566 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
566 lines
20 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, 1 Sep 94 02:13:27 EDT
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Subject: Linux-Admin Digest #8
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Linux-Admin Digest #8, Volume #2 Thu, 1 Sep 94 02:13:27 EDT
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Contents:
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Re: 4P Serial on same IRQ ? (Rob Janssen)
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DNS & 'format error no SOA record...' (MATTHEW CROCKER)
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Re: FTape problems (Conner 250) (Michael James Porter)
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xmkmf failed. (Alex Y. Chang)
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Set up a newsgroup on Linux (Ti Co Nuong)
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Re: Q: NFS, Linux -> Macintosh (Wayne Walker)
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Setting up Smail for SLIP (was Help setting up Smail for Linux) (John Alonzo Breen)
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Re: Crond annoyance (Matt Warnock)
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Re: Swap Space... a simple question. (Norbert J. Girardi)
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Which is better: tar->gzip or gzip->tar? (Jeff Arnholt)
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Re: [Q] Routing Problem/Question! (Jerry Ablan)
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Where is newgrp source code? (Admin)
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Re: Is it possible to have NFS via TERM (Jagadeesh Krishnamurthy Venugopal)
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Re: How to kill the unkillable ? (Preston William Gilchrist)
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Re: Linux hangs up and no trace why (Jim Gifford)
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Re: Testing a pointer (Kai Petzke)
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Re: Shutting down when running in runlevel 6 (X) (sharpe randall k)
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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From: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org (Rob Janssen)
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Subject: Re: 4P Serial on same IRQ ?
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Reply-To: pe1chl@rabo.nl
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Date: Wed, 31 Aug 1994 19:36:45 GMT
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In <340vpr$c7e@quandong.itd.adelaide.edu.au> mayfield@itd.adelaide.edu.au (rob) writes:
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>Ive set up an MS400 card with all 4 ports on irq7, using the AA4RE interrupt
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>sharing mod (4x1n4148, 1x4.7kOhm etc).
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>Every time I use setserial to set the serial irq's to 7, it locks up the whole
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>machine (I know it warns about this).
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>I have no parallel ports, scsi is on 5. Ive tried it as ttyS0-3, and also with
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>a dual port S0-1 with the 4 port at S2-5, as well as removing the 2 port and
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>just trying the 4 port as ttyS4-7 et al. same results all the time. I also tried
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>the IRQ commoned to 2/9 instead of 7 (2 is a standard setting for the MS400, 7
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>has to be engineered :-)
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I would expect it to work that way. I have used such a card myself in the
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past, but not with Linux. The card I use now is not that different from it.
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Note that you must pass the flag '^fourport' to all setserial commands
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on ttyS4 and above, as they are defaulting to AST Fourport cards which will
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cause trouble.
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I would put the board in the ttyS4-7 region to avoid it being autodetected
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with the wrong interrupts at boottime.
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Rob
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--
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=========================================================================
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| Rob Janssen | AMPRnet: rob@pe1chl.ampr.org |
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| e-mail: pe1chl@rabo.nl | AX.25 BBS: PE1CHL@PI8UTR.#UTR.NLD.EU |
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=========================================================================
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------------------------------
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From: crocker@opine (MATTHEW CROCKER)
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Subject: DNS & 'format error no SOA record...'
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Date: 31 Aug 1994 14:37:23 GMT
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I'm trying to setup named on a linux system (it will be on the
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internet in a week or so). I try to run named but I get errors in my
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syslog saying that I haven't defined a SOA record. I followed the
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examples in the NAG and I've stared at named.boot & named.hosts but I
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still can't see whats wrong (I do have a SOA record, makes perfect
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sense to me...) Are there file permissions that need to be set?
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Is there something stupid that I'm overlooking?
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My SOA record looks like this: (from memory)
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;
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; Origin : crocker.com
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;
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@ IN SOA dns.crocker.com. (
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matthew.crocker.com.
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1 ; serial
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4000 ; refresh
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4000 ; expire
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4000 ; minimum
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)
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IN A dns.crocker.com.
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IN MX rmc1.crocker.com.
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[...]
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The numbers for refresh & expire etc are not what I have in the file,
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I'll have to get the actual files and post them in a few days...
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Any hints? Can anybody send me their working named.boot etc?
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just tar & gz & uuencode them to my email...
