From: Digestifier To: Linux-Admin@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu Reply-To: Linux-Admin@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu Date: Tue, 18 Oct 94 14:13:35 EDT Subject: Linux-Admin Digest #213 Linux-Admin Digest #213, Volume #2 Tue, 18 Oct 94 14:13:35 EDT Contents: Re: Logitech 3 Button Mouse Under XFree.. Howto? (Virgil Sealy) Slack 1.2: bad data in /etc/utmp (albayrak@cc.helsinki.fi) Help -> InterViews Package: Compiling on linux box??? (Adrian Mancini) Re: Recommendation: Partitioning Linux (John R. Campbell) Re: ftp sites for linux (Mubashir Cheema) Re: Compressed FS for Linux? (Jason McNeill) Re: Mystery Chip...AMD (John Palaima) Re: Mystery Chip...AMD (John Palaima) Re: Cron Problems - Script runs from sh (Joel M. Hoffman) Modem setup (Hans de Vreught) Re: XFree86-3.1 - Whoopee! (Rene COUGNENC) Re: Logitech 3 Button Mouse Under XFree.. Howto? (Brent Earl) Problems printing .dvi files (Nathan Gilbert) Re: smail configuration woes... (David Kastrup) Re: mgetty -- how to setup?? (Arnoud Martens) HELP CRASH!!! File System Hosed (Tony Schwartz) Re: Please don't post sec (Scott Jennings) Re: Please don't post security holess... (Scott Jennings) Re: Please don't post security holess... (Scott Jennings) Re: [Q] unerase? undelete? (Guess who?) [BUGFIX]: memory consumption (fs/buffer.c) (Mark W. Watson) Setting up X-Server on a Toshiba Laptop T1910CS (Norbert Kuemin) Re: Why does /bin/login and /usr/bin/newgrp not have setuid bit set? (David Kastrup) Re: Why does /bin/login and /usr/bin/newgrp not have setuid bit set? (Paul Smith) How do I use XDM? (Rasta Smurf) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- From: virgil@cybernetics.net (Virgil Sealy) Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.help Subject: Re: Logitech 3 Button Mouse Under XFree.. Howto? Date: 18 Oct 1994 04:53:30 GMT The real problem is that there are about 12 different kinds of Logitech 3 button mice. That is why so many different folks are giving good but conflicting advice. So I thought I would add mine as well :-) Start off by looking at the bottom of your mouse, it won't mind. Find the Model Number (M/N: _________) and the country it came from. You can count on people that quote the same MN and country as you have to have the config setup you need. Others may also be right but you can't be sure. It seems that Logitech has started using software under DOS/Windows on some of its mice to get 3 button input out of mice that X thinks are 2 buttons. Use the following steps to get things working. 1) Try Microsoft without Emulate3Buttons. 2) If the mouse seems to move OK but the middle button does not work, add the Emulate3Button switch and you are set. 3) If the mouse move strangely, try using Logitech, still without the Emulate3Buttons. 4) Same as before on step 2. 5) Try MouseMan with and without Emulate3Buttons. Good luck. I found that the 'First Mouse' (about $20 at Egghead) works fine and is a true 3 button mouse (i.e. I don't have to use the Emulate3Buttons). Many of the expensive mice are 2 button mice in 3 button clothes. We might want to start a Logitech mouse matrix for new users. /vs ------------------------------ From: albayrak@cc.helsinki.fi Subject: Slack 1.2: bad data in /etc/utmp Date: 18 Oct 1994 07:32:12 GMT Since I have installed Slackware 1.2 commands like 'w' and 'talk' haven't worked. Both w programs (bassman and procps) say 'bad data in /etc/utmp'. I have tried to fix the problem by deleting the file /etc/utmp with no success. Either these programs try to read wrong format or some of those programs writing /etc/utmp are corrupting the data. What exactly is causing the problem? -Ali- ------------------------------ From: amancini@bmerhbbe.bnr.ca (Adrian Mancini) Subject: Help -> InterViews Package: Compiling on linux box??? Date: 18 Oct 1994 14:22:14 GMT Please Help me figure out my I only get *.o files and never get the actual iclass, idraw, ... binaries!!! STEPS: I got iv.3.1 and the g++.3.1 patches for my linux box. I ensured I had more than 50 Mb free space on my drive. I unpacked both tar files and applied the g++ patch. I edited gcc.def & replaced