etc
Phil
>Does anyone run an LDAP back end within an ISP ? Im looking to rebuild
> the ISP and use ldap with some sort of radius configuration. Has anyone
> got any sort of expeirence with this? Basically im just wanting to know
> what to use, livingston/cistron ? and is LDAP really w
etc
Phil
>Does anyone run an LDAP back end within an ISP ? Im looking to rebuild
> the ISP and use ldap with some sort of radius configuration. Has anyone
> got any sort of expeirence with this? Basically im just wanting to know
> what to use, livingston/cistron ? and is LDAP really w
I've been trying, like many others, it seems, to get postfix, tls, and sasl to play
nice. TLS was easy, but sasl is turning out not to be. I've tried lots with
pwcheck_method: pam in /etc/postfix/sasl/smtpd.conf, and gotten nowhere, so I thought
I'd give saslauthd a try. My smtpd.conf now looks
I've been trying, like many others, it seems, to get postfix, tls, and sasl to
play nice. TLS was easy, but sasl is turning out not to be. I've tried lots
with pwcheck_method: pam in /etc/postfix/sasl/smtpd.conf, and gotten nowhere,
so I thought I'd give saslauthd a try. My smtpd.conf now looks
I'm having some trouble getting Postfix SMTP auth working. I'm using unstable
postfix and
postfix-tls on testing, with unstable libsasl2 and libsasl2-modules. Whenever I
try to send a
message from my mail client (KMail) on another box, I get this in
/var/log/mail.log:
May 6 23:54:38 rama p
ty Package (size)
stable 100%xinetd 2.2.1-8.1 (87.7k)
replacement for inetd with many enhancements
Such enhancements including, eg, ability to bind to a specific interface
on a machine.
And the xinetd.conf syntax is signicantly cleaner than traditional
inetd.conf (IMHO).
x things
without getting out of bed and without having noisy computers in my
bedroom.
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ely. Note the backslashes - you can
omit them if you make sure to type those three lines as one.
HTH
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Typing away merrily, Phil Pennock produced the immortal words:
> shell_prompt$ perl -i.old \
> -e 's{http://209.155.163.97/}{http://www.pexchange.com/}g' \
> $(find THOSE_DIRECTORIES -name \*.cgi -print)
Need more coffee. Hopefully it's obvious that THOSE_DIRECTORIES
e numbers - many regard it as an invasion of privacy.
mutt(1) can support use of DSN, but it's not enabled by default.
See also RFC 1894.
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manual-page. I've never tried this, so can't
comment.
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my head trying to
> work that one out.
BCP 20. Which is currently RFC 2317. Titled "Classless IN-ADDR.ARPA
delegation".
Follow that, and most things should work, with the caveats stated
therein about older BIND servers.
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.
Matching forward and reverse DNS is a Good Thing(tm).
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HTML email - just say no --> Phil Pennock
"We've got a patent on the conquering of a country through the use of force.
We believe in world peace through extortionate license fees." -Bluemeat
HTML email - just say no --> Phil Pennock
"We've got a patent on the conquering of a country through the use of force.
We believe in world peace through extortionate license fees." -Bluemeat
s
some responsibility for changing their scripts appropriately.
All this IMnsHO. HAND.
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"We've got a patent on the conquering of a country through the use of force.
We believe in world peace through extortionate license fees." -Bluemeat
r version.
Predicting the future is tricky. Being defensive in the way that you
set things up can help you bypass some of the uncertainty.
Defensive SysAdmin-ing as opposed to Defensive Programming. :^)
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on of
perl. Forcing perl to be entirely static is apparently not as
straight-forward as it should be; I don't know, though, as a couple of
colleagues handled this)
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another go at phasing out
perl4 on the servers ...
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tly ends that discussion - I'm already
trying to juggle too many things at work.
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"We've got a patent on the conquering of a country through the use of force.
We believe in world peace through extortionate license fees." -Bluemeat
ter)
Relying on timely response from customers from customers does not scale.
Searching for a magic bullet is naive. Trying to design things right
first time isn't perfect, but it makes life easier in the long run, at
the expense of more work at start-up time.
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ide a here-document, or whatever).
There are some other smaller gotchas as well, but I don't remember them
off the top of my head as the vast majority of problems arise from the
above scenario.
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t's the module interface which
sucks[2], and the inability to make a chain of system dependencies,
so you can't say "if BigRouter goes down, just report that, and not
the 300 LittleServices behind it".
[2] Mostly nocollib.pl which is unclean and leaks memory and I don
ance) and let the external program invoke gpg to
perform the checks. Then change the ``dropdirectory/$MATCH'' to, eg,
``| my_strip_gpg_and_store "$MATCH"''.
man procmailrc(1).
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