On Sat, Oct 18, 2003 at 02:52:11AM +0200, Roman Medina wrote:
> On Fri, 10 Oct 2003 13:49:56 +1000, you wrote:
>
> > another method is to use apt's "pinning" features where you can tell
> > it to upgrade certain packages from one distribution (e.g. unstable)
> > and the rest from another (e.
On Sat, 18 Oct 2003 11:23, Rudi Starcevic wrote:
> For example once he/she is logged in is there any way to deny, say,
> reading the /etc/passwd file ?
> Can they be restricted like the way a user can be restricted using FTP ?
I have heard of people setting up chroot environments for ssh accounts
Hi,
Is there anyway to resistict a non-root user's shell account ?
For example once he/she is logged in is there any way to deny, say,
reading the /etc/passwd file ?
Can they be restricted like the way a user can be restricted using FTP ?
I know I could use a tool like Snort to watch whats goi
On Fri, 10 Oct 2003 13:49:56 +1000, you wrote:
> another method is to use apt's "pinning" features where you can tell
> it to upgrade certain packages from one distribution (e.g. unstable)
> and the rest from another (e.g. stable).
Could you post an /etc/apt/sources.list which demonstrates
On 09 Oct 2003 10:31:25 +0200, you wrote:
>Am Don, 2003-10-09 um 02.50 schrieb Donovan Baarda:
>
>> Using snapshots to do an incremental backup would be no different to
>> doing any other type of backup using snapshots. It's the same as a
>> normal incremental backup, just with the added guarantee
The above are stack dumps. As you can see the most-recently invoked
function in each case was getblk(), so I'd say you need to check your
filesystem (and/or replace the hard drive).
Marcin
Thanks a lot for your help. Now everything seems a bit more clear.
But this leads to another question...
The d
Hello, here is my situation:
I have a computer which is not connected to a network, which I want to
install a package to. This particular package, mondo, doesn't have
many dependencies, so this issue is academic. My objective is to
install everything needed to get mondo up and running on this re
On Fri, Oct 17, 2003 at 11:50:28AM +0200, aCaB wrote:
> Oct 17 04:48:38 fserv kernel: Call Trace:[getblk+25/80]
> [ext3_getblk+185/624] [vc_resize+289/1168] [ext3_find_entry+501/768]
> [ext3_bread+35/128]
> Oct 17 04:48:38 fserv kernel: [ext3_readdir+150/912]
> [permission+42/48] [vfs_read
On Thu, Oct 16, 2003 at 06:41:03PM +0200, Gideon Oosthuysen (Isogo) wrote:
> I am looking for a local DYNDNS solution for my dialup clients. I
> would like to run My own DYNDNS server that updates the dns records so
> that the change is basically Instant for me. Does anyone know of any
> software l
Not sure if this is OT, just hope someone can help.
I experienced a kernel crash last night at cron.daily time.
As i'm totally new to this kind of things i'd like to know where to
start from? This machine, which run quite fine for over a year a 2.4.18
kernel (build from vanilla source taken from
hi everyone,
i'm running spamassassin/unstable through amavisd-new/unstable on a
postfix/stable mailserver (debian/stable). it seems like spamassassin
ignores the per-user settings in ~/.spamassassin (like a personal
'required_hits'). is there a way to fix this? it did work before when i
ran spama
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