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From: Digestifier <Linux-Admin-Request@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu>
To: Linux-Admin@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu
Reply-To: Linux-Admin@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu
Date: Wed, 21 Sep 94 03:13:39 EDT
Subject: Linux-Admin Digest #86
Linux-Admin Digest #86, Volume #2 Wed, 21 Sep 94 03:13:39 EDT
Contents:
Term-rlogin setuid-root: security hole? (Alexandra Griffin)
Re: SEARCH: Clock setting Programm for 24X (Greg Robertson)
Re: GNU finger on Linux ? (Juha Virtanen)
Re: AutoMount For Linux (Mitchum DSouza)
Re: Disappearing Keyboard (Kai Petzke)
Re: who/finger shoing hole net (benny@bigfoot)
Tape problems, (Emerald 9000) (Wim ten Have)
problems with connecting.. (Alan Donald)
Dosemu in X (Dan Wold)
Re: Clean shutdown from X (Christoph Best)
Re: Printers on the parallel port (Corey Brenner)
Re: What user interface to use??? (Corey Brenner)
Re: Modem 14400 and uugetty (Kevin Cummings)
Re: ftp login message (John M Hansen)
Some Networking Problems... (Charles W. Binko)
Re: Printers on the parallel port (George Photakis)
Re: Routing A<-slip->B<-ether->C (Kevin Cummings)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: acg@kzin.cen.ufl.edu (Alexandra Griffin)
Subject: Term-rlogin setuid-root: security hole?
Date: 20 Sep 1994 19:30:37 GMT
I grabbed the pre-compiled RLOGIN binary off the bohr.physics... site,
and found that it did not work properly in "shared" mode (i.e. it
wouldn't find the TERM socket except when run from the account that
started TERM, or by root). Making rlogin setuid-root fixes this, and
things seem to work perfectly: when rlogin'ing to a remote system, the
user name that gets passed through is that of whoever runs TERM, not
root.
So, it seems to work great, but am I opening myself up to any security
holes by doing this? I've checked for the obvious ones already (it
won't let you rlogin as root to localhost without a password, etc.),
but is there something I'm overlooking?
Thanks,
-- alex
------------------------------
From: grober1@abacus.tis.tandy.com (Greg Robertson)
Subject: Re: SEARCH: Clock setting Programm for 24X
Date: 20 Sep 1994 16:39:39 GMT
: NO. freq is for the Diamond proprietary programmable clock generator.
: Diamond doesn't use it on their 24X cards (WD chipset). I thought that
: I read once that the 24X should work just fine once the chipset was
: supported by XFree. Disclaimer: I don't own/use a 24X, so everything
: I'm saying is from memory. I DO own/run a Diamond Stealth VRAM, so I'm
: not totally clueless here!
: --
: Kevin J. Cummings Peritus Software Services, Inc.
: cummings@kjc386.framingham.ma.us cummings@peritus.com
WRONG.....freq is for the 24X cards....I own one and use freq to
set my clocks and my card does have a WD chipset.
Greg
--
+------------------------------+-----------------------------------------+
| Greg Robertson | Tandy Information Services |
| Production Control | Tandy Technology Square, Suite 1431 |
| grober1@tis.tandy.com | 200 Taylor Street, Fort Worth, TX 76102 |
| Voice: (817) 870-0879 +-----------------------------------------+
| Fax: (817) 390-2132 | It doesn't hurt to ask! |
+------------------------------+-----------------------------------------+
------------------------------
From: Juha.Virtanen@hut.fi (Juha Virtanen)
Subject: Re: GNU finger on Linux ?
Date: 20 Sep 1994 14:03:55 GMT
Reply-To: jiivee@hut.fi
>>>>> On 17 Sep 1994 11:10:30 GMT, phil@rivendell.apana.org.au
(Phil Homewood) said:
:> Compiles straight out of the box once you install process accounting,
:> I am told.
Then you have been told wrong information! GNU finger and process
accounting performed by kernel have nothing to do together.
Rather, there are several different patches for GNU finger-1.37
to make in compilable. I don't remember which one I used, but it
works fine for me. Check diffs mentioned in previous article.
Juha
--
Pl<EFBFBD><EFBFBD>h. En m<> k<>yt<79> .signaturea.
