638 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
638 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
From: Digestifier <Linux-Admin-Request@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu>
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To: Linux-Admin@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu
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Reply-To: Linux-Admin@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu
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Date: Thu, 13 Oct 94 22:13:41 EDT
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Subject: Linux-Admin Digest #190
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Linux-Admin Digest #190, Volume #2 Thu, 13 Oct 94 22:13:41 EDT
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Contents:
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PPP documents anywhere? (Serge Solski u)
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Re: Bus mouse (Eric Zager)
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Bash leaves Wedged Processes (Todd R. Lawrence)
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Re: Please don't post security holess... (M. K. Shenk)
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Novell Netware support for Linux... (Matthew Dharm)
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bugs and stuff: rpc.portmap, grep (Greck Cannon)
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Re: Please don't post security holess... (Bill Davidsen)
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Re: SLS system passwd problems (Bill Davidsen)
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Re: 16-user dial-up Linux? (Phil Hughes)
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Re: Drat--lpd runs, but not lpr. (Tom Griffing)
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more LEDs? (Benjamin Ryzman)
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Re: XFree86-3.1 - Whoopee! (Stephen Early)
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Re: /etc/passwd and /etc/group standards (Matt Beal)
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Re: Serious Bug In The Networking Code (Frank Lofaro)
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Re: [Q] I/O error with sendmail (John Gotts)
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Re: [Q] RAM / Disk (Alan Osborne)
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Re: Should I up to 3.1? (was Re: XFree86-3.1 - Whoopee!) (Andrew R. Tefft)
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Re: SLIP through terminal concentrator? (Andrew R. Tefft)
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Re: XFree86-3.1 - Whoopee! (Andrew R. Tefft)
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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From: sols7520@mach1.wlu.ca (Serge Solski u)
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Subject: PPP documents anywhere?
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Date: Thu, 13 Oct 1994 15:52:58 GMT
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Are there any documents, files, how-to's, faqs, etc., anywhere
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that helps with the install of PPP? Everthing that I've found states that
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PPP is new and no documentation is developed yet. Surely something must
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exist by now.
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-Mark
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--
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"Key chuckles. 'If Skinny Puppy, in terms of the movie _Alien_, is a
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chest-burster, then Doubting Thomas is more of a face-hugger,' he informs,
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as if that were an explanation."
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-Keyboard, Jan '92
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------------------------------
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From: eric@homer.phys.washington.edu (Eric Zager)
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Subject: Re: Bus mouse
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Date: 11 Oct 1994 16:49:43 GMT
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The files in /dev are not like DOS device drivers. The program code
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to implement different devices is compiled into the kernel. Files in
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/dev just map a device name like "/dev/hda1" into a major and minor
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device number, like 3, 1. The kernel then uses these numbers to figure
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out how to treat the device.
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To create the entry you need in /dev, try (as root)
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mknod c /dev/bmousems 10 2
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10 and 2 are the major and minor device numbers you need, and c tells the
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kernel that the mouse is a character (unbuffered) device.
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Good Luck,
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- Eric
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Todd Fries (tfries@usenet.umr.edu) wrote:
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: I am having a problem figuring out how to get the /dev/bmousems driver for
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: my mouse to appear. I've no clue which part of the distribution, if any,
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: should have it...the selections command is the one that is giving me the
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: problems, so I don't have any clue how to find the drivers, although I
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: did re-compile the kernel, so that it includes bus-mouse support...
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------------------------------
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From: mutrl@uxa.ecn.bgu.edu (Todd R. Lawrence)
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Subject: Bash leaves Wedged Processes
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Date: 12 Oct 1994 04:58:06 GMT
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Is there any known solution to the annoying habit of BASH to leave
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all kinds of wedged processes floating about when a telnetted in user simply
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drops his connection without using logout/exit.
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--
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Todd Lawrence
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LOD Communications
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"I would like everyone to be nice to baby crabs..."
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------------------------------
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From: mkshenk@u.washington.edu (M. K. Shenk)
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Subject: Re: Please don't post security holess...
