Hello Jeremy,
Thank you for the response.
I am sorry for brief description of the problem. There is no diald
installed, the system runs straight forward "isdnutils". Something keeps
the line up. Every few minutes there is a call to a broadcast address and
port 138, or a call to a DNS server :(
(please 'CC' me your replies. Thanks. This is also my first
posting to any debian.org lists, so if I'm posting to the wrong
group, etc. please let me know. I hope the cross-post is ok, also.)
I'm buying a motherboard soon and want to know if this one is
compatible with Debian. (Info and specs a
(please 'CC' me your replies. Thanks. This is also my first
posting to any debian.org lists, so if I'm posting to the wrong
group, etc. please let me know. I hope the cross-post is ok, also.)
I'm buying a motherboard soon and want to know if this one is
compatible with Debian. (Info and specs
With our ISP we started from scratch and now have over 3000 clients so
eveything was a learning process, or accounts manager started using a
Filemaker database that took monthly totals of users in and then was able to
quickly sort and invoice customers even now with somany, Filemaker is very
script
On Wednesday 02 May 2001 20:12, Marcelo Gulin wrote:
> I think that mod_rewrite or mod_vhosts_alias can do that.
> take a look at http://modules.apache.org
VirtualDocumentRoot IS mod_vhosts_alias.
I have read the documentation for mod_rewrite and couldn't work out how to do
this. However mo
With our ISP we started from scratch and now have over 3000 clients so
eveything was a learning process, or accounts manager started using a
Filemaker database that took monthly totals of users in and then was able to
quickly sort and invoice customers even now with somany, Filemaker is very
scrip
> I tried to tweak exim.conf, adding a couple of sites under
> "relay_domains".
BTW - Be sure to remove the entries you made here or you will have an
open mail relay to these domains (which is Bad).
Pete
PS You may want to verify this information as I have been known not to
be a reliable source!
> > There was no file resolve.conf in /etc, so I created one with the following
>
> That should be 'resolv.conf'. No 'e'.
Arrggg. I'm very embarrassed! I hope I didn't cause you too much teeth
gnashing! :-(
As punishment I've been sentenced to install Unix Servic
Thank you so much!
T'was only this. mved and everything OK.
BTW, 10 years ago I was working on SVR4 (Interactive-Kodak flavor) UNIX
hosts. We were using only 2400bps modems and uucp to transfer files...
A long way and back (with pleasure) to IX !
Greg
- Original Message -
From: "Aaron
GH> I guess it is maybe related to DNS. My simple problem is "where in
GH> the hell do I specify the DNS primary and secondary IP addresses
GH> under Debian Linux ?"
Edit /etc/resolv.conf. It should look like
nameserver PRIMARY_DNS_IP
nameserver SECONDARY_DNS_IP
See 'man resolv.conf' for more d
> Thank you for your answer, but..
>
> There was no file resolve.conf in /etc, so I created one with the following
That should be 'resolv.conf'. No 'e'.
(quick solution: '# mv /etc/resolve.conf /etc/resolv.conf')
> entries
> search mydomain.ch
> nameserver 164.12
On Wednesday 02 May 2001 20:12, Marcelo Gulin wrote:
> I think that mod_rewrite or mod_vhosts_alias can do that.
> take a look at http://modules.apache.org
VirtualDocumentRoot IS mod_vhosts_alias.
I have read the documentation for mod_rewrite and couldn't work out how to do
this. However m
Thank you for your answer, but..
There was no file resolve.conf in /etc, so I created one with the following
entries
search mydomain.ch
nameserver 164.128.36.34
nameserver 164.128.76.39
I did not mention an important fact: We are hosting Web server (apache) and
mail server (exim), but the nameser
> I tried to tweak exim.conf, adding a couple of sites under
> "relay_domains".
BTW - Be sure to remove the entries you made here or you will have an
open mail relay to these domains (which is Bad).
Pete
PS You may want to verify this information as I have been known not to
be a reliable source
> I guess it is maybe related to DNS. My simple problem is "where in the
> hell do I specify the DNS primary and secondary IP addresses under
> Debian Linux
/etc/resolve.conf
which should look like:
search yourdomain.com
nameserver 192.168.2.3
nameserver 192.168.3.4
Pete
--
http://www.elbnet.co
Hi!
