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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: Sat, 15 Oct 94 18:13:37 EDT
Subject: Linux-Admin Digest #200
Linux-Admin Digest #200, Volume #2 Sat, 15 Oct 94 18:13:37 EDT
Contents:
Term and hostname passing (x93frey3@wmich.edu)
Re: Please don't post security holess... (Steve Whorwood)
Symbolic Link Problems (Mark Spencer)
Is UMSDOS really that slow? (Kevin C. Dorff)
Re: Second Ethernet card not Recognized (Mark Cooke)
Re: linux bootable on second SCSI-HD (Tony Gale)
Re: HELP! Floppy mount problems 1.1.49 - 1.1.51!!!! (Milan Zamazal)
Re: /tmp/ is not cleaned up (Patrick J. Volkerding)
Re: shadow-332: -f bug present (Kai Voigt)
cp852... anybody heard about? (Pal Laszlo)
again: record sound
Q sendmail 8.6 config, local lan , uucp conection HOW??? (Peter Brouwer)
Re: ftp freeze problems (Daniel Tran)
Re: Why doesn't ftp work?? (Daniel Tran)
Re: more LEDs? (Jeffrey Lessem)
catman in linux (Ted Hoang)
Re: New Motif lib's for use with XFree 3.1 ? (Craig Groeschel)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: x93frey3@wmich.edu
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.help
Subject: Term and hostname passing
Date: 10 Oct 94 18:31:05 EDT
I was wondering if there was anyway to have term 2.1.4 pass hostnames of
remote users. I saw this for an earlier version of term but I donn't want to
have to use that older version.
Thanks in advance
Jeffrey D. Frey , Jr 99frey@lab.cc.wmich.edu
------------------------------
From: steve@vertex.demon.co.uk (Steve Whorwood)
Subject: Re: Please don't post security holess...
Date: Sat, 15 Oct 1994 03:49:54 +0000
In <37foqi$8g2@nntp1.u.washington.edu> mkshenk@u.washington.edu (M. K. Shenk) writes:
>^^^ LOOOOK! Read this. Then read your response. You start talking about
>compiler use, etc. No. No. Look. Password: beavis "Welcome to.."
><CLICK> Get it?
>>This reminds me of the joke:
>>A guy is driving on the higway and listens to the radio. It say: "Attention!
>>There is a crazy driver driving the wrong way on the highway!" The guy is
>>amazed: "One? All of them!"...
>>
>>Seriously. I do not agree with you. If 99% of admins are against your opinion
>>you still might be right, but the probabilities are *very* low.
>Not really. Faith in the idea sort of depends on where you fall on the
>scale..
Fraid I can't agree. I see what you're saying and, to a degree, I can
sympathise. However, if you own "it" (whatever "it" might be), then you
have a right to say how it's disposed. The analogy I'd use is the backyard
swimming pool. All the neighbours and passers by drop in to use it.
One day you notice turds floating in it. You call a pool service. No
idea who's done it, except you're fairly sure it was one of those
free-loading bastards you let in. No matter how many times you drop the hint
that what's being done isn't appreciated, it carries on. You tell your
friend down the road. Eventually, the pair of you think "Fuck that! put
up a barbed wire fence, electrify it, Declare it No Entry and torch the
twats."
--
Steve Whorwood
e-mail steve@vertex.demon.co.uk
------------------------------
From: myspence@mit.edu (Mark Spencer)
Subject: Symbolic Link Problems
Date: 15 Oct 1994 16:12:44 GMT
I'm running Linux 1.1.45 on a lab of computers. They all share a passwd file
that is sym-linked to the server's. The host file is also sym-linked along
with a few others. THe problem is that sometimes, adding an entry to the
hosts file with cat >>hosts on the server or when they change passwords on
the workstations, sometimes, the sym-links are destroyed and complete
files are written over them, eliminating the ability to make further changes
and I have to telnet to every computer, delete the hosts/passwd, and
re-establish the link (sometimes with disasterous consequences if done
incorrectly). Any ideas? Is this fixed in new kernels? E-mail to:
mspencer@eng.auburn.edu
Thanks.
-Mark Spencer
------------------------------
From: mental@hydra.unm.edu (Kevin C. Dorff)
Subject: Is UMSDOS really that slow?