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Date: 12 Oct 1994 04:54:24 GMT
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In article <jeffpkCxJ8Hu.JJG@netcom.com>,
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Jeff Kesselman <jeffpk@netcom.com> wrote:
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>Yeah, what Patrick said.
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>
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>Surely the man who thinks his breaking into MY machine and using MY
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>system resources for something I didn't intend is not a crime wouldnot
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>mind if I broke into his car and borrowed it to run drugs??? I'll return
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>it as soon as I'm done.....
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I suppose I was unclear. What I meant: someone who does this may be
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commiting a crime (they are) but they are not necessarily a criminal
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in the sense that you probably think about criminals. You have a nice
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label that allows you to feel certain things about anyone you plaster it
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on. If all you meant by criminal ws "someone who has broken the law" then
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i would agree. But you probably don't, even if you think you do. I
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am not (if you people could get it through your thick heads) in favor
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of system cracking. What i am AGAINST is the mindless damning of anyone
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to ever bypass a login prompt. Some of these people are 11-12 year old
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children. I'm not even saying that they should be treated any
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differently because of this. I am saying your label of criminal may
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not fit. I am opposing a knee-jerk reaction to someone that has done
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something that you -> have a perfect right to be upset about, and a legal
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right to get them in trouble <- but really has in many cases not done any
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harm. I.e.: someone uses cycles on my Linux box. They are essentially
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free. I may not want him there, but it is possible for him to enter and
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leave and *do me no harm.* Did I say this makes it "okay."? Don't
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respond to what I am not saying. It is also possible for someone to
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enter your house and do you no harm. NOT "do you no wrong" but "do
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you no harm." Can you accept this statemnt, with no implications?
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Folks, opposing a statement that is true for what you think it may imply
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is pathetic. First and foremost is the truth of a statement. Statement
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"A" if true, is still true if the consequence of believing it is the
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destruction of all living things. My point: do what you like. People
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should not enter your system. If you bend reality in your mind, you
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are pathetic.
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>
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>As Patrick ably poinetd out the issue is that the system in question
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>belongs to someone else who did NOT give you permission to use it. Myabe
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>in YOUR house nobody cared if you took your parents stuff without asking,
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>but in MY up bringing that was considred immoral.
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>
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>JK
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>
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Oh, boy, little dig, eh? Do you possess the mental capacity to understand one
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can take a side in debate without believing in it? Do you understadn one may
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do this to destroy bad thinking in the side he IS on?
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------------------------------
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From: mdharm@alonzo.cs.hmc.edu (Matthew Dharm)
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Subject: Novell Netware support for Linux...
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Date: 13 Oct 1994 18:29:56 GMT
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I will be setting up a Linux box very soon which will be connected to
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an ethernet network which is running Novell Netware and TCP/IP. There
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are several printers on the Netware which I would like to access, but
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I don't think I can from Linux. Or can I? If anyone knows anything
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about attaching a Linux box to Netware (including current projects to
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develop such support -- I'm willing to help), drop me a line here.
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Thanks much.
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Matt Dharm
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mdharm@hmc.edu
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------------------------------
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From: greck@scaredy.catt.ncsu.edu (Greck Cannon)
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Subject: bugs and stuff: rpc.portmap, grep
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Date: 13 Oct 1994 22:01:24 GMT
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I have a couple of problems I'd like to see if anybody can fill me in
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on. First, some config info:
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1.1.53 kernel
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16 megs RAM
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Buslogic SCSI
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3com ethernet
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Soundblaster 16
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ATI GUP VLB
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1) I'm running rpc.portmap, rpc.nfsd and rpc.mountd to export some stuff
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via NFS. Everything seems to work fine, except once every couple of days,
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rpc.portmap decides that it's broken and should respawn. Unfortunately,
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it doesn't kill itself first, so the second copy exits because the port
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is still held by the first copy. Thus is begins an infinite loop of
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respawning and dieing because the first copy won't go away. If you kill
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the first copy, the next copy that loads will be happy and it stops.
