[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> They're not labeled? Not even symbols? Odd... Don't you just hate
> manufacturers? :-} Green is "Line Out" as mentioned above. The blue
> one is "Line In", the pink one is "Mic".
I looked close with 2.75 reading glasses and saw no markings. But
your tip on the web sit
"Bob Buckley" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> You can patch into your sound card using, usually, a RCA-Y to stereo 1/8
> inch phone jack. Ensure that you don't over drive the sound card in put.
> I.e., ensure that you pickoff the preamp.
That sounds a lot like what I'm doing from the computer speak
I wondered if someone knows how to go from an audio tape to
electronic data on a computer. I mean with easily accessable tools.
I have a number of old tapes I'd like to get on the computer to be
manipulated with cd burning tools or audio tools now available.
I have some high quality but somewhat
"Bailo, John" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Rh73 distro
>
> Problem:
>
> The root mailbox has become very large, 300MB.
>
> I want to offload it by forwarding mail to various mailboxes.
This sounds like a good job for procmail. Procmail can be invoked
against a mbox spool or individual fil
Harry Putnam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I'm getting really confused with trying to configure printing from my
> 7.3 box via smbclient to a printer attached to a win2k.
>
> The main confusion I have is what the URL is supposed to look like at
> the question on cups web
I'm getting really confused with trying to configure printing from my
7.3 box via smbclient to a printer attached to a win2k.
The main confusion I have is what the URL is supposed to look like at
the question on cups web admin interface. And how password is handled.
Printer = d145 deskjet name
"Reuben D. Budiardja" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> However, I forgot to copy some files from the old home before I deleted it,
> including .bashrc. No problem, I though, I just copied it from my other
> machine. But then whenever I log in, the /home/rdonald/.bashrc file does not
> get executed
I'm working on and experimenting with a new setup with home network
and also changing over from dsl to cable. Right now I have both.
What I'm after right now is a way to set up networking on both
outgoing networks from the same machine. And I have some thing in
place that does most of it. M2 in
Jim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hal wrote:
>
>
>> > Hi all.I have added some lines to my .bashrc in
>> > an attempt to make an alias and change my prompt. Though
>> > I completely log out and back in, the changes do not take
>> > effect (but xemacs does work when I type "xemacs").
>>
>>What
"Furnish, Trever G" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I don't suppose just using iptraf with multiple windows open would meet your
> need? Ie in one xterm, open it with the summary stuff and in another, open
> it with the realtime stuff?
>
> Just a thought - I haven't even used iptraf. :-)
Yes it i
"Chris Mason" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I think cheops would do what you want. Consider running it in
> conjunction with other tools.
I installed a snapshot. I don't see any way to do any of the things
I mentioned. I see nothing whatever regarding traffic.
There is no man page... the help
I've tried a number of network monitoring tools.
I want one that shows the details like trafshow. Or iptraf
They both can shows both ends of the live connections,
But trafshow has no summary type settings that can be displayed at
the time or at all really.
iptraf has summary info but you c
"Robert P. J. Day" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Tue, 13 Aug 2002, Harry Putnam wrote:
>
>> "Sam'l Bassett" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>
>> >> 2) i downloaded the latest version of ksh93 for linux from
>> >>
"Sam'l Bassett" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> 2) i downloaded the latest version of ksh93 for linux from
>>www.research.att.com/sw, and the newer version that's
>>available there has an annoying bug in that it drops the
>>last character from the definition of each alias when
>>yo
Kalin Mintchev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> hi all,
>
> what would be the opposite of the -X option in tar?
> like if i want to include ONLY files with certain extensions in the
> archive and not all of the directory...
You could do it by globbing the files.
tar czvf some.tar.gz /some/path/*.t
Matthew Boeckman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>
>> Just a guess, but perhaps you have an IRQ sharing issue. IRQ sharing can
>> have all kinds of strange effects.
>
> wouldn't i have seen some *mention* of that in dmesg or
> /var/log/message ? I assume that I would... but.
I have one irq shared
Cokey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Well, first do a 'ps ax' and see what parameters syslog is using.