Date: 10 Oct 1994 22:52:32 GMT
I starting playing with Linux again recently and opted to use
the UMSDOS file system because it was going to make my life
much easier than backing up and re-partitioning my hard disk.
The docs say that UMSDOS is a slower file system than the
other options, but is it really much slower? It seems pretty
quick to me (especially after working with MSDOS). I have
kernal 1.0.something (going to upgrade soon).
Is it really worth my time to backup and repartition?
K
--
Kevin C. Dorff 5800 Osuna NE #93
mental@hydra.unm.edu Albuquerque, NM 87109
-=> Let's Go Paragliding! <=- 505-889-3254
------------------------------
From: ee2015@mail.bris.ac.uk (Mark Cooke)
Subject: Re: Second Ethernet card not Recognized
Date: Fri, 14 Oct 1994 17:30:06 GMT
International Tech. Assoc (ita@crl.com) wrote:
: [ Article crossposted from comp.os.linux.help ]
: [ Author was Kevin B. Murphy ]
: [ Posted on 10 Oct 1994 19:16:38 -0400 ]
: Could someone tell me how to get linux to recognize a second ethernet card?
: There is several eth? device files in /dev and someone told me that Space.c
: had something to do with it. Thanks.
You probably need a later version of the kernel. ISTR about 1.1.45 was
bandied about a little while back.
Mark
/------------------------------------------------------------------------\
| Mark Cooke | Email : ee2015@mail.bristol.ac.uk |
|----------------------------+-------------------------------------------|
| Badock Hall Net-Rep & | Surface : Badock Hall, Stoke Park Road. |
| Data Safety Officer | Stoke Bishop, Bristol. BS9 1JQ |
\------------------------------------------------------------------------/
------------------------------
From: gale@minotaur.dra.hmg.gb (Tony Gale)
Crossposted-To: de.comp.os.linux,comp.os.linux.help
Subject: Re: linux bootable on second SCSI-HD
Date: 14 Oct 1994 17:29:54 GMT
Waldmann (thinklab@rummelplatz.uni-mannheim.de) wrote:
: Hello ot there,
: I'm happily running Linux on my first SCSI-Disk (on sda3, to be true,
: with DOS on the first two partitions for those users in our lab that
: that can never really QUIT wordperfect and the like). Now, as large
: amounts of data are to be expected from a new experimental series,
: I will have to move my Linux to a second SCSI HD (using AHA1542).
: What I need to know is simply:
: How do I make a bootable floppy (the "dd if=zImage of=/dev/fd0 ... style)
: which accesses the second drive as / ? Can I use "rdev.... or something ?
: I know that I need to reconfigure my *tabs in /etc to mount the whole
: fss', but how do I get Linux to start ?
: Thanks in advance for your helpful comments !!!
:
: message by : Hans-Christian Waldmann
: I-NET / e-mail : thinklab@rummelplatz.uni-mannheim.de
I find the easiest way is to use the slackware boot/root disk installation
disks. The setup program allows you to create a boot disk quite easily by
installing LILO on the floppy, which can boot the image on the second drive.
The only problem I had with booting off of a second HD (IDE though) was that
fsck tried to check /dev/hda1 anyway. Easily solved by changing the fsck
command in the relevant rc file (/etc/rc.d/rc.S I think) to just check the
necessary drives.
--
Tony Gale | Stop whinging and start Wine'ing
gale@minotaur.dra.hmg.gb | http://daedalus.dra.hmg.gb/gale/wine/wine.html
| All opinions expressed are my own |
------------------------------
From: pdm@artemis.ics.muni.cs (Milan Zamazal)
Subject: Re: HELP! Floppy mount problems 1.1.49 - 1.1.51!!!!
Date: Tue, 11 Oct 1994 09:37:42 GMT
rene@renux.frmug.fr.net (Rene COUGNENC) writes:
>Ce brave Andre Robotewsky ecrit:
>> Hi there,
>> I've seen a bunch of posts related to the floppy mount problems with
>> the 1.1.51 Kernel, but so far, I haven't seen any answers...
>I have seen a lot...
>And this is now fixed in patch52.
