hardware like vmware.
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hardware like vmware.
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Regarding that mail filtering message, that seems to have come from some
third party who reads the list. I guess it is not mailing list aware.
On Sat, 2004-02-28 at 15:14, Marty Landman wrote:
> Jeff, do you think that the apps are trying to flock the file? I'm curious
> what th
sh the PHP CGI stuff worked right, as if it did, we would opt to use
that instead of the Apache PHP module. It may be slower, but at least
that would limit what users can fuck up with third-party PHP scripts. :(
I hope this helps!
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t to issue the gdb command `backtrace`, and send that output
to the mailing list. Just issue `q` after you've got that to detach.
What version of Apache are you running, and with what modules?
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On Sat, 2004-02-21 at 14:50, charlie derr wrote:
> > 5. Drive usage control (i.e. user only get 10M for mail and 15M for web)
>
> We have quotas implemented on the web and mail servers. This is a daily
>task though (raising quotas of people who've exceeded their default)
You could automate
ards to work.
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every operation. You already spent a
lot of money on that server. I suggest you buy more disks for RAID 10.
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every operation. You already spent a
lot of money on that server. I suggest you buy more disks for RAID 10.
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restrictions on their office or ISP mail server.
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seems another poster had similar trouble
in Dec'02, but there were no apparent follow-up posts. Google has also
been less than revealing on this topic. All suggestions entertained.
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seems another poster had similar trouble
in Dec'02, but there were no apparent follow-up posts. Google has also
been less than revealing on this topic. All suggestions entertained.
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ng the Intel
e100/e1000 drivers, are superb. I suspect the 3c59x driver is not quite
so modern, and the kernel is preempted by NIC interrupts frequently when
new frames come in under your existing bridge configuration.
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ng the Intel
e100/e1000 drivers, are superb. I suspect the 3c59x driver is not quite
so modern, and the kernel is preempted by NIC interrupts frequently when
new frames come in under your existing bridge configuration.
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r flaps, in which case zebra consumes a lot of
CPU power reconfiguring the FIB. It's a shame that the Linux kernel
doesn't make the FIB structures accessible directly via an interface
similar to /dev/kmem so zebra could simply mmap(2) it in and make large
writes instead of small ioctl(
r flaps, in which case zebra consumes a lot of
CPU power reconfiguring the FIB. It's a shame that the Linux kernel
doesn't make the FIB structures accessible directly via an interface
similar to /dev/kmem so zebra could simply mmap(2) it in and make large
writes instead of small ioctl(
this is a helpful start. You'll need to do some configuration
work on OSPF and Zebra itself as well, but we'll need to look at more
specifics of your setup to do that.
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this is a helpful start. You'll need to do some configuration
work on OSPF and Zebra itself as well, but we'll need to look at more
specifics of your setup to do that.
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also
provides a nice way of configuring QoS parameters. Worth a try. :-)
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also
provides a nice way of configuring QoS parameters. Worth a try. :-)
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boards with several of these
chipsets on-board. I have a number of Tyan mainboards with as many as 3
on-board Intel-based ethernet ports.
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m but I suppose it is feasable. It
would be better to check other options first. Incidentally I am running
2.4.20 on my home NFS server and have no similar problems. I have not
upgraded to 2.4.20 on any of my NFS clients yet.
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with a
]
X server ssh sshno X server
Fully encrypted, secure access to X software on your db-server, without
running (or even having) a full X server on the machine. :-)
- Jeff
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p: +612 9263 5052
f: +612 9263 5050
-
fficult, however.
- Jeff
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rwhoisd.
Does anyone else on the list run an RWHOIS server, and if so, which one?
An apt-cache search revealed little, as did a freshmeat.net query. If
other on the list are in the same boat I am, perhaps we could put our
heads together and come up with a free-as-in-debian alternative.
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rwhoisd.
Does anyone else on the list run an RWHOIS server, and if so, which one?
An apt-cache search revealed little, as did a freshmeat.net query. If
other on the list are in the same boat I am, perhaps we could put our
heads together and come up with a free-as-in-debian alternative.
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tack has set DF?