------------------------------
From: Mitchum.DSouza@mrc-apu.cam.ac.uk (Mitchum DSouza)
Subject: Re: AutoMount For Linux
Date: 20 Sep 1994 14:20:00 GMT
In article <CwCnIq.30I@lehman.com>, jcolman@lehman.com (Jake Colman) writes:
|> SethMeister G. (consp05@bingsuns.cc.binghamton.edu) wrote:
|>
|> : GHi There,
|>
|> : Does anyone know if there is an AutoMount Utility, Like Volume
|> : Manager on Solaris, available for Linux. What this does is
|> : automatically mounts a diskette when it is inserted in the disk drive
|> : and mounts it to a directory you specify. Anyone know about this?
|> : -Thanks
|>
|> : --
|> : ----------------------------------------------
|> : O.G. SethMeister <<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>> D.F.W.M.
|> : ----------------------------------------------
|>
|> There is a version of amd (AutoMounter) for Linus that works like a charm
|> for autmounting remote directories. It does not automatically mount
|> diskettes. I would be interested in such a beastie as well.
If you take a look at the "program" option you will be able to see how floppies
may be (u)mounted relatively eaisly. Robert Sanders kindly sent me some scripts
to do just this with the automounter, and I promised him I would add this to any
doccument I wrote on AMD. However lack of time has prevented me from doing so.
If you would like a copy please email me, otherwise just wait until such time
that I am able to doccument such things for pubilc consumption.
Mitch
------------------------------
From: wpp@marie.physik.tu-berlin.de (Kai Petzke)
Subject: Re: Disappearing Keyboard
Date: 20 Sep 94 09:10:52 GMT
gburk@netcom.com (Gene R Burk) writes:
>Does anyone have an idea why after boot up my keyboard would suddenly act
>as if it's not getting any power? Everything worked fine as I set things
>up using the root and boot disks.
Did you accidently press Ctrl-Q? That stops any further screen output,
including, what you type.
Press Ctrl-S for remedy.
--
Kai Petzke | How fast can computers get?
Technical University of Berlin |
Berlin, Germany | Sol 9, of course, on Star Trek.
wpp@marie.physik.tu-berlin.de |
------------------------------
From: benny@bigfoot
Subject: Re: who/finger shoing hole net
Date: 20 Sep 1994 14:21:44 GMT
Hans Petter Fasteng wrote in article <1994Sep20.122634.5720@kfdata.no> :
>
>Is it possible to configure w or finger (bouth) to show all hosts on our
>local ethernet?
>
>-Hans
>
>
Try GNU finger. It's supposed to compile out of the box if you got
accounting installed. If not, like me, you can apply a patch that
can be found on sunsite.
sunsite.unc.edu:/pub/Linux/distributions/debian/misc/finger-1.37.debian.diff.gz
GNU finger is found at your favourite ftp site for GNUware.
/ Benny
------------------------------
From: wimth@gouldnl.encore.nl (Wim ten Have)
Subject: Tape problems, (Emerald 9000)
Date: Mon, 19 Sep 1994 08:06:47 GMT
Is there anybody who knows about support under linux for an
Emerald Systems 9000 Tape Streamer? The Drive and interface
card look like an ordinary QIC-02 tape subsystem (card and
tape streamer).
Additional information:
- According to the documentation the drive is an
Emerald Series 150-9000
- The card address can be set by 4 dip, where the irq is fixed
to 5 and the dma to 3.
- The drive works perfectly under DOS with the supplied software
named asd and asdiags.
- The tape subsystem does always report "tpqic02: Reset failed!"
If any of the available tpqic02 drives are selected. (Wangtek,
Archive or Mountain).
- The Drive head does reposition, together with a short blink of
the drive LED, every time /sbin/qic02conf is given to install the
drive parameters to the drive port, irq and dma.
Thanks for your/any reply that can help us,
-- Wimth.
------------------------------
From: cpamd@ingers105.halls.colostate.edu (Alan Donald)
Subject: problems with connecting..
Date: 20 Sep 1994 11:44:14 GMT
I have this small problem.. it seems that i can't connect to my own pc
with any consistancy. I can connect out everytime, but when i try to
connect via ethernet, either when i use telnet it says connection established,
but no login appears. It also appears that any other service that is run via
inetd suffers this problem, it connects but does not run the appropriate
daemon. The twist is that when i type inetd from the prompt _everything_
from then on works fine until a random time later when it decides to not
work anymore :(. I am running slackware 2.0 with a 1.1.50 kernel with a
ne2100 compatible ethernet card, also the /etc/rc.d/* file are pretty
much as they were when they were installed (except for ip's,gateways,etc)
One last thing, would recompiling inetd and accompanying daemons fix this
problem? I have heard that recompiling can sometimes fix problems with
software made with later kernels. Any help/patches/fixes would come in
most handy...thanks..