I use 1.1.52 now and have great problems with floppies. When I try to mount
ext2 floppy I receive message like
probe failed...
floppy: I/O error ????/????
...
With MS-DOS floppies I receive something about bad FAT entry.
It seems that floppy works properly only just after low level formatting.
May be it's something around disk-change?
The only save way for using floppies for me is to reboot with 1.1.45 where
there is all right.
low level formatting.
May be it's something around disk-change?
The only save way for using floppies for me is to reboot with 1.1.45 where
there is all right.
------------------------------
From: gonzo@magnet.mednet.net (Patrick J. Volkerding)
Subject: Re: /tmp/ is not cleaned up
Date: 14 Oct 1994 06:30:10 GMT
In article <CxnE1w.JMq@acsu.buffalo.edu>,
Srihanto A. Nugroho <nugroho@acsu.buffalo.edu> wrote:
>Hi..
>I am using Slackware 2.0 dist.
>Is there any reason for not cleaning up /tmp directory when the system boot ?
It will if you add this to /etc/rc.d/rc.local:
( cd /tmp ; rm -rf * )
Since I'm not the admin for your machine, it would be presumptuous of
me to clear out your /tmp automatically. What if you'd put something
important in /tmp and didn't know Slackware was going to wipe it out on
your next reboot? Policies like the wiping of /tmp are best determined
locally. (That way, someone can be blamed locally ;^)
>Also, it seems like /usr/tmp is not used.
/usr/tmp in Slackware is a symbolic link to /var/tmp, and you're
correct. Not much of anything in Slackware does use /var/tmp.
It's possible that programs ported from other platforms could require it,
though, so I think it's a good idea to have it.
Later -
Pat
------------------------------
From: kai@depeche.toppoint.de (Kai Voigt)
Subject: Re: shadow-332: -f bug present
Date: 15 Oct 1994 11:55:36 GMT
In <CxMKFw.GtB@ix.de> hm@ix.de (Harald Milz) writes:
>I installed the shadow-3.3.2 suite a couple of minute ago and found
>that the old -f bug is again in there. What's wrong?
You might want to disable the -f option in lmain.c (somewhere around
line 400 in the source file)
Kai
--
Kai Voigt, Werftstrasse 2, 24148 Kiel, Germany, +49 431 7297514
"sendmail.cf looks like a context diff of two core files."
-- sjm@ra12.curtin.edu.au (Simon Mackinlay)
------------------------------
From: lpal@goliat.eik.bme.hu (Pal Laszlo)
Subject: cp852... anybody heard about?
Date: 14 Oct 1994 07:27:45 +0100
anybody heard about any hungarian (cp852) keyboard table for linux?
or can i make this with a simple method (no programming.. (in c..) :-))?
thx
vlad
lpal@goliat.eik.bme.hu
laszlo pal
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 13 Oct 1994 22:49:41 CDT
From: <U37956@uicvm.uic.edu>
Subject: again: record sound
I tried many times trying to record a sound to file, but failed.
( dd , srec vplay, mixer , but don't know how to use mixer command)
Could some one kindly show exactly what the commands are for recording
sounds from microphone to a file? ( i have PAS16 sound card)
Thanks a million,
J Yue
------------------------------
From: pb@apd.dec.com (Peter Brouwer)
Crossposted-To: comp.mail.sendmail
Subject: Q sendmail 8.6 config, local lan , uucp conection HOW???
Date: 14 Oct 94 08:53:14 GMT
Reply-To: pb@apd.dec.com (Peter Brouwer)
I have a simple configuration. A local lan with a few machines. I use a local
name server, with no resolving to the outside world.
All local machines relay E-mail to the mail exchanger machine if the address
contains a not resolved hostname. This works okee ( example from the README
file of the sendmail source distribution ).
The mail exchanger machine has a uucp connection to a machine with internet
connection. ( named internetrelay in the config file )
I see sendmail trying to resolve all hostname address instead of only the local
addresses.
Using sendmail -bt as test I see after the resolving timeouts that the mail
gets routed to the smart internet host.
When sending E-mail it does not start uucp to deliver the mail. In stead of
this I see a unresolved error when using mailq.