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mcrocker@twain.ucs.umass.edu
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Thanks
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-Matt/2
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--
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-Matthew S Crocker "The mask, given time, comes
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mcrocker@twain.ucs.umass.edu to be the face itself." -anonymous
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*OS/2*OS/2*OS/2*OS/2*OS/2*OS/2*OS/2*OS/2*OS/2*OS/2*OS/2*OS/2*OS/2*OS/2*OS/2*
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*linux*linux*linux*linux*linux*linux*linux*linux*linux*linux*linux*linux*
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------------------------------
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From: mike@strauss.udel.edu (Michael James Porter)
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Subject: Re: FTape problems (Conner 250)
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Date: 31 Aug 1994 10:47:44 -0400
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There are several things that you need to think about:
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1. As mentioned, the 'CONNERBUG' flag may need to be defined in the
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source. When the CONNER (DOS and WINDOWS) program formats the
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floppy, it writes an incorrect value in the header. If you
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bought a preformatted tape, you shouldn't have this problem.
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2. Look at the messages produced by the driver. I'm pretty sure you
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can see them by running dmesg, or maybe they end up in a file
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in /var/adm - I forget. In any case, they'll tell you a lot.
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3. I often have to erase the tape - mt -f /dev/ftape erase before
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using tar.
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In article <CvCxzF.FDJ@mcdgs01.cr.usgs.gov>,
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Rob Fugina <rfugina@mcdgs01.cr.usgs.GOV> wrote:
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=>I've been slowly trying to get one thing working at a time since I installed
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=>Linux on my PC several months ago. I am currently stuck on FTape. I have
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=>a Conner 250MB tape drive. I have also just done a clean install of the
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=>Slackware 2.0.0 distribution. The command 'mt -f /dev/ftape retension' works
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=>fine, but to tar to the /dev/ftape device results in 'I/O error'. The Conner
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=>manual suggests a jumper be removed from the drive for Unix operating systems
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=>that has something to do with auto-positioning. This didn't make a difference.
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=>Can anybody give me some hints as to why it's not working?
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=>
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=>Rob
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=>
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=>--
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=>Rob Fugina, Systems Analyst ** I think, therefore I am not politically correct.
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=> rfugina@mcdgs01.cr.usgs.GOV, robf@umr.edu, robf@cs.umr.edu, robf@ee.umr.edu
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=> GE/CS d-(---) p c++++ l++ u++ e- m+ s+/- n--- h-- f? !g w+ t+ r y?
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=> http://mcmcweb.cr.usgs.gov/~rfugina/
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------------------------------
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From: ytchang@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu (Alex Y. Chang)
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Subject: xmkmf failed.
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Date: Wed, 31 Aug 1994 04:51:35 GMT
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Hi, there:
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Recently, My linux box crashed because of the faulty harddrive. After I
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reinstall the system(almost very thing), the xmkmf ceases to function. Each
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time I tried to complie an X application using xmkmf. I got,
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cpp:No input files. And, I get an empty Makefile. I have tried to reinstall
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XFree2.1 from the scratch. The problem still won't go away. Does anyone have
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the same problem? Please email me if you know what is going on. Thanks in
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advance.
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Alex
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------------------------------
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From: kimxuyen@haden.EECS.Berkeley.EDU (Ti Co Nuong)
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Subject: Set up a newsgroup on Linux
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Date: 31 Aug 1994 21:54:04 GMT
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Hi, I am new to Linux so please bear with me.. :(
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I have a PC running Linux and I would like to setup a
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local newsgroup on the machine. The reason is there are
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some people using the machine at diff. time during a day.
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My machine has no network connection. So how to setup a
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local newsgroup so that people can "rn aa.bb.cc"?
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I don't want to use email
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Thanks in advance. I would appreciate if someone emails me
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the solution (I don't access this newsgroup ofter)
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Thanks again.
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.
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------------------------------
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From: novare@crl.com (Wayne Walker)
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Subject: Re: Q: NFS, Linux -> Macintosh
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Date: 30 Aug 1994 21:58:48 -0700
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John Lamp (jw_lamp@tasman.cc.utas.edu.au) wrote:
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: Tony A Rippy <tr2n+@andrew.cmu.edu> writes:
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: > I have a similar question. Is there a project in the works to
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: >support the mounting of a Macintosh disk? (f.e. like mounting a MSDOS
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: >floppy) Right now, whenever I want to transfer data between MAC/PC disks
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: >I have to find a Mac with a superdrive and transfer to an MSDOS disk,
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: >and _then_ take it to Linux. I was just wondering if at a time loooong
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: >down the road if Linux will have mount support for other OS's.