> Should look something like:
>
> 10840 ?S 0:12 syslogd -m 0 -r
>
> Then you might check your /var/log/messages file to see if by some
> chance the Nortel messages are just getting t
"Robert P. J. Day" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> i've got the job of giving a 1/2 to 3/4 day tutorial on how
> to do basic programming in the (gasp! hack!) c shell.
>
> are there any decent online tutorials (ideally, one i could
> just run off and bind), so i don't have to slap together one o
"daniel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> as root, is there a way to see what commands my users are typing into their
> consoles?
> ideally, i'd like to see exactly what they see on their screen.
Rubber hoses and aligator clips on genitalia car battery.
__
Jay Daniels <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I need to resize all gif images in a certain directory by pixels. There has to
> an easier way to do this besides opening all images in the Gimp???
The `convert' tool that comes with image magic does exactly that.
After installing ImageMagik rpm, type `m
"Edward Dekkers" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Your point is very valid Harry, it is POSSIBLE the drives haven't reached
> their 3 year warranty period yet, BUT, believe me, with the amount of drives
> that rip through here, I certainly would have expected at least one back by
> now. We used to u
Harry Putnam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> By slight of hand I will try to redirect any interested parties to a
> new, hopefully more on topic thread:
>
>Subject: init script puzzle
I neglected to add it would be on the valhalla list since it
Matthew Boeckman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I still kind of wonder why that route statment in your ifcfg file was
> being ignored... did you notice anything unusual in the dmesg output?
> you could dmesg|grep route or the like to see.
>
> List: Sorry for the OT discussion. Hopefully it may ser
"Edward Dekkers" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I've been selling WD (only the BB and JB models mind you - 7200RPM) with my
> systems since their WD400BB came out and was voted fastest 40Gb HDD at the
> time. That was a while ago, so you can see how long I've been dealing with
> them.
I'm guessin
Hal Burgiss <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I had 2 WD drives die very prematurely not long ago. Then, I had to
> ask myself why would I want replacements? I don't trust them, at least
> the low end ones. I have another that seems fine though. I also try to
> keep this in mind:
Hal, what are you u
Julian Opificius <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I've been following a thread on the Mandrake newbie list about hard
> drives, and "learned" that my Western Digital HDs are about as welcome
> in the Linux world as a hole in the head.
>
> I haven't had any problems with my RH7.2 installations to dat
"Anthony E. Greene" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On 08-Jul-2002/20:39 -0500, "Parhami, Faraz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>>I am looking for an equivalent of solaris 'gethrtime()' method. Is there
>>a method with high resolution in Red Hat? I have come accross
>>'timeofday'. Is this the right me
Matthew Boeckman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I could be terribly wrong here, but my thinking is that the GW
> statement in eth1 on m6 is being ignored (maybe check dmesg). I have
> never assigned a static route in linux that did not show up in netstat
It turns out your suggested experiment sho
Matthew Boeckman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> There was no particular good reason for the setup below but this is
>> where I am running into what I described:
>>
>
> I'm dying to ask anyway! What are you achieving/trying to do with M6
> that it cohabitates both networks?
I knew you wouldn't b
Matthew Boeckman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I'm not entirely sure what you are asking.
>
>> Destination Gateway Genmask Flags MSS Window
>> irtt Iface
>> 192.168.1.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 U40 0 0 eth1
>> 192.168.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.2
Matthew Boeckman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I think the best answer is 'man route'
>
> route add -net 192.168.2.1 netmask 255.255.255.0 dev eth1
> route add -net 192.168.1.1 netmask 255.255.255.0 dev eth0
>
Matthew, I posted a similar answer in this thread. Although I think
yours is clearer.
Adrian Hunt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Without even addressing the firewall aspect at this
> point, I'm simply trying to take one machine with 2
> network interfaces (192.168.1.1 and 192.168.2.1) and
> convince it to route IP traffice such that 192.168.2.X
> can ping, telnet to, print to, etc.
Kalin Mintchev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> any other suggestions?!
