ftp://ftp.debian.org/debian/dists/potato/main/disks-i386/2.2.17-2000-11-11/images-1.44/compact/rescue.bin
ftp://ftp.debian.org/debian/dists/potato/main/disks-i386/2.2.17-2000-11-11/images-1.44/compact/root.bin
On Tue, Nov 14, 2000 at 08:32:10PM -0800, Kenneth Kowalsky wrote:
> Hello Again,
>
>
How easy is it to setup Postfix for a large number of dynamically configured
email domains? What I need to do is to have a mail server scale to 10,000
domains over the course of a year, adding 500 new domains in a day wouldn't
be uncommon for a busy day...
So I need to be able to add domains
> So I need to be able to add domains without (much) reconfiguring of the
> server. Preferrably I would like to use LDAP to specify the domains, do the
> LDAP patches for Postfix support this?
I use exim for such purpose, all the configs are stored in LDAP, exim is
EXTREMELY configurable, whic
Syslog is not logging to files. It simply displays the output on the
active terminal.
Funny thing is, it does record when I start and stop syslogd, and it
still does its "marks".
Attached is syslog.conf.
Any suggestions would be helpful.
Thanks
Rod
syslog.conf
On Wed, 15 Nov 2000, R. W. Rodolico wrote:
> Syslog is not logging to files. It simply displays the output on the
> active terminal.
What is it logging to the console?
What is it not logging to files?
What do you want logged?
> Funny thing is, it does record when I start and stop syslogd, and
> This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable
text,
> while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware
tools.
> Send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] for more info.
>
>
> On Wed, 15 Nov 2000, R. W. Rodolico wrote:
>
> > Syslog is not logging to files. It
hello,
my hosting company told me that they only support either RAID 1 and RAID 5.
so given this choice, w/c would you suggest?
i use a MySQL database for a bulletin board application w/c does _LOTS_ of
SELECTS and data lookup.
thanks in advance,
chad
_
RAID 5. Easy to set up, fast, and reliable. Uses more disks, however.
RAID 1 is, I believe, mirroring. With that, all info must be written to
two different disks. With RAID 5, the disks are "striped" (not really,
but I don't remember the real name for it) and part of each byte, with a
checksum, g
On Wed, 15 Nov 2000, R. W. Rodolico wrote:
> Ran syslogd with the -d flag set, captured the output to the attached
> file. Only problem I noted was that it errored when trying to open a
> file named /dev/log. I can find no entry /dev/log in /etc/syslogd.conf.
>From your attachment:
Called loge
Hi
On Wed, Nov 15, 2000 at 03:34:45PM +0100, Christian Hammers wrote:
> I'l looking for a program to monitor our ISP network servers and routers
> that is capable of doing
> 1. checking different services (like mon, netsaint)
> 2. showing nice graphs of cpu load and disc-space and traffic (like M
Hello
I have a simple problem but find no suitable programs and won't reinvent
the wheel so I ask here for suggestions.
I'l looking for a program to monitor our ISP network servers and routers
that is capable of doing
1. checking different services (like mon, netsaint)
2. showing nice graphs of
I recommend using Big Brother. http://www.bb4.com/
It has many features that you may want and if there isn't something you want
there are lots of plugins for it that may do what you want, or you can
always write your own. A collection of plugins for BB can be found at
http://www.deadcat.net.
I
> MRTG was also not so suitable as it depends too strongly on traffic
> analyses and is incapable of showing e.g. three graphs in one picture and
> I like to have as much information on one HTML page.
You want to look at RRDtool, which is written by the same guy that wrote
MRTG, except it's much
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