The problem is probably the name server lookup for not local addresses.
I do I stop sendmail from doing this.
Could you please E-mail me any suggestion. I will post a summary.
My news feed provider keeps articles only for two days.
Here is my used config file.
include(`../m4/cf.m4')
VERSIONID(`linux for setup with uucp which uses domain names')dnl
OSTYPE(linux)
FEATURE(nodns)dnl
FEATURE(always_add_domain)dnl
MAILER(local)dnl
MAILER(smtp)dnl
MAILER(uucp)dnl
define(`SMART_HOST', uucp-dom:internetrelay)
LOCAL_NET_CONFIG
R$* < @ $* .$m. > $* $#smtp $@ $2.$m. $: $1 < @ $2.$m > $3
--
Regards, Peter Brouwer \\\//
pb@apd.dec.com (0 0)
===================================oOO==(_)==OOo============================
# Digital Equipment B.V. / WorkGroup Systems,
# DIGITAL : HLDEO1::BROUWER_P,829-4218 \ Dep LinkWorks Engineering, P.O.Box 245,
# PHONE:[+31][0]55 43 ext 4218,fax 9133 7300AE Apeldoorn, The Netherlands.
------------------------------
From: dtran@emelnitz.ucla.edu (Daniel Tran)
Subject: Re: ftp freeze problems
Date: Mon, 10 Oct 1994 17:34:55 GMT
In article <36nvft$aab@master.cs.rose-hulman.edu> henslelf@henslelf.student.rose-hulman.edu (Linux Mac Daddy) writes:
>From: henslelf@henslelf.student.rose-hulman.edu (Linux Mac Daddy)
>Subject: Re: ftp freeze problems
>Date: 3 Oct 1994 03:57:49 GMT
>Craig Tavener (craig@chem.chem.wits.ac.za) wrote:
>: I've got linux (Slackware2.0) recently installed on a 468-66. It has an
>: ethernet card and is networked to Novell and and UNIX. When ftp/telnetting
>: from linux to elsewhere things generally work well. However, when trying to
>: ftp into the linux machine (most notably from the novell network) the
>: session frequently freezes. Pressing cntl-C returns the ftp prompt, but the
>: last action ends up being truncated. A good example of this is a file
>: transfer. All packet but the last one get through. Then it freezes and the
>: last packet it lost.
>: Does anyone have any idea what is going on here?
>I've experienced the same problem, if anyone knows, let us in...
I think Craig or someone else told me he's using Chameleon's TCP/IP protocol
stacks at the PC station. What are you using?. May be with enough
information, we can figure out something.
BTW, i'm using Novell LWP without any problems.
Daniel Tran - dtran@emelnitz.ucla.edu
------------------------------
From: dtran@emelnitz.ucla.edu (Daniel Tran)
Subject: Re: Why doesn't ftp work??
Date: Mon, 10 Oct 1994 17:44:03 GMT
In article <CxE339.BE2@metronet.com> tom@metronet.com (Tom Griffing) writes:
>The title says it ... Why doesn't ftp work?
>It work from a remote machine with the anonymous user id,
>but won't work from any other id. I've modified the
>files /etc/ftpusers and /etc/ftpaccess, but am certainly
>missing something ... seems like defining a class with
>"real" in the typelist doesn't work.
>Can anybody offer any soultions?
Did you check your /etc/passwd file. The name of whoever with password must
be in there. If you running FTPD, make sure that you don't use the same
password file.
Daniel Tran - dtran@emelnitz.ucla.edu
------------------------------
From: lessem@Colorado.EDU (Jeffrey Lessem)
Subject: Re: more LEDs?
Date: 15 Oct 1994 05:37:57 GMT
In article <37no0f$3ai@vixen.cso.uiuc.edu>,
phillyboy <rkoffler@ux4.cso.uiuc.edu> wrote:
>If anyone is interested, Dell used to (still does?) make computers with a
>four character display. I have a 486D/33 with one. Dell included a small
>program for DOS that allows is to either display a clock, or it can scroll
>a message specified on the command line. Without the program, I think it
>shows the sector and the drive being accessed. Since it is a DOS program,
>my display just shows the time of day when I booted Linux using loadlin.
