Re: sendmail upgrade

2002-10-28 Thread Craig Sanders
On Tue, Oct 29, 2002 at 04:26:23PM +1100, Glenn Hocking wrote: > I have just run apt-get update then apt-get upgrade on one of my > production servers which upgraded sendmail and now it won't start. > > The error is as follows, > > > Start sendmail now? (Y/n) > Starting Mail Transport Agent: se

sendmail upgrade

2002-10-28 Thread Glenn Hocking
Hi All I have just run apt-get update then apt-get upgrade on one of my production servers which upgraded sendmail and now it won't start. The error is as follows, Start sendmail now? (Y/n) Starting Mail Transport Agent: sendmail/usr/sbin/sendmail: /lib/libc.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.3' not found

Re: Moving from BSDi

2002-10-28 Thread Craig Sanders
On Mon, Oct 28, 2002 at 10:49:42AM -0500, Scott St. John wrote: > I have several BSDi and FreeBSD servers here that are beyond repair > and I had planned to move them to Linux by now, but I am running into > a few problems and wanted to run them by the crew here for some > thoughts. Please note, I

Re: sendmail upgrade

2002-10-28 Thread Craig Sanders
On Tue, Oct 29, 2002 at 04:26:23PM +1100, Glenn Hocking wrote: > I have just run apt-get update then apt-get upgrade on one of my > production servers which upgraded sendmail and now it won't start. > > The error is as follows, > > > Start sendmail now? (Y/n) > Starting Mail Transport Agent: se

sendmail upgrade

2002-10-28 Thread Glenn Hocking
Hi All I have just run apt-get update then apt-get upgrade on one of my production servers which upgraded sendmail and now it won't start. The error is as follows, Start sendmail now? (Y/n) Starting Mail Transport Agent: sendmail/usr/sbin/sendmail: /lib/libc.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.3' not foun

Re: Moving from BSDi

2002-10-28 Thread Craig Sanders
On Mon, Oct 28, 2002 at 10:49:42AM -0500, Scott St. John wrote: > I have several BSDi and FreeBSD servers here that are beyond repair > and I had planned to move them to Linux by now, but I am running into > a few problems and wanted to run them by the crew here for some > thoughts. Please note, I

Re: Moving from BSDi

2002-10-28 Thread Jeremy C. Reed
On Mon, 28 Oct 2002, Scott St. John wrote: > I have several BSDi and FreeBSD servers here that are beyond repair and I > had planned to > move them to Linux by now, but I am running into a few problems and wanted I have migrated from BSD/OS to Linux (and Linux to BSD/OS and *BSD) a few times.

Re: port 137 scans

2002-10-28 Thread Emile van Bergen
Hi, On Mon, Oct 28, 2002 at 03:21:54PM +0100, Russell Coker wrote: > On Mon, 28 Oct 2002 15:11, Scott wrote: > > They are SPAM messages being set to the Windows Messenger service. We got > > several clients who were blasted with: "Get Your Degree" in a windows > > pop-up. There are spam utiliti

Re: Moving from BSDi

2002-10-28 Thread Jeremy C. Reed
On Mon, 28 Oct 2002, Scott St. John wrote: > I have several BSDi and FreeBSD servers here that are beyond repair and I > had planned to > move them to Linux by now, but I am running into a few problems and wanted I have migrated from BSD/OS to Linux (and Linux to BSD/OS and *BSD) a few times.

Re: port 137 scans

2002-10-28 Thread Emile van Bergen
Hi, On Mon, Oct 28, 2002 at 03:21:54PM +0100, Russell Coker wrote: > On Mon, 28 Oct 2002 15:11, Scott wrote: > > They are SPAM messages being set to the Windows Messenger service. We got > > several clients who were blasted with: "Get Your Degree" in a windows > > pop-up. There are spam utiliti

Re: Moving from BSDi

2002-10-28 Thread Scott St. John
At 05:39 PM 10/28/2002 +0100, Russell Coker wrote: Debian supports both DES and MD5 hashing of passwords. If the BSD passwords for your accounts are in one of those formats then it'll be trivial to convert them. You could create a test account and set a password, then post the lines from /etc/pass

Re: Moving from BSDi

2002-10-28 Thread Scott St. John
At 05:39 PM 10/28/2002 +0100, Russell Coker wrote: You could create a test account and set a password, then post the lines from /etc/passwd and /etc/shadow here and we'll try and devise some sort of proceedure for you... The BSDi machines use /etc/passwd and /etc/master.passwd, I think that is MD5.

