On Sun, 2003-03-09 at 16:27, Blake Covarrubias wrote:
> LifeWithQmail.org does have a lot of information about setting up Qmail,
> but there's parts of it that I can't even get working. Here's the output
> of qmail-showctl. You can see below that I'm having some problems.
>
>
> qmail home directo
On Tue, 2003-03-11 at 12:33, Eduard Ballester wrote:
> >>My question:
> >>do you know any software like Perdition but for FTP service?
> >
> > We use ftpproxy from suse, it's packaged for Debian so have a look. I'm
> > not
> > sure how like perdition it might be though.
>
> Do you know if ftp
On Tue, 2003-03-11 at 12:33, Eduard Ballester wrote:
> >>My question:
> >>do you know any software like Perdition but for FTP service?
> >
> > We use ftpproxy from suse, it's packaged for Debian so have a look. I'm not
> > sure how like perdition it might be though.
>
> Do you know if ftpproxy
On Mon, Mar 10, 2003 at 03:44:11PM -0800, Nate Campi wrote:
> I'm sure I'm missing something here, but if there's duplicate POP/IMAP
> servers and no syncing of actual mailboxes the contents will get out of
> sync between them as users read their mail. How do you work aroud this
> with your scheme?
On Mon, Mar 10, 2003 at 03:44:11PM -0800, Nate Campi wrote:
> I'm sure I'm missing something here, but if there's duplicate POP/IMAP
> servers and no syncing of actual mailboxes the contents will get out of
> sync between them as users read their mail. How do you work aroud this
> with your scheme?
On Tue, 2003-03-11 at 05:58, Teun Vink wrote:
> Check out the Zebra mailinglist, it has been discussed there over and
> over. Basically, a full routing table would require 512Mb at least. CPU
> isn't that much of an issue, any 'normal' CPU (P3) would do...
512MB is more than enough for zebra. I wo
On Tue, 2003-03-11 at 05:58, Teun Vink wrote:
> Check out the Zebra mailinglist, it has been discussed there over and
> over. Basically, a full routing table would require 512Mb at least. CPU
> isn't that much of an issue, any 'normal' CPU (P3) would do...
512MB is more than enough for zebra. I wo
My question:
do you know any software like Perdition but for FTP service?
>
We use ftpproxy from suse, it's packaged for Debian so have a look. I'm not
sure how like perdition it might be though.
Do you know if ftpproxy can redirect connection per user?
Can I use LDAP accounts?
--
*
Hello,
Am 19:16 2003-02-24 +0100 hat Russell Coker geschrieben:
>
>On Mon, 24 Feb 2003 18:34, Colin Ellis wrote:
>The fastest drives (15000rpm) will take an average of 4ms for the disk
to spin
>to the correct location to start a transfer in addition to the seek
times for
>moving the heads. Th
Hello,
Am 11:28 2003-02-20 +1000 hat Samantha Scafe geschrieben:
>
>How is it possble to keep users in their own directory?
???
I use proftpd and if a user login, they have
only its own ~/ and can not go back to /home
It is the default installation.
Michelle
My question:
do you know any software like Perdition but for FTP service?
>
We use ftpproxy from suse, it's packaged for Debian so have a look. I'm not
sure how like perdition it might be though.
Do you know if ftpproxy can redirect connection per user?
Can I use LDAP accounts?
--
Hello,
Am 19:16 2003-02-24 +0100 hat Russell Coker geschrieben:
>
>On Mon, 24 Feb 2003 18:34, Colin Ellis wrote:
>The fastest drives (15000rpm) will take an average of 4ms for the disk
to spin
>to the correct location to start a transfer in addition to the seek
times for
>moving the heads. Th
Hello All
I have put together an antivirus filter for use with Exim.
The filter is written in Python, and it works by examining Mime
headers in e-mail messages. It does not make use of a pattern
database. You could describe it as an upgrade to the antivirus Exim
system filter published on the
Hello,
Am 11:28 2003-02-20 +1000 hat Samantha Scafe geschrieben:
>
>How is it possble to keep users in their own directory?
???
I use proftpd and if a user login, they have
only its own ~/ and can not go back to /home
It is the default installation.
Michelle
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On Tue, 4 Mar 2003, DouRiX wrote:
> To simplify, I want to put Options directly inside , since
> I read from http://httpd.apache.org/docs/mod/core.html#options that the
> Option's context contains virtual host, but it doesn't work.
