heh, it wont even boot on my athlon let alone be stable tim.
Failure is not an option. It comes bundled with your Microsoft product. -- Ferenc Mantfeld On Tue, 4 Jul 2000, Christopher W. Curtis wrote: > Nathan Paul Simons wrote: > > > > Yeah, but a lot of our users like to use these machines remotely > > because they can rely on them not to be in Windows (unlike our other > > dual boot clients). We try to keep only stable releases running on > > our production net machines so that we don't have to hard boot them. > > Hrm. Even stable isn't stable on my Athlon. :( > > The same applied to my Alpha, but it didn't have a reset button anyway. > (Turns out to have been a hardware problem.) > > > We figure that the usermount option (with appropriate nosuid, > > nodev, and noexec options) in /etc/fstab are good enough. Confusing to > > some users at first, but they learn quickly enough. > > It's also superior to the autofs option (as you'd see if you follwed my > thread on the autofs list -- warning, it involves silly statements by > RMS, terse retorts by hpa, and my usual long-windedness). Luckily, the > /etc/fstab entry is sane. Autofs makes things easy, but it shouldn't > distribute security problems. Luckily, only the yp server needs to be > updated. > > Christopher > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] > >