the appropriate paths to the include files and the libraries. I edited local.def and uncommented the "gcc line" & updated the X11 paths per my system. `make CPU` returns LINUX so I moved the iv-x386.cf file to iv-linux.cf I changed dir to /usr/src/iv I did setenv CPU `make CPU` I did the make World ( XCONFIGDIR not needed since it is at /usr/lib/X11/config) This finished and consumed about 35 Mb as opposed to the suggestes 18Mb I then did the make install which ran quickly and added only 1 Mb or so to my drive!!! (Only error ever was some char constant in one source file) PROBLEM: After the make install I looked in my installation dir /usr/local/iv only to find NO binaries except the cpu* imkxxx ..... I examined the Makefiles only to discover that NO linking is being done on the *.o files in iv/src/bin/!! What is going on here?? ANYONE?? Thank You Adrian Mancini -- ================================================== - Adrian Mancini ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ================================================== - The worst fear is fear of a dream. ~~~~~~~~~~~~ ================================================== ------------------------------ From: soup@penrij.UUCP (John R. Campbell) Subject: Re: Recommendation: Partitioning Linux Date: Wed, 12 Oct 1994 13:19:28 GMT giguere@dracma.mrnews (marshall giguere) writes: >1. Is it necessary to have both root and usr partition? No, but it *is* handy. If I'd thought about it more, I would've had a separate /var filesystem. I didn't put /usr in it's own filesystem; /home is a symbolic link to /work/home, and I put all kinds of things in my /work filesystem. >2. What's the necessary size for a root partition. It depends on what you're loading. If I combine *all* in one partition and install everything (Slackware 1.1.2 w/0.99pl15), this will suck up abt 180 MB *before* I add my /u/bin tree... >Currently I'm planning a layout something like this: >Root: 35meg >Swap: 16meg >Usr: (the rest of the disk) Well, place the swap partition FIRST on the disk, so it is as close to the root filesystem's inode table. When you start swapping, you want to minimize HDA motion. Actually, you *don't* want a lot of filesystems on 1 disk, but it *does* make life easier. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ John R. Campbell, Speaker to Machines | Grace is sufficient; soup@penrij.UUCP, soup%penrij@kd3bj.ampr.org | Joy is now unemployed. soup@sonosam.wisdom.bubble.org | - Heather Campbell ------------------------------ From: cheema@earth.sparco.com (Mubashir Cheema) Subject: Re: ftp sites for linux Date: 16 Oct 1994 22:03:03 -0500 smcpeek@isr0830.urh.uiuc.edu (Shawn D. McPeek) writes: >Chris Sorge (crsorge@sgcpu1.sdrc.com) wrote: >: Hi all, >: This is my first time posting in this group, and would really appreciate >: help you could give me as far as sites go to ftp linux. All responses >: are greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance. >sunsite.unc.edu or try ftp.gtlug.org Mubashir Cheema - new, expanded .sig - cheema@sparco.com ------------------------------ From: mcneill@xenon.cchem.berkeley.edu (Jason McNeill) Subject: Re: Compressed FS for Linux? Date: 18 Oct 1994 07:06:06 GMT Jeff Kesselman (jeffpk@netcom.com) wrote: : I don't know if this is a general faeture, but my Fall94 Yygdrasil has : the ability to recognize the .gz extension and decompress a file as it : loads it into memory- kinda a neat little trick. : JK I remember having recently seen a patched libc on Sunsite that claims to do this. It's called zlibc, I think. -Jason -- Jason D. McNeill MS 293, Dept. Chem. University of California Berkeley, CA 94720 (510) 642-6389 mcneill@XENON.CChem.Berkeley.EDU ------------------------------ From: jolt@gnu.ai.mit.edu (John Palaima) Crossposted-To: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.systems,comp.os.linux.misc Subject: Re: Mystery Chip...AMD Date: 18 Oct 1994 14:20:49 GMT In article <37loc2$acb@gate.fzi.de>, Michael Berthold wrote: >|> wholesale relabling DX/2-66s to DX/2-80s. > >Why should they do that??? Because it is cheaper than making a new batch of chips. :) -- Richard Cooley Extraordinaire "Yeah. Arrgh." rcooley96@dgl.ssc.mass.edu These are my opinions, not MIT's etc... rcooley@nyx.cs.du.edu Linux Linux Linux Linux Linux "LILO - it's not just a boot loader, it's a way of life" -- me ------------------------------ From: jolt@gnu.ai.mit.edu (John Palaima) Crossposted-To: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.systems,comp.os.linux.misc Subject: Re: Mystery Chip...AMD Date: 18 Oct 1994 14:38:06 GMT In article <37lne1$acb@gate.fzi.de>, Michael Berthold wrote: >In article <37hgfh$71n@venera.isi.edu>, >daniel@isi.edu (Daniel Zappala) writes: >|> In article <37h24oINN15j@life.ai.mit.edu>, >|>jolt@gnu.ai.mit.edu (John Palaima) writes: >|> > take bets that new 66Mhz chips will be "crippled" so they can't be over- >|> > clocked? :) >|> > -- >I have doubts. It depends. It would force you to buy a "genuine" DX2-80 (read: spend more money) -- although someone said it was only about $20 more--in this case, it seems to be almost stupid to continue to make the 66Mhz version! >|> But a DX2-80 can't be just a relabeled, overclocked DX2-66. >|>It's bus speed has to be 40 Mhz. You're missing the point, I think: A DX2-66 system has a motherboard with a clock crystal that enables the system to run at 33Mhz (if I'm not mistaken, the crystal *is* 66Mhz). If I have a motherboard that allows me to set multiple clock rates (and I do :) than I can rip the xtal out, replace it with a faster one, and set the jumpers to say I'm running at 40Mhz, not 33. "overclocking" in this case, means to run the chip out of spec by running a chip designed for 33Mhz at 40Mhz. I think you misunderstood me. Do you understand now? If not, maybe someone can do a better job than me:) -- Richard Cooley Extraordinaire "Yeah. Arrgh." rcooley96@dgl.ssc.mass.edu These are my opinions, not MIT's etc... rcooley@nyx.cs.du.edu Linux Linux Linux Linux Linux "LILO - it's not just a boot loader, it's a way of life" -- me ------------------------------ From: joel@wam.umd.edu (Joel M. Hoffman) Subject: Re: Cron Problems - Script runs from sh Date: Tue, 18 Oct 1994 14:14:13 GMT [who wrote what deleted] >: >I am having trouble with some scripts running fine from a prompt, but not >: >from cron. Here's one of the scripts. Anyone else have problems like this? >: > >: [script snipt] > >: I haven't played with cron yet on Linux, but on several other Un*ces >: it *requires* that scripts be written in Bourne shell. If this is a real limitation of cron (I suspect it may be) it's easy to get around. Write a sh-shell wrapper for your (say) csh script: #!/bin/sh # # call this file myscript.sh # # exec csh < real.myscript -Joel (joel@wam.umd.edu) -- ============================================================================= |_|~~ Germany, Europe. 1944. "The diameter of the bomb was 30 centimeters, __|~| 16 Million DEAD. and the diameter of its destruction, about 7 meters, and in it four killed and 11 wounded. cnc Bosnia, Europe. 1994. And around these, in a larger circle of pain cnc HOW MANY MORE? and time, are scattered two hospitals and one cemetery. But the young woman who was buried in the place from where she came, at a distance of more than than 100 kilometers, enlarges the circle considerably. And the lonely man who is mourning her death in a distant country incorporates into the circle the whole world. And I won't speak of the cry of the orphans that reaches God's chair and from there makes the circle endless and godless." ============================================================================= Tell Clinton to stop the genocide: president@whitehouse.gov ------------------------------ From: hdev@cp.tn.tudelft.nl (Hans de Vreught) Subject: Modem setup Reply-To: J.P.M.deVreught@CP.TN.TUDelft.NL (Hans de Vreught) Date: Tue, 18 Oct 1994 13:49:27 GMT I've got an internal 14k4 modem. When I set the baudrate in seyon to 38400 (cf Serial-HOWTO) I was able to connect etc. It even gave "CONNECT 38400". Guess that some hardware is trying to fool me (it looked like a 9600 baudrate to me). Or can somebody explain this to me? The more important question I have is the following one. What is the proper way to get: * V32 * V32bis * V42 * V42bis I never