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I don't even know why the first copy becomes unhappy, but I'm getting
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tired of getting back to the computer to find it happily crunching away
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with a load of close to 2 because of portmap. I know for a fact that
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nothing was going on with NFS the last several times it's happened, so
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I don't know what to blame it on.
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2) GNU grep version 2.0 only pays attention to what appears to be the
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first 80 characters of each line? Is this a new feature?
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Any feedback is appreciated,
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-greck
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--
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Greck S. Cannon \ [He's] only bitter on the outside--inside
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sophomore CSC major \ he's got creamy nougat.
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greck@ \ -Slappy Squirrel
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scaredy.catt.ncsu.edu \
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===========================
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set your URL to http://www.catt.ncsu.edu
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------------------------------
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From: davidsen@usenety1.news.prodigy.com (Bill Davidsen)
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Subject: Re: Please don't post security holess...
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Date: 13 Oct 1994 15:20:30 -0400
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Reply-To: davidsen@tmr.com (bill davidsen)
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In article <1994Oct13.031236.16593@terrabit.mn.org>,
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David Dyer-Bennet <ddb@terrabit.mn.org> wrote:
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| I can't reasonably evaluate a patch that doesn't include a description
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| of what it fixes. And I hope you aren't suggesting that people apply
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| any patch that anybody posts!
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|
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| Historically, not posting bug reports seems to result in bugs not
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| getting fixed. After watching the net for, um, a number of years now,
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| I'm firmly in favor of full disclosure.
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I've been on the net since I was ARPA technical person for GE's *only*
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gateway. I agree, the crackers will spread the info among the bad guys,
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it's up to the good guys to spread the word, too.
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I would rather have a problem complete with solution, but I would really
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like to know about the problem anyway. Of course sensitive sites should
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not be on the net (directly) at all, but that's another issue.
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--
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Speaking *from* but never *for* Prodigy
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"Pain builds moral fiber" -my dad
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"Pain hurts" -me
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------------------------------
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From: davidsen@usenety1.news.prodigy.com (Bill Davidsen)
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Subject: Re: SLS system passwd problems
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Date: 13 Oct 1994 15:28:47 -0400
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In article <37dtle$kcg@ocean.CAM.ORG>, Mike Shurtleff <shur@CAM.ORG> wrote:
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:I just loaded up the minimal (4Adisks) version of SLS 1.05. While I can
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:assign
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:passwords to non-root accounts from root.. I can't change passwords from
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:the non-root accounts (for the same account of course).. I get bumped
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:because it doesn't recognize the old password.
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:
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:If I try to change the root password on root, the change goes through
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:..but the password is not the one entered..i.e. I lose access to my root
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:account!
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There are two copies of the passwd command in the SLS release, one for
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shadow and one for non-shadow. You are getting the wrong one. I suggest
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that after you find the correct one, you move or rename the other so you
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don't get the problem again.
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I don't remember where the copies are, /bin and /usr/bin, matbe?
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--
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Speaking *from* but never *for* Prodigy
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"Pain builds moral fiber" -my dad
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"Pain hurts" -me
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------------------------------
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From: fyl@eskimo.com (Phil Hughes)
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Subject: Re: 16-user dial-up Linux?
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Date: Thu, 13 Oct 1994 18:19:41 GMT
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Bart Kindt (bart@dunedin.es.co.nz) wrote:
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: In article <373ft9$nk4@unix1.cc.ysu.edu> s0017210@unix1.cc.ysu.edu (Steve DuChene) writes:
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: > Supposably there are going to be some Digiboard card drivers soon.
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: > You might want to check with them also for multi-port cards to run
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: > with Linux.
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: Yes, but only for the 4 and 8 port cards. There will be no driver for a 16
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: port card. I just got a mail from Digiboard on that.
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The driver for the Cyclades board (see Linux Journal, issue 5) works with
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their 16-port card. Cyclades can be reached at cyclades@netcom.com or
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800-347-6601
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--
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Phil Hughes, Publisher, Linux Journal (206) 527-3385
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usually phil@ssc.com, sometimes fyl@eskimo.com
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------------------------------
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From: tom@metronet.com (Tom Griffing)
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Subject: Re: Drat--lpd runs, but not lpr.