Alan cpamd@ingers105.halls.colostate.edu
--
========================================================
- Boy, your soul better belong to jesus, -
- 'Cause your ass belongs to me.... Megadeth -
========================================================
------------------------------
From: danw@panix.com (Dan Wold)
Subject: Dosemu in X
Date: 20 Sep 1994 19:57:49 -0400
I just setup pre53_20. It's working pretty well.
When I do "dos -AX" the dosemulator starts up in a nice "Dos in a Box"
window. I was able to run Telix (a dos telecom program) in the window.
I can't seem to figure out how to get backspace & delete to work in
this window. When I logged onto a remote system with Telix the backspace and
arrow keys worked normally. Does anyone have a hint on how to fix this?
The other problem is booting from the hdimage file. When I do "dos -CX" then
the emulator starts up in the original xterm rather than opening "Dos in a
Box". I could use a clue on this one too.
Thanks for any help!
-Dan
danw@panix.com
--
danw@panix.com
Daniel Wold 239 City Island Ave, Bronx, NY, 10464
finger danw@danw.dialup.access.net
Sysop: WORLD CITIZEN BBS 718-885-2346 14.4 24 hrs FREE Fidonet BahaiNet
------------------------------
From: cbest@rs502.th.physik.uni-frankfurt.de (Christoph Best)
Subject: Re: Clean shutdown from X
Date: 20 Sep 1994 11:56:37 GMT
Tim Brailsford (Tim_Brailsford@vme.nott.ac.uk) wrote:
: I am having a problem shutting down a Linux system from X (Linux 1.0.9,
: XFree86 2.1.1). When X is permanently loaded with xdm then the usual
: 'shutdown now -h' quits X and then hangs the system - causing a screen full
: of
: errors when the machine is restarted. This works OK when X is loaded using
: startx, but I need to use xdm.
: Any ideas would be gratefully recieved.
We use the following script to shutdown Linux PCs:
echo -e "\033[H\033[2J\n\n\rPLEASE WAIT 20 SECONDS\n\r" >/dev/tty1
echo -e "UNTIL IT SAYS 'The system is halted'\n\r" >/dev/tty1
/sbin/halt >/dev/tty1 2>&1
X dies, you return to console 1, and the text is on the screen. Then it says
'Sending SIGTERM...' and so on, and finally 'The system is halted.' I know I
shouldn't call halt directly, but it works fine that way.
Another nice trick is to put this is xdm/Xstartup:
if [ "$USER" = "halt" ]; then
/usr/local/bin/xhalt # this is above script
exit 1
fi
Add a user halt to /etc/passwd with no shell. Then anybody sitting at the
X11 console can login as halt with a password and shut down. We use this to
let users shut down their desktop machines without getting root access.
Shouldn't shutdown make sure that it does not kill itself?
-Christoph Best | Mathematicians are like Frenchmen:
| Whatever you say to them they
Institute for Theoretical Physics | translate into their own language,
Johann Wolfgang Goethe University | and fortwith it is something entirely
Frankfurt, Germany | different. - J. W. Goethe
------------------------------
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.help
From: brennerc@saucer.cc.umr.edu (Corey Brenner)
Subject: Re: Printers on the parallel port
Date: Tue, 20 Sep 1994 23:19:15 GMT
Kevin Cummings (cummings@hammer.westboro-ma.peritus.com) wrote:
: In article <georgep.186.00378333@sabre.com>, georgep@sabre.com (George Photakis) writes:
: > LPT1 in DOS is /dev/lp0 under Linux....
: > George Photakis
: Generally yes, but not necessarily. Your BIOS looks down a list of
: three possible parallel devices, and assigns the first one it finds to LPT1:,
: The second to LPT2:, and the third to LPT3:. If you have all three, then
: the parallel port on your monochrome video card is LPT1, and the ports
: with hardware address 378 is LPT2, and 278 becomes LPT3. If you don't have
: the video card parallel port, then 378 and 278 are LPT1 and LPT2. If you
: only have port 278, then it becomes LPT1.
: Linux uses a 1-to-1 correspondance with the IO ports to the Linux devices.
: lp0 is always the video port. lp1 is the parallel port at 378, and lp2 is
: always the port at 278. Regardless of whether or not you have them them
: in your system.
: I have one parallel port at home: 378. It is LPT1: under DOS, and lp1
: under Linux.
: A similar correspondance holds true for the serial ports at 3F8, 2F8, 3E8, 2E8
: and COM1-4 under DOS and /dev/ttya-d under Linux.
: Your mileage will vary depending on your hardware.
: --
: Kevin J. Cummings Peritus Software Services, Inc.