get these things right, but I believe it is: * 9600 baud * 14400 baud * +compression * +error correction Thanx. -- Hans de Vreught | John von Neumann: J.P.M.deVreught@CP.TN.TUDelft.NL | Young man, in mathematics Delft University of Technology | you don't understand things, The Netherlands | you just get used to them. ------------------------------ From: rene@renux.frmug.fr.net (Rene COUGNENC) Subject: Re: XFree86-3.1 - Whoopee! Date: 16 Oct 1994 22:51:25 GMT Reply-To: cougnenc@hsc.fr.net (Rene COUGNENC) Ce brave Richard W Kaszeta ecrit: > One important thing I've noticed is problems recompiling under 3.1 > involving ld. My copy of ld (slackware 2.0.1) is hard-coded to use > libs in /usr/X386, so even when I thought I was fixing the problem, some > old libs were being loaded (try running ldd on some of your favorite > executables). > > Any ideas how I can _neatly_ fix this system? I noticed this problem, and just made /usr/X386 a symbolic link to the new stuff. (keeping the X11R5 in /usr/X11R5 and tell it to ld.so.conf). -- linux linux linux linux -[ cougnenc@renux.frmug.fr.net ]- linux linux linux ------------------------------ From: earl@MCS.COM (Brent Earl) Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.help Subject: Re: Logitech 3 Button Mouse Under XFree.. Howto? Date: 18 Oct 1994 11:18:55 -0500 Logitech mouseman, trackman, etc 3 button mice. Don't fool with that Emulate3button stuff. Use Chordmiddle. Occasionally x will foul up the middle button. Just test with a hold and drag, (mine is a menu under button 2) if screwy things happen, drop out of X and startx again. ------------------------------ From: nathan@eskimo.com (Nathan Gilbert) Subject: Problems printing .dvi files Date: Tue, 18 Oct 1994 14:34:10 GMT I have been trying to print the various manuals that are preformated to .dvi files. I have been useing the command "lpr -d [filenam]", but this doesn't seem to work. Can anyone give me an idea as to what I need to do. I have tried editing the printcap file, but linux doesn't seem to want to accept the generic dot matrix entry that is there. Here is the equipment that I am dealing with: 386 DX/40MHz 4 Megs RAM IDE HD (120 MB linux partition) Toshiba P351 24 pin dot matrix printer Any help will be good. Thanks in advance. Mail @: nathan@eskimo.com or abigor@deeptht.armory.com or Call (206) 523-5360 Nathan %-) ------------------------------ From: dak@rama.informatik.rwth-aachen.de (David Kastrup) Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.help,comp.os.linux.misc Subject: Re: smail configuration woes... Date: 18 Oct 1994 14:48:37 GMT johnh@apiltd.demon.co.uk (John Hitchins) writes: >Douglas Lenz (doug@interaccess) wrote: >: I'm currently connecting to the internet via a dialin PPP connection. I've >: configured smail to route mail through my PPP host as a smart_host (I'm using >: it right now), but it only works if I'm actually connected via PPP. If I >: try to send mail while I'm not connected, I get the following: >: |------------------------- Failed addresses follow: ---------------------| >: lenz@comm.mot.com ... transport smtp: connect: Network is unreachable >: |------------------------- Message text follows: ------------------------| >: I've tried using the 'retry' file and durations in my smail config, but it >: insists on dying if my PPP connection is not up when I try to send mail. >: Is there ANY way to be able to have smail retry sending mail if the smtp >: connection is down? Yes. Get a cleanly compiled version. The default smail at least on older Slackware distributions (don't know if this has changed) seemingly have this bug. Compiling smail yourself will stop that problem. -- David Kastrup dak@pool.informatik.rwth-aachen.de Tel: +49-241-72419 Fax: +49-241-79502 Goethestr. 20, D-52064 Aachen -- David Kastrup dak@pool.informatik.rwth-aachen.de Tel: +49-241-72419 Fax: +49-241-79502 Goethestr. 