slowing down right now, as I've a new LCD that I'm
trying out for hardware, and I've taken to the LCDd project the way I
did the LRP project (i.e., I'm writing a lot of new code! :)
I'll probably put a pre-release distribution together and put it out
there for downloads and
Alec Miller wrote:
I don't have the tools to make [LaBrea] into an LRP package, but I think this
could be a neat addon.
(If it doesn't already exist for LRP)
Wouldn't you know it I was just working on this; I've already done
it.
I made a few code changes - mainly designed to make it
I've packaged a couple of scripts that tie into PortSentry which page me
(and send email) every time one tries to connect to a port protected by
PortSentry.
One sends out a page based on the command line by using an email gateway
(you'll have to figure out your own).
The other does the work; it
, if the program is missing it won't use
it. All of those programs (except ping) are available as packages in
the same location. All of them should yet work under glibc 2.0 (and
Eigerstein).
On Wed, 19 September 2001, David Douthitt wrote:
I've packaged a couple of scripts that tie
Reginald R. Richardson wrote:
Trying to use the amazing iptraf.lrp but when I execute it, I get the
following message...
Can someone, tell me what's wrong, or what I'm doing wrong..
thnks
# iptraf
Error opening terminal: vt100.
I FINALLY figured this one out :-)
First, make sure you
Matt Schalit wrote:
Brett J. Hoffman wrote:
Hi,
I was wondering if anyone has any information on getting Oxygen to boot
with TFTP or has any documentation to point me in the right direction.
- Thanks
- Brett Hoffman
Last I tried, loading packages via the
net worked well
DPG wrote:
Makes me miss the old days, before Speakeasy moved my POP 800 miles further
down the copper, and raised my gateway ping from 20 to 100 ms. That move
put my servers out of business. :( Now I just have an expensive,
high-latency SDSL line but no servers...
Did I mention
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