Re: NetworkManager-resolv.conf -

2012-11-18 Thread Bob Goodwin - Zuni, Virginia, USA
On 18/11/12 02:19, Tim wrote: Seemingly network-related prolonged bootup times could be down to several issues. Just to mention some of them: Name resolution - something is trying to resolve a name (e.g. the machine's own hostname), but can't because name resolution isn't working, or the

Re: NetworkManager-resolv.conf -

2012-11-18 Thread Reindl Harald
Am 18.11.2012 11:09, schrieb Bob Goodwin - Zuni: It turned out that this was an unwarranted fear, the slower computer still boots in 46 seconds this morning after modifications to eliminate NetworkManager, while this one unmodified, comes up a little faster. with static

Preupgrade vs other upgrade methods, caveats?

2012-11-18 Thread Christopher Svanefalk
Hello everyone, I was just wondering if there are any known downsides to upgrading via preupgrade, as opposed to using the more familiar upgrade methods (CD/DVD etc)? Best, Christopher Svanefalk mob: +46762628251 skype: csvanefalk -- users mailing list users@lists.fedoraproject.org To

Re: Preupgrade vs other upgrade methods, caveats?

2012-11-18 Thread Reindl Harald
Am 18.11.2012 13:58, schrieb Christopher Svanefalk: I was just wondering if there are any known downsides to upgrading via preupgrade, as opposed to using the more familiar upgrade methods (CD/DVD etc)? fedoraproject.org/wiki/Upgrading_Fedora_using_yum read the gints for the exact version

Re: Reloading amavisd to read spamassassin rules

2012-11-18 Thread lee
Alex mysqlstud...@gmail.com writes: Is there a kill signal that I can send? Is there a more appropriate command to use? Huh? Amavisd reads rules for spamassassin? Indirectly, yes. If you don't have something to contribute other than a wise-ass answer, stfu. Watch your language and your

Re: Preupgrade vs other upgrade methods, caveats?

2012-11-18 Thread Sergio
Preupgrade isn't supported any more, AFAIK. I upgraded via yum. Apart from the usual clean up before-hand (remove uneeded packages so less to download and I also uninstalled the compiled apps and recompiled them afterwards), run rpmconf before and after the upgrade (and look at the

Re: Reloading amavisd to read spamassassin rules

2012-11-18 Thread Ed Greshko
On 11/18/2012 09:07 PM, lee wrote: Alex mysqlstud...@gmail.com writes: Is there a kill signal that I can send? Is there a more appropriate command to use? Huh? Amavisd reads rules for spamassassin? Indirectly, yes. If you don't have something to contribute other than a wise-ass answer,

Re: NetworkManager-resolv.conf -

2012-11-18 Thread Timothy Murphy
Ed Greshko wrote: My server is an HP MicroServer running CentOS-6.3 . My laptop is a ThinkPad T61p running Fedora-17/KDE . I have shown above the entry I have in /etc/dhcp/dhcpd.conf on the server What is your AP? My AP is a Linksys WRT54GL attached to the server; I have another

Re: NetworkManager-resolv.conf -

2012-11-18 Thread Ed Greshko
On 11/18/2012 10:35 PM, Timothy Murphy wrote: Ed Greshko wrote: My server is an HP MicroServer running CentOS-6.3 . My laptop is a ThinkPad T61p running Fedora-17/KDE . I have shown above the entry I have in /etc/dhcp/dhcpd.conf on the server What is your AP? My AP is a Linksys WRT54GL

Re: Reloading amavisd to read spamassassin rules

2012-11-18 Thread Alex
Hi, Is there a kill signal that I can send? Is there a more appropriate command to use? Huh? Amavisd reads rules for spamassassin? Indirectly, yes. If you don't have something to contribute other than a wise-ass answer, stfu. Watch your language and your attitude. What do you mean

Re: How to tell when a file is read from disk or cache?

2012-11-18 Thread James Wilkinson
Philip Rhoades wrote: Is there some way of doing this? - even for a simple situation like opening a text file in Vim? Depends on what you want. If what you’re after is to tell after the fact that a file has been accessed, you should look into auditd, or just turn on atime on your filesystem

Hack attacks

2012-11-18 Thread Roger
Is there any way to trace ip addresses back past the originating ISP. I've been using whois but it seems limited. Thanks in advance Roger -- users mailing list users@lists.fedoraproject.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users

Re: Hack attacks

2012-11-18 Thread Phil Dobbin
On 11/18/2012 11:16 PM, Roger wrote: Is there any way to trace ip addresses back past the originating ISP. I've been using whois but it seems limited. I use nmap http://nmap.org then Google does the rest. Cheers, Phil... -- users mailing list users@lists.fedoraproject.org To unsubscribe

Re: Hack attacks

2012-11-18 Thread JD
On 11/18/2012 04:16 PM, Roger wrote: Is there any way to trace ip addresses back past the originating ISP. I've been using whois but it seems limited. Thanks in advance Roger When whois fails me, I generally resort to arin.net and type the ip address into the Search whois search bar and

Re: Hack attacks

2012-11-18 Thread staticsafe
On 11/18/2012 18:16, Roger wrote: Is there any way to trace ip addresses back past the originating ISP. I've been using whois but it seems limited. Thanks in advance Roger In short, no. That kind of data (I assume you want a name/address of the person using the IP) is usually accessible

virtual cd/dvd drive/xine dvd rip playback

2012-11-18 Thread Brian West
Hello everyone I have been using fedora since 2003 so i'm not totally new at linux. How can i create a virtual cd/dvd drive to use for watching dvds and installing software etc? also is there a way to play a ripped dvd that's on my hard-drive using xine. by ripped i'm refering to the