Kind thanks,
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signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part
rectory `/root/source/libapache-auth-ldap-1.6.0'
> make: *** [build-stamp] Error 2
> ==
Looks like you're missing the devel packages for openldap. Install those,
try again. Make sure you check the build-depends of the package you're
building.
- Jeff
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linux.conf
32 0 21348
622244
-/+ buffers/cache: 220556 812824
Swap: 497972 0 497972
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~#
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Description: This is a digitally signed message part
32 0 21348
622244
-/+ buffers/cache: 220556 812824
Swap: 497972 0 497972
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I am concerned that might slow down packet forwarding, but I
can probably live with that.
Has anyone on the list encountered similar problems? If so, is this the
approach you took to solve them or did you do something else?
Thanks,
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[EMAIL PROTECTED]
I am concerned that might slow down packet forwarding, but I
can probably live with that.
Has anyone on the list encountered similar problems? If so, is this the
approach you took to solve them or did you do something else?
Thanks,
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[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Tue, 2003-01-14 at 17:15, Jan V wrote:
> If you want to know the compile-options for eg cowsay: 'apt-get source
> cowsay' then go to the debian dir that has been created
/ I enjoyed your cowsay reference. It is \
\ very popular on EFnet.
that would allow binary distribution, or distribution of
patched sources, is well-intentioned, but I cannot agree with it.
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case? Any tool or administration tips?
*nix tools save the day. I use a for loop and ssh in a bash script. "Low
tech" solutions are often highly efficient and flexible. :-)
- Jeff
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So, "Jeffrey" seems to mean "the ineffectual, victimised guy in
American movies" in four different languages.
case? Any tool or administration tips?
*nix tools save the day. I use a for loop and ssh in a bash script. "Low
tech" solutions are often highly efficient and flexible. :-)
- Jeff
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So, "Jeffrey" seems to mean "the ineffectual, victimised guy in
American mov
apparent differences and I'd be happy to whip up a Perl
script and post it to the debian-isp list. We have hundreds of zones as
well, and if it there had been a file format problem, I would had to
have done so in order to make the upgrade work.
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O
apparent differences and I'd be happy to whip up a Perl
script and post it to the debian-isp list. We have hundreds of zones as
well, and if it there had been a file format problem, I would had to
have done so in order to make the upgrade work.
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O
pooky
software than known-to-be-exploitable software :-)
Thanks for the suggestion, Sonny.
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Software DevelopmentFive Elements, Inc
http://www.five-elements.com/~jsw/
On Tue, 2002-11-12 at 13:53, Sonny Kupka wrote:
> Why not use Bin
pooky
software than known-to-be-exploitable software :-)
Thanks for the suggestion, Sonny.
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Software DevelopmentFive Elements, Inc
http://www.five-elements.com/~jsw/
On Tue, 2002-11-12 at 13:53, Sonny Kupka wrote:
> Why not use Bin
See ISC.ORG for information on new BIND vulnerabilities. Current bind
package in woody is 8.3.3, which is an affected version. Patches are
not available yet, it seems.
http://www.isc.org/products/BIND/bind-security.html
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Software Development
See ISC.ORG for information on new BIND vulnerabilities. Current bind
package in woody is 8.3.3, which is an affected version. Patches are
not available yet, it seems.
http://www.isc.org/products/BIND/bind-security.html
--
Jeff S Wheeler [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Software Development
ully complete an HTTP/1.1 request.
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signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part
ully complete an HTTP/1.1 request.
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signature.asc
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-hand information only, please.
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-Forwarded Message-
From: CERT(R) Coordination Center <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: nanog@merit.edu
Cc: CERT(R) Coordination Center <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: VU#210321
Date: 10 Sep 2002 10:16:14 -0400
-B
s not very smart, and will do a DNS
lookup on every request even if you are trying to block by IP. If the
IP route null0 method ever fails me, I will patch apache to fix this.
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Software DevelopmentFive Elements, Inc
http://www.five-el
> Jeff,
> please share the cons/pros with us
The following document provides a good analysis of why Maildir was more
appropriate to Courier IMAP's general audience and tasks (the SELECT.1
benchmarks are telling):
http://www.courier-mta.org/mbox-vs-maildir/
To me, the differe
appropriate to each. They operate very differently, and have pros/cons
for different uses.