20, D-52064 Aachen ------------------------------ From: arnoud@ijssel.xs4all.nl (Arnoud Martens) Subject: Re: mgetty -- how to setup?? Date: Sun, 16 Oct 1994 21:23:14 GMT Reply-To: arnoudm@ijssel.xs4all.nl To Siu Pong (BACS2 student) writes in newsgroup comp.os.linux.admin: > Hello all, > I've got the mgetty and have installed, however how can I config > it?? The modem doesn't answer when a there's a call and when > I type "mgetty", it said that > mgetty FATAL : no line give > What should I do now?? Read the docs! Hope for you Gert does not see this post ;-) -- Name: Arnoud Martens, Utrecht, the Netherlands, tel: +31-30-732679 E-mail: arnoudm@ijssel.xs4all.nl, IBM: nlibm2wq (nlibm2wq@ibmmail.com) ------------------------------ From: tony@teleport.com (Tony Schwartz) Subject: HELP CRASH!!! File System Hosed Date: Sun, 16 Oct 1994 10:24:03 In the wee early hours of this morning, I was Linuxing away and my entire system froze up on me. Finally after a long time, I had to hit the RESET button. Now, when I boot up, it gives me a prompt with the none in it. (none)~/ (now) brutus/ (in the past) It appears all my stuff is there but I cant do anything with it. I tried to do a fsck but couldnt find it. I tried to mount, dismount, halt, shutdown. Nothing seems to work. In fact, only mount and dismount are even found. This may be a path issue but I am not sure. The mount and dismount commands produce an error saying something about /etc/mtab~ cannot be created because file system is read only. I then went to my boot diskettes and brought the system up also with read only. I really need to get this back up and running soon. Any help or suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Tony Schwartz Portland OR ------------------------------ From: smj@smudge.oro.net (Scott Jennings) Subject: Re: Please don't post sec Date: 16 Oct 1994 02:07:33 GMT Riku Saikkonen (riku.saikkonen@compart.fi) wrote: : >>I'm rather unconfortable with the posting of all of these security holes. : >I disagree completely. This information should be disseminated freely. : I too am for reporting everything at once. How else will the things get : fixed? And, the truth often is that once someone discovers a security I think like this: Now that I have found a hole, does knowing it exists permit me to plug it? If I can't think of any way knowing about the hole helps me, then I wouldn't post it. But I can't imagine knowing about a hole and not being able to envision *some* way of securing it. And if knowing about it allows me to fix it, *not* posting it merely supports its persistence and is unethical. -smj ------------------------------ From: smj@smudge.oro.net (Scott Jennings) Subject: Re: Please don't post security holess... Date: 16 Oct 1994 02:13:46 GMT Isis Leslie (sheela@er7.rutgers.edu) wrote: : All the attempts to hack my machine originated from a remote machine, in : fact a single user workstation which has only one account besides root : on it, who was in addition an employee of thenearby University. There was : also the usual attempts to try and hack the ftp, nntp, rsh and rexec : systems, and a quick identity trap easily tracjed the culprit down. : At this time I'm undecided as to what action to take since this person : isn't a student but a full time employee of the school. You might wish to ponder that many folks have spent *years* in jail for doing nothing more (or less) than that fellow has, and his future may well be in your hands. -smj ------------------------------ From: smj@smudge.oro.net (Scott Jennings) Subject: Re: Please don't post security holess... Date: 16 Oct 1994 02:21:53 GMT M. K. Shenk (mkshenk@u.washington.edu) wrote: : Oh, criminals. Give me a break. The criminals are the ones that mess with : things. I consider myself a (wannabe, at least) hacker in the original : sense, and in HS was a "hacker" in the new sense. I never altered : ANYTHING. I got in, to get in, or to use a compiler. Nothing criminal about : that (except in the eyes of the law.) Penetrating the security of a I'm glad to see that you *are* aware that it *is* criminal "in the eyes of the law". But from your cavalier attitude, I suspect that you are *not* aware of the severity of the penalties, and the court precidences. (you might do well to *at*least* stop confessing to this behavior in past) check it out. -smj ------------------------------ From: someone@s96120.u96.stevens-tech.edu (Guess who?) Subject: Re: [Q] unerase? undelete? Reply-To: jmcphers@vaxc.stevens-tech.edu Date: Sun, 16 Oct 1994 17:43:25 GMT Frank B. Brokken (frank@icce.rug.nl) wrote: : dinob@zems.etf.hr (Dino Butorac (III rac)) writes: : >Is there any 'unerase' or 'undelete' utility for ext2fs? Accidentally I : >rm'ed a bunch of once useful files, and I wasn't able to recover them... : >I know, some of you are going to say: 'You should be more careful with : >rm and such commands!' but it doesn't really help much. Thanx in advance! [much deleted] : Apart from that, no undelete/unerase exist. [much more deleted] Shouldn't there be a way to write one, though? I'm no kernel hacker, but I just have this intuition that if MeSsy-Doz can write a pretty effective undelete, linux should be able to too. -- #------------------------------------------------------------------------# | //\\ Jim McPherson | someone@s96120.u96.stevens-tech.edu | | << >> Business Manger, WEXP | jmcphers@menger.eecs.stevens-tech.edu | | \\// IDC Rep., Palmer 3rd. | jmcphers@vaxc.stevens-tech.edu | #>----------------------------------------------------------------------<# | "Insanity is necessary for understanding." | #>----------------------------------------------------------------------<# | GCS/MU d?>! H-() s+:++ g-(+)>! p1+ !au>- a-- w+ v(-)(?)@>--- C++(+++) | | UL++++S+U+X(-) P? L++>+++ 3- E- N(-) K- W(---)>! M-- V-(--) | | -po+ Y+ t+ !5 j R(+) G'''>'''' !tv() b+ D+ B-- e+(++)>+++ | | u(-)(**) h()@ f+@ r++ n- y+(**) | #------------------------------------------------------------------------# ------------------------------ Subject: [BUGFIX]: memory consumption (fs/buffer.c) From: mark@wehi.EDU.AU (Mark W. Watson) Date: 18 Oct 1994 02:11:02 GMT I checked the FAQ and the source but could find no obvious place to send this so its here ;-) This is NOT an official bug fix and may actually be grossly incorrect, I am just trying to get it to the right person (people) for comment or inclusion. Hopefully someone will tell me where this sort of discussion should go. System: Dual P90 with 96MB memory (yes, that is 96MB and a b****y fast PC) AHA1542 SCSI controller and SCSI disks, tape, CD drive Ethernet, networking, etc... NO X Problem: buffers grow until almost all memory is gone (known feature I know). Not a problem except that memory is not returned fast enough. We can experience 20-30 logins simultaneously, all starting the same program and wanting a chunk of memory NOW!. buffers are not released fast enough and the system crashes. (currently only a theory until Wednesday night's big login test). Fix 1: buffer.c had a hard-coded nr_free_pages check of 5, meaning that bufferf could take all but the last 5 pages (about 20k). Is this a bug or was it done deliberately? If deliberate, why? Fix 2: For LARGE memory machines, increase the amount of memory protected from stealing by buffer.c. Who really wants 95MB of buffers anyway ;-) ? Patch follows; *** linux/fs/buffer.c.orig Mon Oct 17 20:37:49 1994 --- linux/fs/buffer.c Mon Oct 17 20:43:18 1994 *************** *** 661,667 **** /* Too bad, that was not enough. Try a little harder to grow some. */ ! if (nr_free_pages > 5) { if (grow_buffers(GFP_BUFFER, size)) { needed -= PAGE_SIZE; goto repeat0; --- 661,667 ---- /* Too bad, that was not enough. Try a little harder to grow some. */ ! if (nr_free_pages > min_free_pages) { if (grow_buffers(GFP_BUFFER, size)) { needed -= PAGE_SIZE; goto repeat0; *************** *** 1598,1604 **** --- 1598,1610 ---- if (high_memory >= 4*1024*1024) { min_free_pages = 200; if(high_memory >= 16*1024*1024) + { nr_hash = 16381; + if(high_memory >= 64*1024*1024) + min_free_pages = 2000; + else + min_free_pages = 500; + } else nr_hash = 4093; } else { -- Mark W. Watson, Systems and Network Admin. | mark@wehi.edu.au The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute | Ph : +61 3 345 2555 P.O. Royal Melbourne Hospital | Fax: +61 3 347 0852 Australia 3050 | include all known disclaimers here ------------------------------ From: kuemin@srapc101.alcatel.ch (Norbert Kuemin) Subject: Setting up X-Server on a Toshiba Laptop T1910CS Date: 18 Oct 1994 14:53:10 GMT Reply-To: norbert.kuemin@alcatel.ch