It controls based on "a particular directory" (which DocumentRo
On Tuesday 11 March 2003 06:51, Eduard Ballester wrote:
> My question:
> do you know any software like Perdition but for FTP service?
We use ftpproxy from suse, it's packaged for Debian so have a look. I'm not
sure how like perdition it might be though.
--
Fraser Campbell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Hello All
I have put together an antivirus filter for use with Exim.
The filter is written in Python, and it works by examining Mime
headers in e-mail messages. It does not make use of a pattern
database. You could describe it as an upgrade to the antivirus Exim
system filter published on the
On Tue, 4 Mar 2003, DouRiX wrote:
> To simplify, I want to put Options directly inside , since
> I read from http://httpd.apache.org/docs/mod/core.html#options that the
> Option's context contains virtual host, but it doesn't work.
It controls based on "a particular directory" (which DocumentRo
On Tuesday 11 March 2003 06:51, Eduard Ballester wrote:
> My question:
> do you know any software like Perdition but for FTP service?
We use ftpproxy from suse, it's packaged for Debian so have a look. I'm not
sure how like perdition it might be though.
--
Fraser Campbell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
On Tue, 11 Mar 2003 12:51, Eduard Ballester wrote:
> > For load balancing create several POP and IMAP proxies with an IPVS load
> > balancer in front. Use Perdition on the POP and IMAP proxies to direct
> > the connection to the correct back-end server that has the mail.
>
> I had used Perdition+L
Hello
For load balancing create several POP and IMAP proxies with an IPVS load
balancer in front. Use Perdition on the POP and IMAP proxies to direct the
connection to the correct back-end server that has the mail.
I had used Perdition+LDAP and it works fine!!!
My question:
do you know any softw
On Tue, 11 Mar 2003, Nicolas Bougues wrote:
> The machine has 256 Mb, and is pretty happy with it.
>
> It's a 450 MHz PIII. CPU power depends on the trafic you expect.
>
> We have two peers, and get full routing table from both (+- 120 000
> routes).
That's the confirmation I was waiting for. I
On Tue, Mar 11, 2003 at 12:28:04PM +0200, Valkai Elod wrote:
>
> Anyone running BGP with a global routing table on zebra/debian/gnu/linux?
>
I do.
The machine has 256 Mb, and is pretty happy with it.
Here is an extract from ps aux :
root 616 0.0 11.3 31012 29204 ? SMar02 6:
On Tue, 2003-03-11 at 11:28, Valkai Elod wrote:
> Anyone running BGP with a global routing table on zebra/debian/gnu/linux?
>
> How much memory would it require? Does the CPU matter or is it mostly a
> RAM issue?
>
> thx,
Check out the Zebra mailinglist, it has been discussed there over and
ov
On Tue, 11 Mar 2003 12:51, Eduard Ballester wrote:
> > For load balancing create several POP and IMAP proxies with an IPVS load
> > balancer in front. Use Perdition on the POP and IMAP proxies to direct
> > the connection to the correct back-end server that has the mail.
>
> I had used Perdition+L
Anyone running BGP with a global routing table on zebra/debian/gnu/linux?
How much memory would it require? Does the CPU matter or is it mostly a
RAM issue?
thx,
--
Elod VALKAI
Network Administrator
RC Team SA, Timisoara
On Tue, 11 Mar 2003 09:11, Markus Welsch wrote:
> > Depends on what you want to balance, just TCP/IP traffic, or a specific
> > service (mail/web/etc). For TCP/IP traffic, we use VRRP (Virtual
> > Redundant Router Protocol), which works fine.
>
> What would you recommend if you want to realize load
Greetings!
On Tue, 11 Mar 2003 09:47:25 +0200
"Craig" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I was wondering if its possible to have 2 Debian boxes sharing
> a single UPS ? Its a 650Pro - made by APC.
Depending on the boxes 650 VA might be a bit small/underpowered.
Standard office PCs (no fancy/overclocke
Hello
For load balancing create several POP and IMAP proxies with an IPVS load
balancer in front. Use Perdition on the POP and IMAP proxies to direct the
connection to the correct back-end server that has the mail.
I had used Perdition+LDAP and it works fine!!!
My question:
do you know any sof
On Tue, 11 Mar 2003, Nicolas Bougues wrote:
> The machine has 256 Mb, and is pretty happy with it.
>
> It's a 450 MHz PIII. CPU power depends on the trafic you expect.
>
> We have two peers, and get full routing table from both (+- 120 000
> routes).