- Jeff
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"Love never misses the chance to put the boot in." - Kelly, SLOU
> Failing that, a migration to pure maildir would probably be good, provided
> the migration could be handled transperantly.
There are plenty of reasons to not use Maildir, too.
- Jeff
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"What's up with that word though... it's like something you did to
e the
general Internet is accessing services at your site, you would be _far_
smarter to colocate one or more PCs with a colocation supplier, than to
try to do fail-over with DNS. It's a bad solution, won't work all the
time, you'll have TTL issues, etc. etc. but it is possible.
successfully deploy BGP, and your two ISPs may not
even be staffed or equipped to deliver BGP sessions to you. If you want
to undertake it anyway, I strongly urge you to contract a consultant who
can help you and possibly your ISPs through the process.
I hope this helps.
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er and does several mbits/sec
24x7, and that packet loss affected all the TCP sessions going over it,
limiting them to around 400Kbits/sec throughput due to TCP backoff :-(
I hope this is helpful.
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a router and does several mbits/sec
24x7, and that packet loss affected all the TCP sessions going over it,
limiting them to around 400Kbits/sec throughput due to TCP backoff :-(
I hope this is helpful.
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e copy of libc, but it seems workable.
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ports. 1000baseT works, take advantage of it.
I hope you'll think about a solution other than mysql for this problem,
though. It's not the right tool for session management on such a scale.
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Software DevelopmentFive Ele
ports. 1000baseT works, take advantage of it.
I hope you'll think about a solution other than mysql for this problem,
though. It's not the right tool for session management on such a scale.
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Software DevelopmentFive Ele
et
known by all your web servers. This is not a new concept, nor a
difficult one. It can even be implemented using PHP, though a C apache
module is smarter.
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Software DevelopmentFive Elements, Inc
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et
known by all your web servers. This is not a new concept, nor a
difficult one. It can even be implemented using PHP, though a C apache
module is smarter.
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--
smtp_ to something higher
than your current value, say 500, it will reduce the number of
connections used.
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But on the other hand, it's not surprising that they weren't organized
enough to realize they spend a lot of time figuring out where things go.
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On Wed,
> Do you know of any better shell tools for extracting from, cc, subject etc.
> from the headers than procmail/formail?
How about Python and its RFC822 modules?
- Jeff
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"Tha
On Thu, 2002-04-04 at 03:06, Stephane Bortzmeyer wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 03, 2002 at 06:35:22PM -0500,
> Jeff S Wheeler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
> a message of 39 lines which said:
>
> > would not go for that because apparently a disproportionate number of
> > thei
SIC authen? I
know it's a poor limitation but *shrug* the customer knows their needs.
I figured DBM would be sluggish, and the customer already tried text
files, but moved to mod_auth_mysql when that ran out of steam.
Your Input Is Appreciated.
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ke what happens if master.cf isn't upgraded properly when updating
to newer postfixes; I had this happen with the Debian packages too. Check
the postinst file, or the postfix lists.
- Jeff
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work. Think anythi
> Russel, would you recommend software RAID with a production system? Have
> you tried it? Curious.
I would, and have.
- Jeff
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He's not an idiot.
The doc
at RAID 5, but the 7x50 series
improved upon this greatly. My source is www.storagereview.com, though,
I do not use any of their newer RAID 5 boards.
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e.
I think the suggestion to stay 2 - 3 days behind is good. What I do now
is just upgrade a non-critical box, and assuming everything works okay,
I upgrade the others. Is there an easy way to just keep the packages a
few days behind with apt?
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Softw
> I'd like to do antiviral filtering but budget is low. Any
> recommendations?
postfix + amavis + nod32 (www.nod32.com). Happens to be the best, too.
- Jeff
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wider. Rock My Softw
4+m/vgTuCluGdDjP+zj9U24QxBQgCfdNTg
> 4wcJpD5lrFxyV6B6kTfywh8=
> =T1Ff
> -END PGP SIGNATURE-
>
>
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>
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yet :-)
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IOS doesn't have protected memory, is that not correct? It's like old
multitasking systems where you didn't have virtual memory. :/
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IOS doesn't have protected memory, is that not correct? It's like old
multitasking systems where you didn't have virtual memory. :/
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Packet
> routing, filtering, masquerading really doesn't require much CPU
> horsepower.