: cummings@kjc386.framingham.ma.us cummings@peritus.com
I believe he said he was using Slackware 1.0... what kernel? and also, if the
parallel printer driver is not compiled in, he won't be able to use it anyway.
I believe the solution here is to have a look at your kernel config, compile
in parallel printer support if it's not already there, and hope for the best.
BTW, are the plip ports laid out the same?
ie.
lp0 => plip0
lp1 => plip1
lp2 => plip2
Corey Brenner
------------------------------
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.development
From: brennerc@saucer.cc.umr.edu (Corey Brenner)
Subject: Re: What user interface to use???
Date: Tue, 20 Sep 1994 23:23:57 GMT
Tony Schwartz (tony@teleport.com) wrote:
: When do dial into your local ISP using a standard terminal connection, what
: software is used to providet the menuing, ability to do internet functions
: like telnet, ftp, gopher, etc???
: Recommendations please and locations on obtaining these....
: Thanks
: Tony Schwartz
I would go the dip route. It provides SLIP which is, in my experience, a bit
more stable than ppp in the later kernels. This will work only if your
Internet Service Provider allows slip connections. Menuing is handled by some
funky DOS client ( :) ). Using your system as just another node on the 'net
will make you very happy.
Corey Brenner
------------------------------
From: cummings@hammer.westboro-ma.peritus.com (Kevin Cummings)
Subject: Re: Modem 14400 and uugetty
Date: Tue, 20 Sep 1994 19:24:10 GMT
In article <35du97$53n@clarknet.clark.net>, csamsi@clark.net (Caesar M Samsi) writes:
> Michael Zill (mzill@saturn.RoBIN.de) wrote:
> : First of all you should configure your modem that it returns
> : the DTE speed not the DCE speed in the CONNECT <speed> string.
>
> : Than you should enable hardware flow control for the modem and
> : the serial line.
>
> : Than you can lock the modem at 38400. So the modem is using
> : the handshake lines to prevent overruns.
>
> What is the AT command string to do this ?
What is your modem type? It varies. RTFM.
--
Kevin J. Cummings Peritus Software Services, Inc.
cummings@kjc386.framingham.ma.us cummings@peritus.com
------------------------------
From: m8412hj1@mimi.mbar.dtu.dk (John M Hansen)
Subject: Re: ftp login message
Date: 20 Sep 1994 14:44:18 GMT
Srini Seetharam (srini@runabout.igt.com) wrote:
: I am trying to provide my users with a message when they try to
: ftp. Especially when they log in and also when the CWD command
: is issued.
: Can someone tell me where these message files are stored ?
: I looked in the spool directories but was unable to find any.
: --
: srini
------------------------------
From: cwb@cis.ufl.edu (Charles W. Binko)
Subject: Some Networking Problems...
Date: 21 Sep 1994 00:57:34 GMT
Howdy.
I have recently set up Linux (for the first time) and have actually had
pretty good luck. I have one major problem (I think it's only one) that
has me stumped. First, here is the setup:
Kernel 1.0.9 (from slackware CD-Rom, recompiled with everything I need)
running on a 486 DX50 8MB mem 16MB swap partition
Using Dip version 3.3.7-uri to connect using a USR Sportster 28.8 V.FC
(waiting for the V34 upgrade :)
X-Free86 Ver 2.1 in standard VGA mode (while monitor gets fixed)
Ok, here is the problem...I CAN'T See myself!
I am using a dynamic CSLIP interface to the UF netork, and that works
fine (I can ping any host out there and get my stats, and xterms,
netrek, and _almost_ all of the apps I try work fine). My problem is
that if I do a 'ping localhost' or 'ping DittoHead' (my host name - go
ahead and flame, I don't care) or 'ping slip-c12.cis.ufl.edu', I get
this:
DittoHead:/usr/lib/X11/app-defaults> ping slip-c11
PING slip-c11 (128.227.224.231): 56 data bytes
ping: sendto: Network is unreachable
ping: wrote slip-c11 64 chars, ret=-1
ping: sendto: Network is unreachable
ping: wrote slip-c11 64 chars, ret=-1
--- slip-c11 ping statistics ---
2 packets transmitted, 0 packets received, 100% packet loss
I THINK I set all of the information in the hosts, networks, etc
correctly, but something is missing. The main reason I want this is
that xmosaic will not run. I get an error saying that it can't get my
local address.
Any ideas? I thought about the netmask, but it is set in hosts as
255.255.255.0 !
Thanks for any help...