That's the confirmation I was waiting for. I
On Tue, Mar 11, 2003 at 09:47:25AM +0200, Craig wrote:
> I was wondering if its possible to have 2 Debian boxes sharing
> a single UPS ? Its a 650Pro - made by APC.
I have a SmartUPS 650 and I use apcupsd -- It's great and supports
a network mode where you have one master with the serial connectio
On Tue, Mar 11, 2003 at 12:28:04PM +0200, Valkai Elod wrote:
>
> Anyone running BGP with a global routing table on zebra/debian/gnu/linux?
>
I do.
The machine has 256 Mb, and is pretty happy with it.
Here is an extract from ps aux :
root 616 0.0 11.3 31012 29204 ? SMar02 6:
On Tue, 2003-03-11 at 11:28, Valkai Elod wrote:
> Anyone running BGP with a global routing table on zebra/debian/gnu/linux?
>
> How much memory would it require? Does the CPU matter or is it mostly a
> RAM issue?
>
> thx,
Check out the Zebra mailinglist, it has been discussed there over and
ov
On Tue, 2003-03-11 at 08:47, Craig wrote:
> I was wondering if its possible to have 2 Debian boxes sharing
> a single UPS ? Its a 650Pro - made by APC.
Besides connecting both their power supplies to that UPS ?? :)
I'm using the package nut with my APC SmartUPS 1000 and it's running
fine. There
On Tue, 2003-03-11 at 09:11, Markus Welsch wrote:
> > Depends on what you want to balance, just TCP/IP traffic, or a specific
> > service (mail/web/etc). For TCP/IP traffic, we use VRRP (Virtual
> > Redundant Router Protocol), which works fine.
>
> What would you recommend if you want to realize l
Anyone running BGP with a global routing table on zebra/debian/gnu/linux?
How much memory would it require? Does the CPU matter or is it mostly a
RAM issue?
thx,
--
Elod VALKAI
Network Administrator
RC Team SA, Timisoara
--
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with a subject of "uns
Depends on what you want to balance, just TCP/IP traffic, or a specific
service (mail/web/etc). For TCP/IP traffic, we use VRRP (Virtual
Redundant Router Protocol), which works fine.
What would you recommend if you want to realize load balancing between mail and
webservers ? (Mail server should al
On Tue, 11 Mar 2003 09:11, Markus Welsch wrote:
> > Depends on what you want to balance, just TCP/IP traffic, or a specific
> > service (mail/web/etc). For TCP/IP traffic, we use VRRP (Virtual
> > Redundant Router Protocol), which works fine.
>
> What would you recommend if you want to realize load
Greetings!
On Tue, 11 Mar 2003 09:47:25 +0200
"Craig" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I was wondering if its possible to have 2 Debian boxes sharing
> a single UPS ? Its a 650Pro - made by APC.
Depending on the boxes 650 VA might be a bit small/underpowered.
Standard office PCs (no fancy/overclocke
Hi guys
I was wondering if its possible to have 2 Debian boxes sharing
a single UPS ? Its a 650Pro - made by APC.
..Craig
On Tue, Mar 11, 2003 at 09:47:25AM +0200, Craig wrote:
> I was wondering if its possible to have 2 Debian boxes sharing
> a single UPS ? Its a 650Pro - made by APC.
I have a SmartUPS 650 and I use apcupsd -- It's great and supports
a network mode where you have one master with the serial connectio
On Tue, 2003-03-11 at 08:47, Craig wrote:
> I was wondering if its possible to have 2 Debian boxes sharing
> a single UPS ? Its a 650Pro - made by APC.
Besides connecting both their power supplies to that UPS ?? :)
I'm using the package nut with my APC SmartUPS 1000 and it's running
fine. There
On Tue, 2003-03-11 at 09:11, Markus Welsch wrote:
> > Depends on what you want to balance, just TCP/IP traffic, or a specific
> > service (mail/web/etc). For TCP/IP traffic, we use VRRP (Virtual
> > Redundant Router Protocol), which works fine.
>
> What would you recommend if you want to realize l
Depends on what you want to balance, just TCP/IP traffic, or a specific
service (mail/web/etc). For TCP/IP traffic, we use VRRP (Virtual
Redundant Router Protocol), which works fine.
What would you recommend if you want to realize load balancing between mail and
webservers ? (Mail server should al
Hi guys
I was wondering if its possible to have 2 Debian boxes sharing
a single UPS ? Its a 650Pro - made by APC.
..Craig
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