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Date: Wed, 12 Oct 1994 04:19:18 GMT
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In article <CxHzqM.3xB@news.tudelft.nl>,
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Dolf Smits <dolf@interduct.tudelft.nl> wrote:
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>What does lpc stat give for messages?
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>Did you enable the printer? (with lpc enable <printername>
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>Try this, if it doesn't work give the output of lpc stat over here and I will
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>have a second look at it
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I am having similar troubles with printing on my HP 4L.
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I got the following when printing a text file:
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# ls -l consult.book
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-rw-r--r-- 1 tom users 506 Jan 27 1994 consult.book
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# lpc stat
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lp:
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queuing is enabled
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printing is enabled
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no entries
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no daemon present
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# lpr consult.book
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# echo $?
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0
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# lpc stat
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lp:
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queuing is enabled
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printing is enabled
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no entries
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no daemon present
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#
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And wala! No printout. The light doesn't even blink.
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But it prints fine from MS-DOG.
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The printcap entry follows (maybe this is the problem):
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# Hewlett-Packard Laser Jet:
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lp|hplj:\
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:lp=/dev/lp0:\
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:sd=/usr/spool/lp0:\
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:mx#0:\
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:of=/usr/spool/lp0/hplj:
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I get *some* output if I just 'cat' the file to /dev/lp0,
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but it has the "staircase" effect.
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Any help would be greatly appreciated.
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--
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_____________________________________________________
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| Thomas L. Griffing | |
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| tom@metronet.com | (214) 352-3441 |
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|__________________________|__________________________|
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------------------------------
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From: zarkdav@eddy.frmug.fr.net (Benjamin Ryzman)
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Subject: more LEDs?
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Date: 11 Oct 1994 15:18:58 +0100
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>>>>> Au sujet de "Re: SCSI vs IDE", Alan Cox <20>crivait r<>cemment:
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AC> In article <36t84s$pb0@dhp.com> panzer@dhp.com (Panzer Boy)
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AC> writes:
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>> Umm, I have three LED's on my computer, plus a panel for stupid
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>> speed. I have 3 drive controllers hooked up to the "HD, Turbo,
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>> and Power" LED's. I don't anyone who uses turbo for more than
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>> minor kicks, and if you can't tell you're computer is on, maybe
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>> you need your head examined. Of course, if you only have 1 led,
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>> this could be a problem.
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AC> Definitely we need more LEDs. I've got the turbo wired to the
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AC> carrier detect on the amateur radio PI2 card 8)
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Yep!
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In fact, we'd need a user programmable LCD (2x40?) screen for:
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-disk status
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-serial port status
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-system load
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-custom peripheral status (like your amateur radio...)
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Or maybe a multi-led ramp, if you prefer a "Thinking Machine"-like
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computer ;-))
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Time to check alt.comp.home-built, eh?
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--
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Amicalement, "Benj" Email: zarkdav@eddy.frmug.fr.net
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Calm down, it's only ones and zeroes.
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------------------------------
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From: sde1000@hermes.cam.ac.uk (Stephen Early)
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Subject: Re: XFree86-3.1 - Whoopee!
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Date: 11 Oct 1994 17:15:19 GMT
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In article <CxGBIA.3o7@info.swan.ac.uk>,
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Alan Cox <iialan@iifeak.swan.ac.uk> wrote:
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>In article <36p94u$ltd@interport.net> carlos@interport.net (Carlos
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>Dominguez) writes:
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>>Will fvwm and its modules work in Xfree3.11?
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>
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>I can't get any of openlook or fvwm to work. I'm inclined to think this is
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>probably X11R6 incompatibilities with these packages rather than bugs. So
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>until they appear fixed I shall stay with 2.1.1.
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You probably just have things in the wrong place, like fvwm not being on the
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path, not moving or symlinking /usr/X11/lib/X11/fvwm to the
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appropriate place, not having your old shared libraries in an
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appropriate place and in /etc/ld.so.conf, etc.