Charles
cwb@cis.ufl.edu
------------------------------
From: georgep@sabre.com (George Photakis)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.help
Subject: Re: Printers on the parallel port
Date: Tue, 20 Sep 1994 10:50:30 UNDEFINED
In article <35mg9d$ob3@crl4.crl.com> sefarlow@crl.com (Stephen E. Farlow)
writes:
>George Photakis (georgep@sabre.com) wrote:
>: In article <350th4$dtj@mozo.cc.purdue.edu> webblab@koala.ecn.purdue.edu (K
>Webb/Lab Acct) writes:
>: >I am trying to connect a laser printer to the parallel port.
>: >The printer HOWTO file specifies to use /dev/lp1 for this port, but it
>: >doesn't work. I even tried ls -l > /dev/lp1 and I got the following error.
>: LPT1 in DOS is /dev/lp0 under Linux....
>: George Photakis
>*****************************************************************
>WRONG!!! A laser printer in Linux is /dev/lp1 !!! Becareful here!
>*****************************************************************
>--
That's funny, my HP LaserJet IIIP is LPT1 under DOS and is accessed by lp0
under Linux. My HP DeskJet 550C is LPT2 under DOS and is lp1 under Linux.
I've been printing to lp0 for the past month now and the paper continues to
come out on the LaserJet.
George
------------------------------
From: cummings@hammer.westboro-ma.peritus.com (Kevin Cummings)
Subject: Re: Routing A<-slip->B<-ether->C
Date: Tue, 20 Sep 1994 20:10:19 GMT
In article <jshiffleCw52v3.AID@netcom.com>, jshiffle@netcom.com (John Shifflett) writes:
> We have 3 linux computers here: A & B are connected via SLIP, B & C are
> connected via ethernet. Ping, telnet, etc work fine between A & B, and
> between B & C, but not even ping works between A & C. I presume this is
> because the routing is setup wrong. I have made an effort to read about
> the subject, and to do some trial and error fooling around, but have had
> no success. Now's the time to ask all you folks for help! First, a few
> questions:
>
> 1) I've assigned 2 IP numbers to B - one for SLIP and one for the
> ethercard. Is this the correct thing to do?
Are A, B, and C all on the same IP network? If so there is one answer.
If not, there is another.
> 2) Are the two halves - SLIP & ethernet - considered to be two separate
> networks, subnets of one network, or one network? In other words,
> do I need a subnetting setup?
The simplest setup is to do routing and subnetting between a SL/IP network
and your ethernet network. You will need two IP networks for this
(they needn't have the same sized netmasks, nor need they distinct, but the
case of overlapping networks gets a little more complicated to setup right).
If you are trying to do this with one IP network, then there are two solutions:
a specific host route, or proxy arp. You can add a specific host route to your
ethernet network that basically says route all packets to A to machine B. Then
machine B can know that A is at the other end of its SL/IP line when SL/IP
is running, and transfer the packets appropriately. Proxy arp will
esentially do the same thing, except that machine B will "proxy" itself as
machine A by using its own ethernet address for packets destined machine A.
When B gets those packets, it then routes them over the SL/IP line to machine
A.
The cost for the two different methods: Static host routing, some
machine must publish the static route to B (it could be machine B itself if
it is allowed to publish routes, otherwise it is the router for the ethernet
network that B & C are on). Proxy Arp, needs some machine to publish the
artificial arp address for machine A so that it points to machine B. Again,
it could be machine B, or some other machine on the network.
> 3) Do all 3 machines need a different routing table (not counting the
> different IP numbers, of course)? Or would A's and C's be more or less
> identical?
> 3) I'm running 1.1.50, and do NOT have 'IP forwarding/gatewaying' enabled.
> Is this required in my case? If yes, does only B need it?
IP forwarding is needed (I think) if you are using different IP networks.
> 4) Is B considered to be a 'gateway' to C from A (& vice versa), or is
> A through B to C considered to be a 'direct' route?
B is a gateway only if different IP networks are being used. When proxy arp
is being used, then A is considered part of a direct route (only B knows
that it isn't, and B handles that case right for you).
Disclaimer: I am not a network expert, but I have (at different times)
configured parts of my network at work using different IP networks, and
using proxy arp. However, I have never actually made a linux box be the
gateway machine (at work, I do have that setup working at home, however,
I no longer have a real IP network at home, so I am now using 192.0.2.0, and
we all know that you can't (shouldn't) route packets to/from that network
elsewhere). I have used a DOS 286 PC running KA9Q sucessfully, and an
annex terminal server as well. (The reason I haven't used Linux has to do
with a lack of the right kind of PC at work, not with my reluctance to do it.)
--
Kevin J. Cummings Peritus Software Services, Inc.
cummings@kjc386.framingham.ma.us cummings@peritus.com
------------------------------
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