The fact that two ethernet cards are on the same IRQ is not itself a
problem. I've had two on one irq for a couple of years.
dmesg|grep -i 'eth.*irq'
eth0: RealTek RTL-8029 found at 0xd800, IRQ 9, 00:00:E8:90:99:20.
eth1: Li
"K.Deepak" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Dear Harry,
>
> I tried for the past two days , but all in vain. i am not
>able
> to deliver the spammed messages into the folder caughtspam. I gave in the addtional
> entries given by you . the procmail log says "No match found f
"K.Deepak" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Please help me out by telling the exact rules which will make the spamassassing to
> deliver the spammed messsages to the folder
> /var/spool/mail/caughtspam
Sounds like something else is wrong here.
If you have the rule you posted:
:0fw
| spamassass
David McGlone <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> nick
>
> You can also use the "audio browser" in Konqueror to browse the songs on the
> CD.
How does on locate this `audio browser'? I don't see it under any
konqueror menu. And a brief ALT+f search of konqueror manual didn't
find it either.
"K.Deepak" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Dear Brain,
>
> I have setup spamassassin in a RedHat 7.2 with sendmail
> 8.12.3. Please let me know as to how filter all the spammed messages to a
> single folder called as spam using procmail.
>
> It would be also great if you ca
"Kevin Krieser" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Look at cdrecord.
>
> If cdrecord -scanbus
> finds your CD burner, then it is a pretty easy process: cdrecord
> dev=(whatever the scanbus finds) -v file.iso
>
> You may want to try the -dummy option the first time to see that everything
> works, etc.
Statux <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> If you're looking for LILO on the floppy, use mkbootdisk (man mkbootdisk
> for more info). If you just want your system to boot from a floppy then do
> something like the following:
>
> # dd if=/boot/vmlinuz of=/dev/fd0 bs1440k
If I read it right, that is exa
Hal Burgiss <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Sun, May 26, 2002 at 07:15:45PM -0700, Shin Ji wrote:
>> Whoa!! A response.
>>
>> There is nothing wrong with the way I asked my
>> question.. Go back to sleep MR. Hal Burgiss. :P You
>> probably didn't even read my previous two posts
>> anyway.
Running 7.1 and seems to have been running ok for quite a while.
Today running up2date -u as I do every so often I got a few updates.
imap, imlib, and fetchmail and sharutils.
I realized I had no need for imap so just rpm -e'd those instead of
installing the new ones. When I did I got this mess
Mike Martin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> just a related point I find the following alias very useful
> lsd='ls -l|grep ^d'
> works to just give a list of directories (handy for weeding compile
> trees)
You could just let ls do it:
ls -d */
___
Redh
"Anthony E. Greene" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On 19-May-2002/20:02 -0400, Statux <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>The old default behavior of "ls" was to list directory contents in
>>alphabetical order with hidden objects first before regular objects. Now
>>adays, "ls" ignores the leading '.' of
Eric Sisler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I've just started working with iptables and I can't seem to find a way
> to list current masquerade / nat connections. With ipchains I'd use
> the command 'ipchains -nML' to get a table of masq'ed connections. Am
> I just missing something or is there n
"Rodolfo J. Paiz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> The CD's which are freely downloadable do not include StarOffice,
> which you can also freely download from
> www.sun.com/staroffice. Including StarOffice on CD is one of the ways
> in which Red Hat tries to make the purchased package more valuable
Mike Burger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> You do not necessarily have to have SCSI, though, if you can see your way
> clear to buying SCSI equipment (it is more expensive, but the performance
> gains, IMO, are worth it), you're better off.
>
[...]
> SCSI is parallel tasking. You can read/wri
Trying to slip in some OT questions by using an unusual subject line.
But It is actually part of the possible answer.
I've never tinkered with cd read/write equipment. And a little
bewildered by the plethora of equipment out there.
I want to be able to write to a writable cd. Both data and mu
julius <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I am glad to see discussion about system security because I am just
> considering to build a small LAN.
> Currently, I use a DSL connection with a SMC Barricade router in front of my
> RedHat 7.2 box. SMC advertised Barricade as a router that has an effecti
Thomas Ribbrock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
[...]
>> I found it a big pain in the butt fussing with ipchains and then
>> iptables too so finally got a hardware firewall/router.
> [...]