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Once I'd moved everything around, fvwm and its modules worked with no
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problems.
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Steve
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------------------------------
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From: publius@eng.umd.edu (Matt Beal)
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Subject: Re: /etc/passwd and /etc/group standards
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Date: 13 Oct 1994 14:41:06 GMT
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Chris Bitmead (chrisb@stork.cssc-syd.tansu.com.au) wrote:
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: In article <376aq3$97u@niaomi.iscm.ulst.ac.uk> gareth@benbane.infc.ulst.ac.uk (Gareth McAleese) writes:
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: From my SunOS machine:
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[encrypted root password deleted]
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For your sake, I hope that password isn't crackable :-) Mebbe you
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should change it now, eh?
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Matt
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------------------------------
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Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.development,comp.os.linux.help
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From: ftlofaro@unlv.edu (Frank Lofaro)
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Subject: Re: Serious Bug In The Networking Code
|
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Date: Thu, 13 Oct 94 19:47:06 GMT
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In article <KETIL.94Oct9183323@lomvi.ii.uib.no> ketil@ii.uib.no writes:
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>
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>There appears to be a serious bug in some of the networking code
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>supplied with linux/slackware, that causes the computer to get
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>'network unreachable' after approximately 3 minutes of perfect
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>functioning. I have no idea what the problem might be, and if
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>somebody tell me where to look, I can try to figure out what versions
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>my drivers etc. are. Here are the configurations I ve gotten this
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>problem with:
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>
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>AMD DX2/66, 8Mb, VLB CL5428 1Mb with either
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>* Etherlink II, kernel 1.1.50 and 1.1.49
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>* SMC Ultra Combo, kernel 1.1.33, 1.1.49, 1.1.50
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> -tried both coax and TP
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>* SMC Ultra something else, also with various kernels
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>
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>AMD 386/40, 12Mb,
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>* SMC Ultra Combo, kernel 1.1.33
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>
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>The 386 works perfectly well with the network with both cards when
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>using older software (Some old SLS distrib. I believe)
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>
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>I would very much like to know what is wrong, and how to fix it.
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>
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>There is also a 'bug' in df, causing a float exception when it cannot
|
||
>access a non-existent NFS-mount.
|
||
>
|
||
>Thanks for any help,
|
||
>--
|
||
>
|
||
> <20> Ketil Malde In real life: ketil@ii.uib.no <20>
|
||
> <20> Nuke The Whales! Pave The Earth! And Honk If You Love Unicorns! <20>
|
||
|
||
Are you running routed? The could cause routes to get dropped and
|
||
thus Network unreachables to occur.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
From: john@linux.reshall.umich.edu (John Gotts)
|
||
Subject: Re: [Q] I/O error with sendmail
|
||
Date: 12 Oct 1994 05:31:12 GMT
|
||
|
||
Tim Bass (Network Systems Engineer) (bass@cais2.cais.com) wrote:
|
||
|
||
: Sendmail sends mail just fine. Receiving mail gives
|
||
: the error:
|
||
|
||
: linux[\64]/tmp> /usr/lib/sendmail -v root < /tmp/testmessage
|
||
: root... Connecting to linux.silkroad.com (local)...
|
||
: lmail: write failed to temp file /tmp/lmail1465
|
||
: root... I/O error
|
||
: linux[\65]/tmp>
|
||
|
||
: Any ideas?
|
||
|
||
: BTW: The /tmp/lmail* file(s) are created.
|
||
--
|
||
|
||
The same stuff happens to me. Any ideas?
