Malcolm Ferguson wrote:
Sorry, wrong list. I meant to send to debian-user.
Malc
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I've just rebuild my server and now it appears that logrotate is failing
for apache:
wolverine:/var/log# logrotate /etc/logrotate.d/apache
error running shared postrotate script for /var/log/apache/*.log
I've run the above command through strace and it looks like logrotate
creates a file in /tmp
David Pastern wrote:
On Wed, 2005-03-30 at 20:34 +1000, Matthew Palmer wrote:
You're not the first person to observe that woody's getting a bit long in
the tooth. We're working on a new release, an no amount of aimless
commentary on the symptom is going to solve the problems.
I know. Firs
Thanks for all the feedback everybody. It looks like an ssh dictionary
attack discovered a weak password, followed by a local root exploit
against an out-of-date kernel. From now on I will be sticking with an
official Debian stable one.
Alvin,
I made a tar of the filesystem and put it on anot
Mark Foster wrote:
Malcolm Ferguson wrote:
My machine was cracked on Thursday evening. I'm trying to understand
how it happened so that it doesn't go down again.
Sounds to me like you know exactly how it happened - ssh user
enumeration won the jackpot.
Thanks: you got me thinki
All,
My machine was cracked on Thursday evening. I'm trying to understand
how it happened so that it doesn't go down again.
Machine was running Debian 3.0 and was behind a NAT box with ports
forwarded for SMTP, HTTP and SSH. It hadn't been rebooted for 430
days. I was using a 2.4 kernel wit
Mike Dresser wrote:
>
> On Fri, 30 Nov 2001, Roger Keays wrote:
>
> > I'm not sure if this is common knowledge or not, but I have just noticed
> > the effects of having the first two letters of your password the same as
> > the first two in your login name... You can use any extension of your
> >
Mike Dresser wrote:
>
> On Fri, 30 Nov 2001, Roger Keays wrote:
>
> > I'm not sure if this is common knowledge or not, but I have just noticed
> > the effects of having the first two letters of your password the same as
> > the first two in your login name... You can use any extension of your
>
John DOE wrote:
>
> Have to code the application in C ( I would prefer visual basic since it is
> sometimes hard to tell a professor that this code does it in C especially if
> you are in Turkey ) or C++ and of course on GNU Debian Linux.
I'm a bit confused by this statement. First, what's Tu
John DOE wrote:
>
> Have to code the application in C ( I would prefer visual basic since it is
>sometimes hard to tell a professor that this code does it in C especially if you are
>in Turkey ) or C++ and of course on GNU Debian Linux.
I'm a bit confused by this statement. First, what's Tur
10 matches
Mail list logo