>
>> It is what is known as `statefull' and allows full NATing with fairly
>> simple choices on a java based i
Glen Lee Edwards <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 5) Having a tight firewall is like living in a fenced in yard. No one can get
> in, but you can't get out. I have no desire to live on an island.
I found it a big pain in the butt fussing with ipchains and then
iptables too so finally got a hardwa
Amir Tal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> /sbin/iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o eth0 -j MASQUERADE
Haa, Yes Amir... that little rule does the job. Now I can start
fleshing out a more elaborate setup.
Thanks
___
Redhat-list mailing list
[EMAIL PROTE
Tom Pollerman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>Have you tried a GUI "frontend" for iptables - just to get things
> secure. I've found them to be useful to "see" what rules are being
> applied to what. Once you get the hang of it, you can ditch the GUI.
> Take a look at Firestarter at http://w
Posters here got me over the first hurdle of setting up this
experimental network within a network. I can now ping all internal
machines and ping anything internal/external from M1
INTERNET
|
dsl modem (Static IP)
|
ROUTER (gateway) NETGEAR FR3
"BG" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I think you will find your network construction is the problem. I think
> this is what you want:
>
> INTERNET
> |
> |
> |
> DSL Modem
> |
> |
> m5
> |
> |__ROUTER
> |
> |
>
[NOTE Windbag ALERT.. what follows seemed necessary to
give enough detail for a helpfull reply..sorry]
Setup: RH 7.1 (two nics
RealTek RTl8029
(NETGEAR) Lite-On 82c168 PNIC)
Home network DSL connected.
Hardware router/gateway at DSL MODEM
Background info:
I've be
ABrady <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> At least it all worked out in the end.
Just to make sure you understood, my last post was a thank you.
Wasn't sure from your reply if you realized I was thanking you.
There does need to be some more even handed way to handle that
situation though. I appears
ABrady <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> What I did to fix it was I went to a mirror and downloaded a new up2date
> (that was part of the problem too, I think) and all of the other RPMs
> and manually updated them. After that everything worked OK.
>
> I remember (but not in detail) that a lot of othe
Steve Coffman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Thanks for the hints.
>
> My problem was exactly like yours, same error message, same
> suggestion that I re-select the packages to update. I looked at each
I got no suggestions.
> package I was trying to update and none of them had anything obvious
Steve Coffman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Are you sure.. I saw your post and took note, but I thought it was
a very different outcome.
At 5/1/02 11:21 PM, you wrote:
>HI all, I tried using up2date on my registered RH 7.1 system since I
>just replaced the motherboard. Everything came up and run
Setup: Redhat 7.1 mostly up to date.
Running up2date -u today to get updated on a few new packages like
sudo I get this message and only headers are downloaded:
(From the tail of output)
[...]
Testing package set / solving RPM inter-dependencies...
There was a package dependency problem.
Bret Hughes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> The last two parts are easy, but can anyone here tell me how to grab the
>> current URL in Netscape Location box? Is it stored somewhere under
>> .netscape or is there some way in X apps to grab stuff like that from
>> a script?
>>
>>
>
> Not sure if
I want to write a perl script that allows me to extract the current
address in netscape url box. I'm sort of tired of the bookmark
interface that requires a bit too much clickety clack to annotate a
bookmark with my own annotations.
I'm thinking a script that first grabs the url some how, and th
"Anthony E. Greene" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Tue, Apr 23, 2002 at 11:21:25AM -0700, Harry Putnam wrote:
>>Running 7.1 with gnome/sawfish desktop. I see a screen locking thing
>>in the menus, but how can I manage to have my screen locked with some
>>
Running 7.1 with gnome/sawfish desktop. I see a screen locking thing
in the menus, but how can I manage to have my screen locked with some
stipulated period of non-use. I mean to I don't have to do anything
with menus each time.
___
Redhat-list maili
Gordon Messmer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
[...]
>> However the notation used
>> with find is weaker in several ways (As I mentioned in my 1st post in
>> this thread) than what I referred to as POSIX.
>
> Your misunderstanding of a regex match does not constitute a weakness in
> find. :)
Yikes.
"Ian Hendershot" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
[...]
A note of advice. It helps if you trim away excess baggage on your
posts. Its easier to see what is going on. Try to give your comments
following to those you are commenting on so a prospective helper can
quickly see what has been covered.
