> > > > Is that like sending in the tanks? :)
> > >
> > > I like tanks! ;)
> >
> > Not on my phoneline, thank you. ;)
>
> Why? The latest version is only an 80K deb! It's small, resource friendly,
> fast, etc.
I meant the tank. ;)
> Well the latest version of Portslave (the one that is too
On Tue, 9 Oct 2001 02:12, Jeff Waugh wrote:
>
>
> > > Is that like sending in the tanks? :)
> >
> > I like tanks! ;)
>
> Not on my phoneline, thank you. ;)
Why? The latest version is only an 80K deb! It's small, resource friendly,
fast, etc.
> > Sure. AFAIK every RADIUS server in the Unix w
> > Is that like sending in the tanks? :)
>
> I like tanks! ;)
Not on my phoneline, thank you. ;)
> Sure. AFAIK every RADIUS server in the Unix world supports PAM in some way.
Cool. I've never really looked at it, as I've always thought, "oh no, that's
for like, *lots* of modems." :)
> I r
On Tue, 9 Oct 2001 01:27, Jeff Waugh wrote:
>
>
> > There's nothing stopping you from running Portslave with a single dial-in
> > line!
>
> Is that like sending in the tanks? :)
I like tanks! ;)
> > If your dial-in setup is serious enough to use a RADIUS server then it's
> > big enough for Port
* This one time, at band camp, Jeff Waugh said:
> > Setting up the RADIUS server is likely to be the most difficult part of a
> > Portslave installation.
>
> Can I authenticate with PAM, etc. somehow?
>
Well, RADIUS isn't that hard. A simple radius server can auth from a
number of different 'b
> There's nothing stopping you from running Portslave with a single dial-in
> line!
Is that like sending in the tanks? :)
> If your dial-in setup is serious enough to use a RADIUS server then it's big
> enough for Portslave.
>
> Setting up the RADIUS server is likely to be the most difficult
> > > > Is that like sending in the tanks? :)
> > >
> > > I like tanks! ;)
> >
> > Not on my phoneline, thank you. ;)
>
> Why? The latest version is only an 80K deb! It's small, resource friendly,
> fast, etc.
I meant the tank. ;)
> Well the latest version of Portslave (the one that is to
On Tue, 9 Oct 2001 02:12, Jeff Waugh wrote:
>
>
> > > Is that like sending in the tanks? :)
> >
> > I like tanks! ;)
>
> Not on my phoneline, thank you. ;)
Why? The latest version is only an 80K deb! It's small, resource friendly,
fast, etc.
> > Sure. AFAIK every RADIUS server in the Unix
> > Is that like sending in the tanks? :)
>
> I like tanks! ;)
Not on my phoneline, thank you. ;)
> Sure. AFAIK every RADIUS server in the Unix world supports PAM in some way.
Cool. I've never really looked at it, as I've always thought, "oh no, that's
for like, *lots* of modems." :)
> I
On Tue, 9 Oct 2001 01:27, Jeff Waugh wrote:
>
>
> > There's nothing stopping you from running Portslave with a single dial-in
> > line!
>
> Is that like sending in the tanks? :)
I like tanks! ;)
> > If your dial-in setup is serious enough to use a RADIUS server then it's
> > big enough for Por
* This one time, at band camp, Jeff Waugh said:
> > Setting up the RADIUS server is likely to be the most difficult part of a
> > Portslave installation.
>
> Can I authenticate with PAM, etc. somehow?
>
Well, RADIUS isn't that hard. A simple radius server can auth from a
number of different '
> There's nothing stopping you from running Portslave with a single dial-in
> line!
Is that like sending in the tanks? :)
> If your dial-in setup is serious enough to use a RADIUS server then it's big
> enough for Portslave.
>
> Setting up the RADIUS server is likely to be the most difficul
On Sat, 6 Oct 2001 11:53, Jeff Waugh wrote:
> > Anything that can be done by getty, mgetty, radius-client, etc can be
> > done better by Portslave.
>
> Is portslave appropriate for a smaller system, say with only three dial-in
> ports? mgetty is not exactly the most polite software to administer,
> Anything that can be done by getty, mgetty, radius-client, etc can be done
> better by Portslave.
Is portslave appropriate for a smaller system, say with only three dial-in
ports? mgetty is not exactly the most polite software to administer, and
there are lots of times I'd like a simple, eas
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