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
John Gotts (jgotts@umich.edu) 73 de N8QDW URL: http://www.umich.edu/~jgotts
|
||
GE -d+ H s+: g-- p? !au a-- w+ v C++++ UL++++ 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? <Linux rules!>
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
From: alan@osborne.demon.co.uk (Alan Osborne)
|
||
Subject: Re: [Q] RAM / Disk
|
||
Date: Wed, 12 Oct 1994 22:45:17 +0000
|
||
|
||
K.B. van Benten (kbbenten@cs.vu.nl) wrote:
|
||
: Hi there,
|
||
|
||
: buy 16Mb of RAM (is it MUCH better than 8Mb) or buy
|
||
: 4MB of RAM and, say 400Md harddisk?
|
||
|
||
Could your motherboard/bus/graphics adaptor stand an upgrade (esp. as
|
||
you find X important)? There seem to be quite cheap and tasty PCI
|
||
mboards available with onboard (NCR) SCSI-2 and 16550 serial ports - add
|
||
the cost of that and a PCI graphics card and see how much money you've
|
||
got left for some RAM and disk space.....you could maybe get a nice fast
|
||
SCSI-2 hdd too. I'd rather take this route and make to with 8Mb RAM
|
||
until I could afford more. You'd have to sell the simms you've now got
|
||
first though probably.
|
||
|
||
Volgens mij, tenminste :-) Hoeveel geld heb je ?
|
||
(Apologies for my appalling Dutch, everyone)
|
||
|
||
Daag,
|
||
--
|
||
AlanO
|
||
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
From: teffta@erie.ge.com (Andrew R. Tefft)
|
||
Subject: Re: Should I up to 3.1? (was Re: XFree86-3.1 - Whoopee!)
|
||
Reply-To: teffta@erie.ge.com
|
||
Date: Tue, 11 Oct 1994 13:24:18 GMT
|
||
|
||
In article <379a41$ifn@ritz.cec.wustl.edu>, are1@ritz.cec.wustl.edu (Andrew Robert Ellsworth) writes:
|
||
> Getting the
|
||
>entire XFree86 3.1 package is a bit of overkill if you just want an updated
|
||
>Xserver.
|
||
|
||
Somewhat true. But you will need the libraries, and you might as well get
|
||
them all because they all come together; in the future I suspect precompiled
|
||
binaries will use the new libraries. And if you have the libraries and the
|
||
server, there is not much reason you should link your own binaries with
|
||
the old libraries, so you might as well get the headers. Also you will
|
||
need the updated man pages, which all come together.
|
||
|
||
So about the only thing you end up not really needing to upgrade is the
|
||
fonts.
|
||
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
|
||
Andy Tefft - new, expanded .sig - teffta@erie.ge.com
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
From: teffta@erie.ge.com (Andrew R. Tefft)
|
||
Subject: Re: SLIP through terminal concentrator?
|
||
Reply-To: teffta@erie.ge.com
|
||
Date: Tue, 11 Oct 1994 13:26:21 GMT
|
||
|
||
SLIP requires an 8-bit clean line.
|
||
PPP has the ability to escape characters that cannot be sent directly
|
||
over the line.
|
||
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
|
||
Andy Tefft - new, expanded .sig - teffta@erie.ge.com
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
From: teffta@erie.ge.com (Andrew R. Tefft)
|
||
Subject: Re: XFree86-3.1 - Whoopee!
|
||
Reply-To: teffta@erie.ge.com
|
||
Date: Tue, 11 Oct 1994 13:32:48 GMT
|
||
|
||
In article <371olf$6cf@ritz.cec.wustl.edu>, are1@ritz.cec.wustl.edu (Andrew Robert Ellsworth) writes:
|
||
>Carlos Dominguez <carlos@interport.net> wrote:
|
||
>>Now that it's been released.. Is there a compelling reason to upgrade?
|
||
|
||
>Unless you have a bunch of X11R6-specific programs you need to run, no.
|
||
>... if you
|
||
>don't need to run X11R6-specfic stuff, I doubt it's worth the trouble (unless
|
||
>you just want to be able to say "I have the latest version of Xfree86"). :)
|
||
|
||
I would guess that from about now on, most precompiled X binaries
|
||
will be linked with the R6 libraries. Going to 3.1 (keep your old libraries
|
||
too!) will give you some backwards compatibility, since the R6 server
|
||
can work with your older binaries.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
|
||
Andy Tefft - new, expanded .sig - teffta@erie.ge.com
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
|
||
** 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
|
||
******************************
|