Gordon Messmer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Fri, 2002-04-19 at 14:16, Harry Putnam wrote:
>>
>> I'm not really sure what constitutes a posix legal regex but I don't
>> think it includes trick riders like having to match a specific part
>> of a st
Gordon Messmer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Fri, 2002-04-19 at 07:26, Harry Putnam wrote:
>>
>> It is new within a year or so, I believe but if you look close you'll
>> also notice it isn't posix regex
>>
>> The example given shows it
Bill Crawford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Oops.
>
> I completely missed that one ... how long's that been there?
>
> I'm guessing it's probably always been there, like Kosh. I'm sooo
> embarrassed now :o)
It is new within a year or so, I believe but if you look close you'll
also notice it
"daniel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> i'm a perlgeek
> so i'm familiar with its style of regular expressions
> but when i'm trying to use one of those regular expressions in a find
> command,
> i'm not having much luck
> here's what i want to do:
>
>
> find /home/ -name "(.Apple(.*))|(Network Tr
Billy R Nordyke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Does the linuxconf mailconf work properly with RH 7.2? The FAQs at
> sendmail.org say not to use it to edit sendmail.cf with RH 7.1. What is
> the proper config program for sendmail? Is it proper to use emacs to
> edit sendmail.cf? I have read the
"The Gyzmo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Thanks a lot, your tip works, but now I have a new problem: the colors
> are gone when I run the command. For example, when you run 'ls', there
> are different colors to distinguish the folders, text files,
> executables, etc, but it's all only one color
Bill Crawford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Sat, 30 Mar 2002, Harry Putnam wrote:
>
>> It has to be a dot file. A file who's name begins with `.'
>> Try .test.
>>
>> Maybe someone here can explain why it doesn't work in a file named
>>
Bill Crawford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> From: Bill Crawford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: RE: cd in a Shell Script
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Date: Sun, 31 Mar 2002 05:09:26 +0100 (BST)
> Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> On Sat, 30 Mar 2002, Kevin Krieser wrote:
>
>> You can source any tex
Harry Putnam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> "The Gyzmo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> Hello. I've written a short shell script to change my directory and
>> display the contents at once because I'm sick of having to do 'cd dir'
"The Gyzmo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hello. I've written a short shell script to change my directory and
> display the contents at once because I'm sick of having to do 'cd dir'
> then 'ls -l'. My problem is that once the program is done executing, my
> directory remains the same. Here's
Michael George <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
[...]
> The Linux server sits behind a firewall which does not allow access to an SMTP
> port, so it should be pretty secure to just let the sendmail on that system
> relay mail from any system on the internal network to any system on the
> outside.
>
>
Bill Crawford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Thu, 21 Mar 2002, Harry Putnam wrote:
>
>> Just a sanity check here... when you type 7 ks
>>
>> $ kkk
>> Then place the cursor in the middle of those ks and press
>> repeatedly... what happens?
&
"Kevin Keithan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I'm new to sendmail and want to install it and configure it on my
> domain. I'm running RedHat 7.2. I did a "rpm -qa | grep sendmail" to
> see what was installed on my box. I get this, sendmail-cf-8.11.6-3. So
> I then did an "up2date --showall | g
Bill Crawford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Thu, 21 Mar 2002, Harry Putnam wrote:
>
>> Bill Crawford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>
>> >> Also while setting stty erase ^? fixed that perticualr thing. At the
>> >> command line (in xterm)
Bill Crawford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> Also while setting stty erase ^? fixed that perticualr thing. At the
>> command line (in xterm) I used to be able to delete with delete key
>> too. Now I just get tildes (~~)
>
> That looks like a problem with the shell's key bindings (readline
Bill Crawford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
[...]
>> Do you know anything about this (from recent log input in /var/log/messages):
>> Mar 20 10:40:35 reader rc.sysinit: \
>> Setting default font (lat0-sun16): succeeded
>
> I think that's the default, but wouldn't swear to it.