Re: Moving from BSDi

2002-10-28 Thread Russell Coker
On Mon, 28 Oct 2002 16:49, Scott St. John wrote: > First, does anyone know of a way to export the user accounts on BSDi and > import them into > a Debian box? I have close to 5,000 accounts I need to bring over. Debian supports both DES and MD5 hashing of passwords. If the BSD passwords for you

Moving from BSDi

2002-10-28 Thread Scott St. John
Hi gang- I have several BSDi and FreeBSD servers here that are beyond repair and I had planned to move them to Linux by now, but I am running into a few problems and wanted to run them by the crew here for some thoughts. Please note, I am new to Debian, I was using Mandrake and Red Hat, but dis

Re: Moving from BSDi

2002-10-28 Thread Scott St. John
At 05:39 PM 10/28/2002 +0100, Russell Coker wrote: Debian supports both DES and MD5 hashing of passwords. If the BSD passwords for your accounts are in one of those formats then it'll be trivial to convert them. You could create a test account and set a password, then post the lines from /etc/pa

Re: Moving from BSDi

2002-10-28 Thread Scott St. John
At 05:39 PM 10/28/2002 +0100, Russell Coker wrote: You could create a test account and set a password, then post the lines from /etc/passwd and /etc/shadow here and we'll try and devise some sort of proceedure for you... The BSDi machines use /etc/passwd and /etc/master.passwd, I think that is M

RE: port 137 scans

2002-10-28 Thread Jeremy Carman
Hey yall. I have seen this happening to my windows workstations as well lately. Here's an article that might shed a little more light on the subject. http://mynetwatchman.com/kb/security/articles/popupspam/netsend.htm J.J. -Original Message- From: Russell Coker [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Re: Moving from BSDi

2002-10-28 Thread Russell Coker
On Mon, 28 Oct 2002 16:49, Scott St. John wrote: > First, does anyone know of a way to export the user accounts on BSDi and > import them into > a Debian box? I have close to 5,000 accounts I need to bring over. Debian supports both DES and MD5 hashing of passwords. If the BSD passwords for you

Re: port 137 scans

2002-10-28 Thread Russell Coker
On Mon, 28 Oct 2002 15:11, Scott wrote: > They are SPAM messages being set to the Windows Messenger service. We got > several clients who were blasted with: "Get Your Degree" in a windows > pop-up. There are spam utilities that now do this. The technical description linked from the Wired article

Re: port 137 scans

2002-10-28 Thread Statu Nascendi
there's a worm: Opaserv. - Original Message - From: "Russell Coker" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "Debian ISP" Sent: Monday, October 28, 2002 4:14 PM Subject: port 137 scans > Does anyone know why there's been a sudden increase in port 137 UDP scans? Is > there some new SMB networking hole? >

Re: port 137 scans

2002-10-28 Thread Scott
They are SPAM messages being set to the Windows Messenger service. We got several clients who were blasted with: "Get Your Degree" in a windows pop-up. There are spam utilities that now do this. -Scott On Mon, 28 Oct 2002, Russell Coker wrote: > Does anyone know why there's been a sudden

port 137 scans

2002-10-28 Thread Russell Coker
Does anyone know why there's been a sudden increase in port 137 UDP scans? Is there some new SMB networking hole? -- http://www.coker.com.au/selinux/ My NSA Security Enhanced Linux packages http://www.coker.com.au/bonnie++/ Bonnie++ hard drive benchmark http://www.coker.com.au/postal/Pos

Moving from BSDi

2002-10-28 Thread Scott St. John
Hi gang- I have several BSDi and FreeBSD servers here that are beyond repair and I had planned to move them to Linux by now, but I am running into a few problems and wanted to run them by the crew here for some thoughts. Please note, I am new to Debian, I was using Mandrake and Red Hat, but di

SpamAssassin not using MySQL preferences

2002-10-28 Thread Gene Grimm
After a suggestion to separate options for spamd startup (thanks again to whoever that was), I see the SpamAssassin mysql user accessing the 'userpref' table. 646 Connect [EMAIL PROTECTED] on spamassassin 646 Query select preference, value from userpref where username = 'spamby' OR user

RE: port 137 scans

2002-10-28 Thread Jeremy Carman
Hey yall. I have seen this happening to my windows workstations as well lately. Here's an article that might shed a little more light on the subject. http://mynetwatchman.com/kb/security/articles/popupspam/netsend.htm J.J. -Original Message- From: Russell Coker [mailto:russell@;coker.com

Re: mysqlsnapshot and InnoDB tables

2002-10-28 Thread Amaya
Jeremy Zawodny dijo: > That depends. I don't know if it's "safe" to backup the InnoDB > tablespaces without shutting the server down. I suspect that it's not > because there is no way to force InnoDB to commit all logged > transactions. In practice it may not be a problem, but it could be. Cool

Re: port 137 scans

2002-10-28 Thread Russell Coker
On Mon, 28 Oct 2002 15:11, Scott wrote: > They are SPAM messages being set to the Windows Messenger service. We got > several clients who were blasted with: "Get Your Degree" in a windows > pop-up. There are spam utilities that now do this. The technical description linked from the Wired article

