Any pointers on where to find skeleton source files, and a make file for
PAM account, auth, password, session in C? perl? other recommended
programing languages? ???
Also, how is it that Linux knows to use LDAP auth if its installed?
The config file for the ldap auth is one thing. It points t
Assuming the U.S. government doesn't freak out and stop it, IPSEC
encryption will soon(?) be used for all internet communication, which
hahahahahahahahahaha
agreed - hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha
--elijah
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> http://tiefighter.et.tudelft.nl/~arthur/gnupg-idea/
>
> It is sort of an source-based installer. You get the source, when
> building the package it downloads the source and creates a binary
> package. The source file idea.c is however not DFSG free because the
> copyrights notice forbids distrib
> * elijah wright <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [040727 19:40]:
> > and it probably would have been fine, if you'd been running a stock
> > config.
>
> If things only have to be fine when using a stock config, why not
> abolish all those limiting rules about /etc and just
> That's my point: I did not do "apt-get install", I did "apt-get
> upgrade". If this had been a fresh install, I would agree with you
> completely, but not in the case of a security update.
and it probably would have been fine, if you'd been running a stock
config.
with great power comes great
> It's been a long time, but IIRC, the NIS uses it's own dbm files which
> are built from those in /etc. The test account must have existed when
> you set it up.
Arnaud, if i remember correctly, there's a special directory you can go to
and type 'make' - you get a set of rebuilt NIS databases as
> It's been a long time, but IIRC, the NIS uses it's own dbm files which
> are built from those in /etc. The test account must have existed when
> you set it up.
Arnaud, if i remember correctly, there's a special directory you can go to
and type 'make' - you get a set of rebuilt NIS databases as
> > I've been asked to place a sniffer on a network that handles HIPPA
> > data, and watch for e-mail containing certain strings. I figured that
> > mailsnarf would be the best way to do this.
> >
> Aside from any of hte technical details of this, I'm kind of wondering
> how this fits into HIPPA a
> > I've been asked to place a sniffer on a network that handles HIPPA
> > data, and watch for e-mail containing certain strings. I figured that
> > mailsnarf would be the best way to do this.
> >
> Aside from any of hte technical details of this, I'm kind of wondering
> how this fits into HIPPA a
> ... but on a second thought: how do I find this information out ion my
> own and what does "SMP" stand for?
my understanding is that all of the post-k6/III CPUs from AMD are K7-ish.
[well, the 32-bit non-AMD64 cpus anyway... if there are other quirks *I*
would like to know.] you'd know if you h
> ... but on a second thought: how do I find this information out ion my
> own and what does "SMP" stand for?
my understanding is that all of the post-k6/III CPUs from AMD are K7-ish.
[well, the 32-bit non-AMD64 cpus anyway... if there are other quirks *I*
would like to know.] you'd know if you h
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