Fedora 17 x96_64 source ISO

2012-11-18 Thread Brian West
Hello everyone, Where can I download the 64bit source code for fedora 17? Thanks in advance for your time. Brian West -- users mailing list users@lists.fedoraproject.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines:

Re: Fedora 17 x96_64 source ISO

2012-11-18 Thread Rami Rosen
Hi, Brian, You have F17 mirrors site in: http://mirrors.fedoraproject.org/publiclist/Fedora/17/ Just pick one of the mirror and navigate to the source subfloder. There you have source iso or SRPMs. For example, look under: http://mirrors.dcarsat.com.ar/fedora/releases/17/Fedora/source Or pick

Re: Fedora 17 x96_64 source ISO

2012-11-18 Thread Ed Greshko
On 11/19/2012 12:22 PM, Brian West wrote: Hello everyone, Where can I download the 64bit source code for fedora 17? Thanks in advance for your time. Brian West http://download.fedoraproject.org/pub/fedora/linux/releases/17/Fedora/source/iso/Fedora-17-source-DVD.iso -- Programming today

Re: Fedora 17 x96_64 source ISO[solved]

2012-11-18 Thread Brian West
On 11/18/2012 11:29 PM, Rami Rosen wrote: Hi, Brian, You have F17 mirrors site in: http://mirrors.fedoraproject.org/publiclist/Fedora/17/ Just pick one of the mirror and navigate to the source subfloder. There you have source iso or SRPMs. For example, look under:

Re: virtual cd/dvd drive/xine dvd rip playback

2012-11-18 Thread Ed Greshko
On 11/19/2012 12:04 PM, Brian West wrote: Hello everyone I have been using fedora since 2003 so i'm not totally new at linux. How can i create a virtual cd/dvd drive to use for watching dvds and installing software etc? also is there a way to play a ripped dvd that's on my hard-drive

Re: virtual cd/dvd drive/xine dvd rip playback

2012-11-18 Thread Brian West
On 11/18/2012 11:53 PM, Ed Greshko wrote: On 11/19/2012 12:04 PM, Brian West wrote: Hello everyone I have been using fedora since 2003 so i'm not totally new at linux. How can i create a virtual cd/dvd drive to use for watching dvds and installing software etc? also is there a way to play a

Re: virtual cd/dvd drive/xine dvd rip playback

2012-11-18 Thread Ed Greshko
On 11/19/2012 01:00 PM, Brian West wrote: On 11/18/2012 11:53 PM, Ed Greshko wrote: On 11/19/2012 12:04 PM, Brian West wrote: Hello everyone I have been using fedora since 2003 so i'm not totally new at linux. How can i create a virtual cd/dvd drive to use for watching dvds and installing

Re: Hack attacks

2012-11-18 Thread NOSpaze
On Mon, 2012-11-19 at 10:16 +1100, Roger wrote: Is there any way to trace ip addresses back past the originating ISP. I've been using whois but it seems limited. Could mtr be of any help? -- NOSpaze nosp...@gmail.com -- users mailing list users@lists.fedoraproject.org To unsubscribe or

Start a single application instead of all desktop in Xrdp

2012-11-18 Thread Jatin K
Hi all, I want to configure some systems at my office, like when a user logs into the system using xrdp, a single application should start automatically instead of all desktop, and when user closes or exit that particular application he/she must be logged off from the system. its

Re: Hack attacks

2012-11-18 Thread Roger
On 11/19/2012 02:13 PM, staticsafe wrote: On 11/18/2012 18:16, Roger wrote: Is there any way to trace ip addresses back past the originating ISP. I've been using whois but it seems limited. Thanks in advance Roger In short, no. That kind of data (I assume you want a name/address of the

Re: Hack attacks

2012-11-18 Thread Brian West
On 11/19/2012 12:28 AM, NOSpaze wrote: On Mon, 2012-11-19 at 10:16 +1100, Roger wrote: Is there any way to trace ip addresses back past the originating ISP. I've been using whois but it seems limited. Could mtr be of any help? ISP and a rough location is all your going to get my friend some

Re: Hack attacks

2012-11-18 Thread David G . Miller
Roger arelem at bigpond.com writes: Is there any way to trace ip addresses back past the originating ISP. I've been using whois but it seems limited. Thanks in advance Roger Chances are that any sort of multi-host attack will use zombies as proxies. Even if you are able to chase the

Re: Hack attacks

2012-11-18 Thread Roger
On 11/19/2012 05:02 PM, Brian West wrote: On 11/19/2012 12:28 AM, NOSpaze wrote: On Mon, 2012-11-19 at 10:16 +1100, Roger wrote: Is there any way to trace ip addresses back past the originating ISP. I've been using whois but it seems limited. Could mtr be of any help? ISP and a rough

Re: Hack attacks

2012-11-18 Thread Roger
On 11/19/2012 05:13 PM, David G. Miller wrote: Roger arelem at bigpond.com writes: Is there any way to trace ip addresses back past the originating ISP. I've been using whois but it seems limited. Thanks in advance Roger Chances are that any sort of multi-host attack will use zombies as