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oughput. Packet
> routing, filtering, masquerading really doesn't require much CPU
> horsepower.
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ap a bit more
than I usually do. What do other folks on this list do? Zero swap? As
much swap as physical memory? More? Why? Can you change the swapper's
priority, and does this help when your machine starts swapping heavily?
Thanks for the opinions.
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ap a bit more
than I usually do. What do other folks on this list do? Zero swap? As
much swap as physical memory? More? Why? Can you change the swapper's
priority, and does this help when your machine starts swapping heavily?
Thanks for the opinions.
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mailing list, but I always hear that
Debian as an organization is often too burdened with internal bickering
and politics to move forward with big changes. Is that the case here?
Just curious, not trying to start a flame war.
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Software Develop
his mailing list, but I always hear that
Debian as an organization is often too burdened with internal bickering
and politics to move forward with big changes. Is that the case here?
Just curious, not trying to start a flame war.
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Software Develop
Anyone here have any luck with PPTP through NAT with IPtables? I have
recompiled my kernel with PPTP VPN MASQ support and loaded the module. I
have even verified that the modules is loaded with lsmod. It tells me that
it is unused. I can't seem to authenticate with PPTP to my work's VPN. I
us
er
than that, the only downside I can think of is that the user on the
remote system becomes useless for any purpose other than scp-ing.
Hope that makes sense.
Later,
Jeff
er
than that, the only downside I can think of is that the user on the
remote system becomes useless for any purpose other than scp-ing.
Hope that makes sense.
Later,
Jeff
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in using it as a debugging tool), it may happen, but in
its current state, UML is not appropriate for this.
- Jeff
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out between yourselves." - Alexander Viro
in using it as a debugging tool), it may happen, but in
its current state, UML is not appropriate for this.
- Jeff
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examples? Many thanks.
man sshd, down the bottom.
- Jeff
--
No clue is good clue.
examples? Many thanks.
man sshd, down the bottom.
- Jeff
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end, and it gets changed back to 'jdub @
perkypants.org' when mail comes in.
Just about every MTA will do similar, or a fairly close approximation,
though. (I'm just familiar and happy with postfix.)
- Jeff
--
I wonder how many bugs have gone unfixed due to misspellings of "FIXME".
end, and it gets changed back to 'jdub @
perkypants.org' when mail comes in.
Just about every MTA will do similar, or a fairly close approximation,
though. (I'm just familiar and happy with postfix.)
- Jeff
--
I wonder how many bugs have gone unfixed due to misspellings of &
it to
log in to the ~30-40 machines I have my public key on, without typing
passwords every five minutes.)
- Jeff
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"jwz? no way man, he's my idle" - James Wilkinson
use it to
log in to the ~30-40 machines I have my public key on, without typing
passwords every five minutes.)
- Jeff
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r scripted rsyncs, etc) then they *only need the key*. So, you should
keep the data available with passphrase-less keys either read-only or backed
up, depending on its importance, etc.
- Jeff
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out." - George Lebl
r scripted rsyncs, etc) then they *only need the key*. So, you should
keep the data available with passphrase-less keys either read-only or backed
up, depending on its importance, etc.
- Jeff
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"I think we agnostics need a term for a holy war too. I feel all left
> Sigh... and I was hoping for a simple solution like cp /mnt/disk1/*
> /mnt/disk2/ :-/
This is the point at which we have one of those "Brady Bunch Moments", when
everyone stands around chuckling at what they've learned, and the credits
roll.
- Jeff
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"And
> Sigh... and I was hoping for a simple solution like cp /mnt/disk1/*
> /mnt/disk2/ :-/
This is the point at which we have one of those "Brady Bunch Moments", when
everyone stands around chuckling at what they've learned, and the credits
roll.
- Jeff
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"And
e above work? Sorry if I seem naive, but I haven't tried this
> "once in a while" RAID method before.
It's a dirty hack to make it do what you want it to, that's all. Russell's
solution was better, as at least you were getting the benefit of the running
mirror if a driv
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