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: Doubt it. Mac disks! Better to use Fetch on the a Mac connected by TCP/IP
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: to the linux box and use the "put file" command (or button). Fetch will
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: binhex the file on the way.
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: Now if what you want to do is convert the file, rather than make a disk
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: image, that's a different prospect entirely.
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: --
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: -- jw_lamp@postoffice.utas.edu.au : John Lamp --------------------------------
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: Oh oh. Better make myself look big.
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: --------------------------------- http://131.217.21.97/jw_lamp/jw_lamp.html --
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------------------------------
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From: jab3@motel6.cec.wustl.edu (John Alonzo Breen)
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Crossposted-To: comp.mail.smail
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Subject: Setting up Smail for SLIP (was Help setting up Smail for Linux)
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Date: 31 Aug 1994 21:01:01 GMT
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In article <33og7t$835@pop0.rain.rg.net>,
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Paul Bingman <paul@edgewood.portland.or.us> wrote:
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>
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>First off, please take a few minutes and fix your email return address.
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>I think it's pretty unlikely that you are really on the registered domain
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>of "myhost.subdomain.domain".
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By sheer coincidence, I was reading this newsgroup to ask this very
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question (which probably isn't limited to smail, but it's the one I'll
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be using).
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How should one configure hostname/return address on SLIP connections?
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The hostname/ip address I'm assigned changes everytime I make the
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connection; besides, I don't really want replies sent here - I want
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them sent to a host that's up most of the time. And other users may
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want to have replies sent to other hosts. And having something like
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"myhost.subdomain.domain" in the headers looks ugly, even if replies
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aren't going there.
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So...is there a way to have the From: field (or alternately, the
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Reply-to: field) set differently on a user-by-user basis? I'm using
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the version that came with Linux Slackware 1.2 (version 3.something,
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maybe?) but I'm assuming this is a fairly generic question.
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[I realize a thorough reading of the smail manual would answer most of
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this, but I've only been able to locate a 1988-vintage copy of it, and
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it won't print on our laser printer for some reason. Can someone
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point me to where I can get the latest manual, without having to
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download the whole distribution?]
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Thanks.
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--
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John A. Breen
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jab3@cec.wustl.edu
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--
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John A. Breen | I teleported home one night with Ron & Sid & Meg.
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jab3@cec1.wustl.edu | Ron stole Meggie's heart away, and I got Sidneys's leg.
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| - Douglas Adams
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------------------------------
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From: mwarnock@garlic.com (Matt Warnock)
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Subject: Re: Crond annoyance
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Date: 31 Aug 1994 18:00:29 -0700
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In article <33vsmv$lc9@nkosi.well.com>,
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Patrick J. Volkerding <gonzo@magnet.mednet.net> wrote:
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>In article <33uq7b$pbd@agate.berkeley.edu>,
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>Greg Jesus Wolodkin <greg@muttley.EECS.Berkeley.EDU> wrote:
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>>The fact that it's Dillon's crond isn't the problem at all -- as far as I
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>>can tell it's just Slackware 2.0's install. Try "ps -aux | grep cron" and
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>>you'll find you have two of them running. One is started in rc.M, I think,
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>>and the other is in rc.inet2.
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Not so. ONly one running, but it poops on the screen all the time.
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But only on VC1. Still, its an annoyance.
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--
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W. Matthew Warnock, Attorney (mwarnock@garlic.com) Tel:408.778.7273
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60 West Main Avenue, Suite 12A, Morgan Hill CA 95037-4553 Fax:408.778.7989
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------------------------------
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From: girardi@rniil.rni.sub.org (Norbert J. Girardi)
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Subject: Re: Swap Space... a simple question.
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Date: Wed, 31 Aug 1994 18:19:24 GMT
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George W. Pogue (gwp@dithots.org) wrote:
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: I've been monitoring the free command over the past several weeks, more to get
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: an understanding of how memory is affected than to troubleshoot; But, I've run
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: across something interesting enough to look for an answer.
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[ woes about 1 MB permanently in swap, deleted ]
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: I would like to see the system give back the 1M, or does the system use it
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: and never return it? If it keeps it, why? Sure, its not a big deal, I just
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: want to understand better.
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It really is no big deal. One time in the 33 days your system needed
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all the real memory, so some *unused* processes got swapped out.
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Since then they are *sleeping* in swap because nobody woke they up :-)
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Of what use would it be to swap those *sleeping* processes back into
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real memory?
