Hi
Guys
I have set message
size restrictions in exim and it tells me in the logs when they
are
to big however I
would like to have a response generated and sent to the recipient too,
telling
him/her
that the message was too large.
Any help would be
appreciated.
Thanks
Craig
One of a company wants to see their remote office computers
in "network neighbourhoods".
Can I apply brctl (bridge-utils package) over tunnel interfaces?
System not present yet than I cannot test it.
linux boxes cross connected to routers with active IPs and
I know how can i make tunnel interfaces
I would check /etc/login.defs, you can specify the Mail drop there. You
can further customize the default adduser options in /etc/adduser.conf
(i think it is...)
~duane
Splash Tekalal wrote:
I've found an interesting, if annoying bug in my system and was
wondering if anyone could suggest a fix.
if ${message_size} > {5M}then fail
text "This message has been rejected because it
is\n\
\ttoo large. Please contact the system
administrator\n\
\tif you believe this is in error." seen
finishendif
Please tell me whats
wrong with the above.
..Craig
Craig wrote:
I have set message size restrictions in exim and it tells me in the
logs when they are to big however I would like to have a response
generated and sent to the recipient too, telling him/her that the
message was too large.
It is kinda hard to make it *not* do that.
Have you looked at t
Not strictly Debian related but the boxes in question are deb powered.
I have just been given a /28 (16 node) subnet and until I get a switch
in place I have a short xover eth cable between two boxes. I thought I
could get away with a couple of static routes in the mean time but the
upstream defaul
Hi, all
Well I got some trouble configuring quota under woody, the instalation went
fine showing no errors. but when i try to configure the quota for one user,
some things dont go the way they shuld.
I restarted the machine after the install and add the userquota in the
/etc/fstab . Then try to set
On Fri, 25 Apr 2003 01:48 am, you wrote:
> Proxy ARP on the .146/.147 box for .158?
I would have thought so too but all my attempts at arp'ing just
get errors like... (including a lot of attempted variations)..
# arp -i eth1 -s x.x.x.158 00:20:ED:47:B3:21 netmask 255.255.255.240
SIOCSARP: Invalid
Hi Mark,
I'm not sure I understand your setup. Is the x.x.x.145 machine your
router or your ISP's? What do the routing tables look like for each
machine you control? From my experience, an upstream connection is
usually placed on a bridge network such as a /30. You may want to try
something li
I have a user that really like to create files. Then, they don't clean them
up. We have already put a quota* on them, but unfortunetly, their directory
is so large and convaluted, that they can't even figure out where all the
disk space has gone. Is there a sane way to generate a report showi
On Fri, 25 Apr 2003 01:04 am, Mark Constable wrote:
> Not strictly Debian related but the boxes in question are deb powered.
> I have just been given a /28 (16 node) subnet and until I get a switch
> in place I have a short xover eth cable between two boxes. I thought I
> could get away with a coup
On Fri, 25 Apr 2003 07:43 am, David Bishop wrote:
> I have a user that really like to create files. Then, they don't clean
> them up. We have already put a quota* on them, but unfortunetly, their
> directory is so large and convaluted, that they can't even figure out where
> all the disk space ha
> I have been allocated a x.x.x.144/28 (16 node) subnet
> .145 is the upstream gateway, .146/.147 is eth0/eth1 on box1
> there is a short xover cable between eth1 on box1 and box2
> .158 is eth0 on box2
>
> x.x.x.145 <-> eth0:x.x.x.146 eth1:x.x.x.147 <-xover-> eth0:x.x.x.158
On box1 (.146/.147) I
On Thursday 24 April 2003 04:33 pm, Tarragon Allen wrote:
> On Fri, 25 Apr 2003 07:43 am, David Bishop wrote:
> > I have a user that really like to create files. Then, they don't clean
> > them up. We have already put a quota* on them, but unfortunetly, their
> > directory is so large and convalu
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