Re: port 137 scans

2002-10-28 Thread Statu Nascendi
there's a worm: Opaserv. - Original Message - From: "Russell Coker" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "Debian ISP" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Monday, October 28, 2002 4:14 PM Subject: port 137 scans > Does anyone know why there's been a sudden increase in port 137 UDP scans? Is > there some new SMB

Re: port 137 scans

2002-10-28 Thread Scott
They are SPAM messages being set to the Windows Messenger service. We got several clients who were blasted with: "Get Your Degree" in a windows pop-up. There are spam utilities that now do this. -Scott On Mon, 28 Oct 2002, Russell Coker wrote: > Does anyone know why there's been a sudden

port 137 scans

2002-10-28 Thread Russell Coker
Does anyone know why there's been a sudden increase in port 137 UDP scans? Is there some new SMB networking hole? -- http://www.coker.com.au/selinux/ My NSA Security Enhanced Linux packages http://www.coker.com.au/bonnie++/ Bonnie++ hard drive benchmark http://www.coker.com.au/postal/Pos

SpamAssassin not using MySQL preferences

2002-10-28 Thread Gene Grimm
After a suggestion to separate options for spamd startup (thanks again to whoever that was), I see the SpamAssassin mysql user accessing the 'userpref' table. 646 Connect spamby@localhost on spamassassin 646 Query select preference, value from userpref where username = 'spamby' OR usern

Re: mysqlsnapshot and InnoDB tables

2002-10-28 Thread Amaya
Jeremy Zawodny dijo: > That depends. I don't know if it's "safe" to backup the InnoDB > tablespaces without shutting the server down. I suspect that it's not > because there is no way to force InnoDB to commit all logged > transactions. In practice it may not be a problem, but it could be. Cool

Re: Controlling IP traffic (e.g. per month)

2002-10-28 Thread Bart-Jan Vrielink
On Mon, 2002-10-28 at 10:32, Dieter Heiliger wrote: > I am doing the administration for a server located at an ISP. We have a > certain amount of traffic per month included in the monthly fee. > Additional traffic will be paid extra. > > Now I want to get more control over the traffic that was

Re: Controlling IP traffic (e.g. per month)

2002-10-28 Thread Alexander Reelsen
Hi On Mon, Oct 28, 2002 at 10:32:30AM +0100, Dieter Heiliger wrote: > Now I want to get more control over the traffic that was already used > since the beginning of each month. My ideal configuration would be to > get an email when e.g. 80% of the traffic included in the monthly fee > got used

Controlling IP traffic (e.g. per month)

2002-10-28 Thread Dieter Heiliger
Hi Gurus! I am doing the administration for a server located at an ISP. We have a certain amount of traffic per month included in the monthly fee. Additional traffic will be paid extra. Now I want to get more control over the traffic that was already used since the beginning of each month. My i

Re: Controlling IP traffic (e.g. per month)

2002-10-28 Thread Bart-Jan Vrielink
On Mon, 2002-10-28 at 10:32, Dieter Heiliger wrote: > I am doing the administration for a server located at an ISP. We have a > certain amount of traffic per month included in the monthly fee. > Additional traffic will be paid extra. > > Now I want to get more control over the traffic that was

Re: Controlling IP traffic (e.g. per month)

2002-10-28 Thread Alexander Reelsen
Hi On Mon, Oct 28, 2002 at 10:32:30AM +0100, Dieter Heiliger wrote: > Now I want to get more control over the traffic that was already used > since the beginning of each month. My ideal configuration would be to > get an email when e.g. 80% of the traffic included in the monthly fee > got used

Re: mysqlsnapshot and InnoDB tables

2002-10-28 Thread Jeremy Zawodny
On Fri, Oct 25, 2002 at 02:33:54PM +0200, Amaya wrote: > Dear friends, > > I have successfully setup MySQL replication enviroment in several > clusters at work. The thing is that it is a little cumbersome > proccess as I have to make a snapshot of the databases in the master > server everytime and

Controlling IP traffic (e.g. per month)

2002-10-28 Thread Dieter Heiliger
Hi Gurus! I am doing the administration for a server located at an ISP. We have a certain amount of traffic per month included in the monthly fee. Additional traffic will be paid extra. Now I want to get more control over the traffic that was already used since the beginning of each month. My

Re: [Help] continue https certificate date

2002-10-28 Thread Mathieu Meylan
Hello, use this: ssl-certificat -days 365 and make your cert with 365 of validity. Good look... $A++ Mathieu >>> axacheng <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 10/24/02 10:02AM >>> Hello All : How could i continue apache-ssl certificate date??? im using ssl-certificate command to generate new certif