I think that mod_rewrite or mod_vhosts_alias can do that.
take a look at http://modules.apache.org
cheers
Marcelo Gulin
- Original Message -
From: Russell Coker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Wednesday, May 02, 2001 5:35 AM
Subject: Apache VirtualDocumentRoot
> Here is my Apach
> > There was no file resolve.conf in /etc, so I created one with the following
>
> That should be 'resolv.conf'. No 'e'.
Arrggg. I'm very embarrassed! I hope I didn't cause you too much teeth
gnashing! :-(
As punishment I've been sentenced to install Unix Servi
Thank you so much!
T'was only this. mved and everything OK.
BTW, 10 years ago I was working on SVR4 (Interactive-Kodak flavor) UNIX
hosts. We were using only 2400bps modems and uucp to transfer files...
A long way and back (with pleasure) to IX !
Greg
- Original Message -
From: "Aaron
Hi!
My brand-new exim on potato kernel 2.2.13 used to
work perfectly for some days. Just before (what a chance!) to go production, it
stopped working on outgoing e-mails, with this nasty message: '550 relaying to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> prohibited
by administrator (failed to find host name from
Mark Janssen wrote:
> I don't know if it's packaged, I think so. Otherwise a search on
> freshmeat would turn it up. If that fails try contacting At
> on: www.atcomputing.nl
It is, at least on woody.
--
Regards,
Marek L. Kozak
GH> I guess it is maybe related to DNS. My simple problem is "where in
GH> the hell do I specify the DNS primary and secondary IP addresses
GH> under Debian Linux ?"
Edit /etc/resolv.conf. It should look like
nameserver PRIMARY_DNS_IP
nameserver SECONDARY_DNS_IP
See 'man resolv.conf' for more
Jeremy C. Reed writes:
> On Wed, 2 May 2001, Jerzy Miszczyk wrote:
>
> > I am using debian box with 2.2 basic installation, working as an ISDN
> > gateway. How can I check which process or daemon frequently initiates the
> > line with DNS call? I am getting grey hair partially becau
An ISP I work with recently offloaded all the ISP billing and account
management to Optigold (www.digitalpoint.com). Optigold should be able
to import everything from Peach Tree without too much trouble (they had
to import from Quickbooks, which can't be too much different). If you
need to hang on
> Thank you for your answer, but..
>
> There was no file resolve.conf in /etc, so I created one with the following
That should be 'resolv.conf'. No 'e'.
(quick solution: '# mv /etc/resolve.conf /etc/resolv.conf')
> entries
> search mydomain.ch
> nameserver 164.1
On Wed, 2 May 2001, Jerzy Miszczyk wrote:
> I am using debian box with 2.2 basic installation, working as an ISDN
> gateway. How can I check which process or daemon frequently initiates the
> line with DNS call? I am getting grey hair partially because of the
> bill :(((.
I am not sure
Thank you for your answer, but..
There was no file resolve.conf in /etc, so I created one with the following
entries
search mydomain.ch
nameserver 164.128.36.34
nameserver 164.128.76.39
I did not mention an important fact: We are hosting Web server (apache) and
mail server (exim), but the namese
> I guess it is maybe related to DNS. My simple problem is "where in the
> hell do I specify the DNS primary and secondary IP addresses under
> Debian Linux
/etc/resolve.conf
which should look like:
search yourdomain.com
nameserver 192.168.2.3
nameserver 192.168.3.4
Pete
--
http://www.elbnet.c
Hi!
I think that mod_rewrite or mod_vhosts_alias can do that.
take a look at http://modules.apache.org
cheers
Marcelo Gulin
- Original Message -
From: Russell Coker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, May 02, 2001 5:35 AM
Subject: Apache VirtualDocumentRoot
Hi there
I am using debian box with 2.2 basic installation, working as an ISDN
gateway. How can I check which process or daemon frequently initiates the
line with DNS call? I am getting grey hair partially because of the
bill :(((.
Best regards :))
"Jersey"
Hi!
My brand-new exim on potato kernel 2.2.13 used to
work perfectly for some days. Just before (what a chance!) to go production, it
stopped working on outgoing e-mails, with this nasty message: '550 relaying to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> prohibited
by administrator (failed to find host name from
On Wed, May 02, 2001 at 09:36:35AM -0400, Robert Brown wrote:
> What are other ISPs running for financial accounting software? We are running
> Peach Tree 7.0 with a customer base of 3000 users. Printing invoices is now
> over 30 hours. A call to Peach Tree informs us that our software is only ma
Mark Janssen wrote:
> I don't know if it's packaged, I think so. Otherwise a search on
> freshmeat would turn it up. If that fails try contacting At
> on: www.atcomputing.nl
It is, at least on woody.