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Look at a ps -ax from my box:
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PID TTY STAT TIME COMMAND
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[snip]
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38 con S 0:00 /usr/sbin/syslogd
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40 con SW 0:00 (klogd) # <- look here
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42 con SW 0:00 (inetd) # <- and here
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44 con SW 0:00 (lpd) # <- and here, too
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56 p 4 S 0:00 -bash
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47 con S 0:00 /usr/sbin/crond
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57 p 5 S 0:00 /sbin/agetty 38400 tty5
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[snip]
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Processes 40, 42 and 44 are swapped out.
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42 [ inetd ] is in swap because the other system in my 2 boxes mini net
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is off.
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44 [ lpd ] is in swap because I have not printed anything since I needed
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real memory for something serious ( viewing dirty pictures with xv ;-) )
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40 [ klogd ] is in swap because the kernel didn't want to talk to me
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in the meantime.
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As soon as any of these -swapped out- processes gets a "WAKE-UP" by the
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kernel they will return into real memory.
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- Norbert
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--
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SSSSSS SQUAREDANCE is FRIENDSHIP set to MUSIC.
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S QQSQQQ Norbert J. Girardi < girardi@rniil.rni.sub.org >
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SSSQSS Q Voice: +49 621 493417 (h) +49 621 381-3260 (w)
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QQQQQQ If you know how to REPAIR YOUR SQUARE :-) drop me a line
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------------------------------
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From: arnholt@mayo.edu (Jeff Arnholt)
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Subject: Which is better: tar->gzip or gzip->tar?
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Date: 31 Aug 1994 16:23:02 GMT
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Reply-To: arnholt@mayo.edu
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For best compression on previously uncompressed files,
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which is better: tar * | gzip, or gzip * | tar?
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IE, is it best to tar compressed files, or compress
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a tar file of uncompressed files? Does gzip -r * work
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better than either solution?
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I'm looking for the most robust method to archive groups
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of files.
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---
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Jeff Arnholt: mail arnholt@mayo.edu
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Mayo Medical and Graduate Schools
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200 1st St. SW, Rochester, MN 55905
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------------------------------
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From: munster@cboe.com (Jerry Ablan)
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Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.help,comp.os.linux.misc
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Subject: Re: [Q] Routing Problem/Question!
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Date: 31 Aug 1994 10:14:25 -0500
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Once upon a time, Alan Cox wrote:
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: In article <330mv3$pa@kevorke.cboe.com> munster@news.cboe.com (Jerry Ablan) writes:
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: >Packets coming in for 198.160.147.* are not being routed from the sl0 device
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: >to the eth0 device, and vice versa. Packets from 198.160.147.27 are getting
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: >to .28, but are not utilizing the default route, they just die!!
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: Have you got a 1.1.x kernel and not got IP routing enabled in the config?
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: Also make sure its not packets going out and the other end of the slip
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: link not having a route back.
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Yes that was exactly the problem. It's all fixed now. Thanks.
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--
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.----------------------------------------------------------.
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| Jerry Ablan Chicago Board Options Exchange |
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| Sr. Systems Developer LaSalle at Van Buren |
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| Distributed Systems Division Chicago, IL. 60605 |
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|----------------------------------------------------------|
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| "I have always believed that I was slightly saner than |
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| most people. Then again, most insane people think |
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| this." -- Truman Capote |
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|----------------------------------------------------------|
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| GAT: d--(?) -p+ c++++ l++ u+ c+(*) m+(++) s++/++ !n |
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| h---(--) f+ g+++ w++ t++ r++ y**(--) |
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`----------------------------------------------------------'
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------------------------------
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From: admin@mrcsb.com (Admin)
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Subject: Where is newgrp source code?
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Date: 31 Aug 1994 20:46:06 GMT
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I need the source code for an executable in /usr/bin It is: newgrp
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and I haven't been able to find it at ftp.cdrom.com or tsx-11.mit.edu
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in the linux-sources directory and would like to know where it may be
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found. THANKS FOR THE HELP LANCE PURDY
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admin@photon.mrcsb.com
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------------------------------
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From: jkvg@everest.ccs.neu.edu (Jagadeesh Krishnamurthy Venugopal)
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Subject: Re: Is it possible to have NFS via TERM
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Date: 31 Aug 94 22:35:37
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> Is it possible to have NFS via TERM-connected network ?
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I am not too certain about this but I remember having read somewhere that NFS
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is a connectionless protocol and term is only for connection priented
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services, so I dont think you can get one.
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But who knows!