Unfortunately Dell no longer uses these. When I was selling Dells I
asked our rep why they stopped putting them on machines and he said
they cost $5 per machine and $5x100,000=too much money. All of our
salespeople agreed we would pay $5 more for a programable LCD display.
------------------------------
From: hoang1@litwin.com (Ted Hoang)
Subject: catman in linux
Date: Mon, 10 Oct 1994 16:40:30 GMT
Does linux use catman?
--
===========================================================================
Ted Hoang Email:Ted.Hoang@litwin.com Tel: (713) 267-7122
Litwin Process Automation Fax: (713) 267-7908
1250 W. Sam Houston Pkwy S. Houston, TX 77042
------------------------------
From: craig@metrolink.com (Craig Groeschel)
Crossposted-To: comp.windows.x.i386unix,comp.windows.x.motif
Subject: Re: New Motif lib's for use with XFree 3.1 ?
Date: 10 Oct 1994 15:20:01 -0400
This article is Linux-specific and Metro Link Motif-specific.
Please hit n now if you're not interested.
In article <Pine.SUN.3.90.941008125857.26941A-100000@huxley>,
Rajesh Raj <rxr401@huxley> wrote:
>I was in contact with tech@metrolink.com. They have no plan to recompile
>Linux Motif 1.2.4 with X11R6 libraries. The tech guy advised me to use the
>old X11R5 libraries.
That's an interesting spin you have chosen to put on things.
Yes, it's true we do not plan to update 1.2.x, but you left out why:
Motif 2.0 is out. We are working on porting Motif 2.0 to Linux.
In the meantime, allow me to explain how to make our Linux Motif work
with XFree86-3.1.
Yes, Virginia, Motif 1.2.x does work with X11R6, but we have
to rely on the magic of shared libraries and dynamic linking.
The short answer:
Install the libX11 and libXt of XFree86-2.1, and Motif will work.
(Also be sure /usr/X386/lib is in your /etc/ld.so.conf, and run ldconfig.)
The filename is XF86-2.1-lib.tar.gz, and it is available from
your friendly neighborhood Linux archive. Use archie to find one near you.
The long answer:
Motif applications compiled with 1.2.4 WILL WORK with XFree86-3.1 (X11R6).
However, Motif 1.2.4 is based on X11R5, and it depends on
R5's libX11 and libXt. So all you need to do is keep those libraries
(libX11 and libXt) from XFree86-2.1 installed on your system.
Through the magic of dynamic linking, the proper libraries will be
linked in.
I agree it would be nice if Motif would work seamlessly with R6,
but this is the way things are:
XFree86-2.1 is based on X11R5.
XFree86-3.1 is based on X11R6.
X11R5 != X11R6
Motif 1.2.4 is based on X11R5.
Motif 2.0 is based on X11R5.
Motif 2.1 will be based on X11R6. (?)
Linux's shared dynamic linker (ld.so) provides a [IMHO solution] work-around,
and in fact the whole concept of major versions of shared libraries
was designed exactly for a situation like this.
>As I have no plan to keep old libraries taking the disk-space, I removed
>motif from the disk altogether. Would somebody give me $100 for this
>package ?
This sounds to me like cutting off your nose to spite your face.
Let's see how much space the old libraries actually take up:
/usr/X386/lib/libX11.sa 157756
/usr/X386/lib/libXt.sa 80440
/usr/X386/lib/libX11.so.3.1.0 320516
/usr/X386/lib/libXt.so.3.1.0 291844
For a total of 850556 bytes. Plus a couple of symbolic links
that ldconfig(8) will make. I don't know...that doesn't seem like
a whole lot of space to me, but disk space is a scarce resource,
and everyone has to set his own priorities.
Bottom line is that we support our customers, and we are working on
providing the latest technology both in X and Motif.
Pay no attention to the boilerplate: I am speaking for Metro Link this time.
--
Craig E. Groeschel <craig@metrolink.com> Not speaking for my employer.
"Do not play this piece fast. It is never right to play Ragtime fast." Joplin
GCS/E g+ s+/- au* v+ C+ P->+ L+++ U@ u+++ E---(+) N+ !W Y+ t++ b+ e- n++ h* f
------------------------------
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