--
Regards,
Marek L. Kozak
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "
On Wed, May 02, 2001 at 04:34:50AM +0800, Jason Lim wrote:
> It would be really cool if there was some kind of app that would run on a
> console, and would show a summary of most types of stats a real sysadmin
> would be interested in (eg. total system loading, total network bandwidth
> being used)
We are also using Peach Tree Complete Accounting and it
is not user friendly plus it has many bugs.
Has someone experienced the Microsoft products.
Abu Umair
- Original Message -
From: Robert Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Wednesday, May 02, 2001 8:36 AM
Subject: Accounting Softw
Jeremy C. Reed writes:
> On Wed, 2 May 2001, Jerzy Miszczyk wrote:
>
> > I am using debian box with 2.2 basic installation, working as an ISDN
> > gateway. How can I check which process or daemon frequently initiates the
> > line with DNS call? I am getting grey hair partially beca
An ISP I work with recently offloaded all the ISP billing and account
management to Optigold (www.digitalpoint.com). Optigold should be able
to import everything from Peach Tree without too much trouble (they had
to import from Quickbooks, which can't be too much different). If you
need to hang on
On Wed, 2 May 2001, Jerzy Miszczyk wrote:
> I am using debian box with 2.2 basic installation, working as an ISDN
> gateway. How can I check which process or daemon frequently initiates the
> line with DNS call? I am getting grey hair partially because of the
> bill :(((.
I am not sur
What are other ISPs running for financial accounting software? We are running
Peach Tree 7.0 with a customer base of 3000 users. Printing invoices is now
over 30 hours. A call to Peach Tree informs us that our software is only made
for 1000 or less accounts but they will be glad to sell us their
Hi there
I am using debian box with 2.2 basic installation, working as an ISDN
gateway. How can I check which process or daemon frequently initiates the
line with DNS call? I am getting grey hair partially because of the
bill :(((.
Best regards :))
"Jersey"
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE,
On Wed, May 02, 2001 at 09:36:35AM -0400, Robert Brown wrote:
> What are other ISPs running for financial accounting software? We are running
> Peach Tree 7.0 with a customer base of 3000 users. Printing invoices is now
> over 30 hours. A call to Peach Tree informs us that our software is only m
It would be really cool if there was some kind of app that would run on a
console, and would show a summary of most types of stats a real sysadmin
would be interested in (eg. total system loading, total network bandwidth
being used), and things like that. It would definately not be very
detailed (y
On Wed, May 02, 2001 at 04:34:50AM +0800, Jason Lim wrote:
> It would be really cool if there was some kind of app that would run on a
> console, and would show a summary of most types of stats a real sysadmin
> would be interested in (eg. total system loading, total network bandwidth
> being used
We are also using Peach Tree Complete Accounting and it
is not user friendly plus it has many bugs.
Has someone experienced the Microsoft products.
Abu Umair
- Original Message -
From: Robert Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, May 02, 2001 8:36 AM
Subje
What are other ISPs running for financial accounting software? We are running
Peach Tree 7.0 with a customer base of 3000 users. Printing invoices is now
over 30 hours. A call to Peach Tree informs us that our software is only made
for 1000 or less accounts but they will be glad to sell us their
It would be really cool if there was some kind of app that would run on a
console, and would show a summary of most types of stats a real sysadmin
would be interested in (eg. total system loading, total network bandwidth
being used), and things like that. It would definately not be very
detailed (
Here is my Apache VirtualDocumentRoot setting:
VirtualDocumentRoot /www/%-1/%-2/%-3/%-4+
Now for URLs such as "http://company.com/"; this will be expanded to
/www/com/company/_/_/ !
Currently I am putting sym-links from "_" to "." in the directories
/www/com/company/ but this is a real hack. D
Here is my Apache VirtualDocumentRoot setting:
VirtualDocumentRoot /www/%-1/%-2/%-3/%-4+
Now for URLs such as "http://company.com/"; this will be expanded to
/www/com/company/_/_/ !
Currently I am putting sym-links from "_" to "." in the directories
/www/com/company/ but this is a real hack.
Replying to my own message...
I should have looked in the Unix FAQ first :) I believe the answer was in
3.14. It has to do with the amount of buffering.
http://www.faqs.org/faqs/unix-faq/faq/part3/section-14.html
I did receive some off-list emails about this. One used strace to see that
it was bu
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