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--
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Jagadeesh K. Venugopal
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Graduate Student, College of Computer Science
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Northeastern University
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Boston, MA 02115
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xmosaic url: http://www.ccs.neu.edu/home/jkvg
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------------------------------
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From: pwg7503@tamsun.tamu.edu (Preston William Gilchrist)
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Subject: Re: How to kill the unkillable ?
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Date: 31 Aug 1994 00:42:36 -0500
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I'm sure some processes might be unkillable, but almost all I have encountered
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that could not be killed with plain kill could be kill with the following:
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kill -KILL <process>
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This should do for most things.
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--
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Preston Gilchrist Texas A&M University, Computer Science
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E-Mail: mystic@tamu.edu http://tamsun.tamu.edu/~pwg7503/
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------------------------------
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From: jgifford@moe.coe.uga.edu (Jim Gifford)
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Subject: Re: Linux hangs up and no trace why
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Date: 1 Sep 1994 02:57:00 GMT
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Mark Krischer (mkrisch@avalanche.mpce.mq.edu.au) wrote:
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: In article <342438$khg@dawn.mmm.com>, uspra016@mmm.com (John Sundberg) writes:
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[stuff deleted...]
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: i think i know what the "failed" is from.
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Great, I also get this with 1542b
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: i had it as well until i fixed the setting for my Adaptec SCSI. check the SCSI FAQ. it's
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: not the simplest thing to read--but hey, it's a document for running UNIX :) anyway, there
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: are some notes about adding command line parameters to LILO. when i fixed that, the CD-ROM
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: worked and "failed" went away, to be replaced by information concerning the CD-ROM hookup.
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: hope that helps.
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It would help a lot more if our newsserver didn't eat any character past
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column 80.
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Oh well, to be so close yet so far .....
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Later,
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Jim
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------------------------------
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From: wpp@marie.physik.tu-berlin.de (Kai Petzke)
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Subject: Re: Testing a pointer
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Date: 31 Aug 94 19:01:01 GMT
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rob@pe1chl.ampr.org (Rob Janssen) writes:
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>In <014320JJFWNEAXUEJBGU@cml.com> dsnider@cml.com writes:
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>>Is there a command/function in C to test if a pointer is pointing to
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>>accessable memory? GDB can tell you if a pointer's contents are
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>>"unaccessable"... so there must be a way.
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>Just catch SIGSEGV and dereference it?
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Well, a bit of a brute force method. But you could try the following:
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- Use brk() to obtain the end of the BSS area. If your pointer is
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below that address, it is valid (except for QMAGIC executables,
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which start at address 0x1000, not 0).
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- Write a function, which declares one automatic variable, and returns
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the address of that variable as a void *. Then compare your pointer
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to that address. If your pointer is higher than this, and lower than
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0xc0000000, then it is on the stack.
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--
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Kai Petzke | How fast can computers get?
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Technical University of Berlin |
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Berlin, Germany | Sol 9, of course, on Star Trek.
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wpp@marie.physik.tu-berlin.de |
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------------------------------
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From: sharpe@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu (sharpe randall k)
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Subject: Re: Shutting down when running in runlevel 6 (X)
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Date: 1 Sep 1994 03:13:10 GMT
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"Eric Jeschke" <jeschke@cs.indiana.edu> writes:
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>Check out
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> man xmodmap
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>to learn how to remap keys under X. You can do this in your
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>own .xinitrc or in the Xdm scripts.
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>--
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>Eric Jeschke | Indiana University
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>jeschke@cs.indiana.edu | Computer Science Department
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I was looking for a more global solution. I have found one:
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*ttyModes: intr ^C quit ^\\ erase ^? kill ^U eof ^D start ^Q stop ^S susp ^Z rprnt ^R lnext ^V flush ^O weras ^W
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in the XTerm file in app-defaults. I also put stty sane in the global
|
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shel scripts, /etc/csh.login, /etc/profile, /etc/ksh???
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This solved the problem for me so far, at least with xterms and xterms
|
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-Cl
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------------------------------
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** FOR YOUR REFERENCE **
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The service address, to which questions about the list itself and requests
|
|
to be added to or deleted from it should be directed, is:
|
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|
|
Internet: Linux-Admin-Request@NEWS-DIGESTS.MIT.EDU
|
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|
|
You can send mail to the entire list (and comp.os.linux.admin) via:
|
|
|
|
Internet: Linux-Admin@NEWS-DIGESTS.MIT.EDU
|
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|
|
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
|
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******************************
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