>
>> Is that normal
"Furnish, Trever G" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Would one be correct in assuming that you are in some sort of X interface
> when this problem is evident? For example, an xterm, rxvt, eterm, etc? On
> a recently updated system I don't see the same problems you do, but I'm
> accessing it via ss
Bill Crawford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Wed, 20 Mar 2002, Harry Putnam wrote:
>
>> Last night I ran a major update that has been accumulating on my 7.1
>> system, bringing everthing up to date with current update packages.
>
> Did you get any messages s
gregory mott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> >You wouldn't still have the *.mc file that produced that would you?
>
> my machine's doing the same.. here's mine.. make appropriate
> subsitiutions between the +plusses+ (i do it with sed)..
> divert(-1)
[...]
Oh thanks Gregory,
I just now saw th
Harry Putnam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> An example: Previous to update, pressing bckspc while in insert mode in
> vim would delete to the left, moving the cursor to left. Now I get
> ^? with the same action. Default font for emacs has changed.
A further note here: dme
Last night I ran a major update that has been accumulating on my 7.1
system, bringing everthing up to date with current update packages.
This involved updating all of X to newest update. The kernel, Mesa
Xinitrc, modutils and quite a few other things. I didn't keep a
record of everthing. A fe
Harry Putnam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Attempting to send mail from machine 192.168.0.7 with mail client
> aimed at the above machine with the edited sendmail.cf, for smtp server.
>
> Gives me this error on the (Win 98) client:
> Error reporte
David Talkington <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Harry Putnam wrote:
>
>>In my setup I have a static IP address but I relay my outgoing mail
>>thru my isps smtp machine. I do this by giving that host name as
>>answer to Smart relay host: in Sendmail.cf
>>
>
"Ed Wilts" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> I am thinking of using ipopd instead of imapd. But ipopd and imapd is
> started
>> from xinetd in my system (default RH 7.2). If that's the case for you too,
>> would not just adding the some line in hosts.allow and hosts.deny solve
> this
>> problem? Is
Ed Wilts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
[...]
> All the tools are provided by Red Hat out of the box. What I do is to first
> create each user on my Linux system that I want to provide mail for (all 2
> of us :-)). In that user account, create a .fetchmailrc that goes and gets
> the mail. Here'
AIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Harry Putnam wrote:
>
>>Instead of having each machine retreive its mail from the internet, I
>>want to have one machine do all retreival and the others to be aimed
>>at it as there pop server.
>
> Sure, you're already on the right track ...
Harry Putnam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Sorry folks that reply was intended for a different thread.
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David Talkington <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Harry Putnam wrote:
>
>>Instead of having each machine retreive its mail from the internet, I
>>want to have one machine do all retreival and the others to be aimed
>>at it as there pop server.
>
> Sure, you
Setup: RH 7.1
Single user home machine
DSL connected
Mail retrieval thru fetchmail from POP3
2 other houshold machines running one or another MS platform.
All are setup behind a hardware firewall (Netgear FR314)
I want to do something I haven't ever pla
Gordon Messmer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> You're still exploring this as if the repository needs to be owned by
> root, which it does not. There is no reason to fight against the
> no-root restriction in cvs. Just don't use the tool as root.
The OP asked how to access cvs as root without er
Patrick Nelson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> OK so after browsing through the book Gordon suggested, I got an idea. So I
> tested it out and it worked within the environment that I need it to. Here
> is the way I did it:
>
> user="pnelson"
> cvslocal="/usr/local/cvsrep"
>
> mkdir .bon
> chown $
Patrick Nelson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> So I'm wondering what the problem is. Is it that I can't be su to run cvs?
> The problem is that the files I'm creating come from the output of commands
> that are run as root user. I'd rather not su the exit and then commit. So
> I guess I'm asking
Dave Ihnat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> From: Dave Ihnat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: Vi: Replace Word sequence
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Date: Tue, 5 Feb 2002 08:17:52 -0600
> Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> On Tue, Feb 05, 2002 at 11:41:45AM -0100, john-paul delaney wrote:
>> Having
I once had an epson 900 hooked directly to my linux box. With that
setup, my printer knew all about postscript files and handled them as
if it were a big time postscript printer, thanks to the Redhat print
filters that take care of that. And as I recall I just used a fairly
stock printcap.
Its
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