Is There any posibility to set up an X-Server for a Toshiba T1910CS ? If anyone has an Xconfig for this machine, please send it by email TNX Norbert ------------------------------ From: dak@rama.informatik.rwth-aachen.de (David Kastrup) Subject: Re: Why does /bin/login and /usr/bin/newgrp not have setuid bit set? Date: 18 Oct 1994 14:51:58 GMT ahn@wfu.edu (Dave Ahn) writes: >Hello, >I was adding my uid to a second gid in /etc/groups when I noticed that >newgrp did not have the setuid root bit set. Obviously, without root uid, >newgrp can't call setgid/setegid to change my process's gid. I thought >this was strange and took a look at /bin/login, and it too has no >setuid root bit set. This is not normal. Is there a known security >hole or bug with these two programs? Or why would the permissions >be incorrect? If I set the setuid bits, will that introduce a potential >hole? Both programs do not need to be setuid root. login is called by getty, and has root permissions anyway, and newgrp is supposed only to change the group id to legal group ids, namely those in the supplemental group ids of the user. As any setuid program is a potential security problem, having those programs not needing setuid operation not using it is an intelligent measure. -- David Kastrup dak@pool.informatik.rwth-aachen.de Tel: +49-241-72419 Fax: +49-241-79502 Goethestr. 20, D-52064 Aachen -- David Kastrup dak@pool.informatik.rwth-aachen.de Tel: +49-241-72419 Fax: +49-241-79502 Goethestr. 20, D-52064 Aachen ------------------------------ From: psmith@lemming.wellfleet.com (Paul Smith) Subject: Re: Why does /bin/login and /usr/bin/newgrp not have setuid bit set? Date: 18 Oct 1994 16:41:16 GMT Reply-To: psmith@wellfleet.com %% Regarding Re: Why does /bin/login and /usr/bin/newgrp not have setuid %% bit set?; B.A.McCauley@bham.ac.uk writes: bam> In article <380nee$phq@urmel.informatik.rwth-aachen.de> bam> dak@rama.informatik.rwth-aachen.de (David Kastrup) writes: >> login is called by getty, >> and has root permissions anyway, bam> Unless, of course, it isn't. Usual Unix semantics for bam> /bin/login allow anyone to call it. AHA!! So *that's* the damn problem. Sheesh. On my Sun and other systems I have a special WM menu option to kick off an xterm which is logged in as root; I do this more or less: xterm -title "ROOT" -C -e /bin/login root & Works fine on SunOS et. al., but doesn't work at all on Linux (I am always logged in as myself :) One of those annoying things I just never got around to figuring out. Well, that's trivially fixed... -- =============================================================================== Paul D. Smith | That's the thing about being a boxer: | even when you're at the top of your field, Wellfleet Communications, Inc. | people still hit you in the head. Network Management Development | -- Paula Poundstone =============================================================================== ------------------------------ From: rsmurf@ritz.mordor.com (Rasta Smurf) Subject: How do I use XDM? Date: Sun, 16 Oct 1994 21:36:22 GMT I've managed to get X Windows running unde Slackware Professional Linux 2.0 using the 1.1.18 kernel. I would like to set my system up to boot into X Windows, but when I run XDM, it loads a login requester. When I log in it acts like it's going to load X, but then it kicks me back to the login requseter. Even when I login as root. Any suugestions? I'm running on a 486DX-33 with 8 megs, Cirrus Logic CL-GD5428 w/2megs DRAM, and a Sony CDU-33A cdrom. I used ConfigXF86 to configure X, and can run it by typing 'startx'. What am I doing wrong, or haven't done? ------------------------------ ** FOR YOUR REFERENCE ** The service address, to which questions about the list itself and requests to be added to or deleted from it should be directed, is: Internet: Linux-Admin-Request@NEWS-DIGESTS.MIT.EDU You can send mail to the entire list (and comp.os.linux.admin) via: Internet: Linux-Admin@NEWS-DIGESTS.MIT.EDU Linux may be obtained via one of these FTP sites: nic.funet.fi pub/OS/Linux tsx-11.mit.edu pub/linux sunsite.unc.edu pub/Linux End of Linux-Admin Digest ******************************