Please keep on list!
>
>> The Question is, what you mean with "view the captured content".
>
> As I said before, for example, the text I send to a web site
> filling a form.
- google for a beginners guide how to use Wireshark and read !!!
- Install Wireshark on your client PC where you fill the f
2013/2/2 Sthu Deus :
> Good time of the day, Meike.
>
>
> Thank You, Meike, for Your time and answer. You wrote:
>
>> What u mean is a "Network Forensic Analysis Tool" (NFAT).
>> You can capture with tcpdump or other similar tool (tshark, ...) in a
>> file and analyze this file later.
>
> So, besid
>
>> you can also try tcpdump. you can capture traffic wothout a GUI and
>> then analyze it in wireshark.
>
> By the way do You know how to see the captured packet data w/ tcpdump
> w/o using wireshark? - Under the data I mean not technical
> communication data but the useful data the packets carry
>
> you can also try tcpdump. you can capture traffic wothout a GUI and then
> analyze it in wireshark.
Don't forget the -s0 switch while using tcpdump or u are going to miss
some traffic
Kindly regards Mike
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "u
>
> You simple place the log files in a different place where the user that
> creates the files has write perms or accomodate the "/var/log/
> your_application/*" directory permissions.
>
Yes I did this, and changed the rights to the user from the script:
mkdir /var/log/script
chown script.root /va
> >From your explanations, I understand that logrotate would create the
> file if logrotate rotates the file, which requires the file to exist in
> the first place, so create it manually and let logrotate rotate and
> create the file in the future. Does that work? (This somewhat ignores
> issues
Hello dear list,
I've a problem with creation of a logfile in /var/log.
I have running a cronjob with a script, that should log in a file
under /var/log/. (using logger is not possible) The script is running
under a normal user.
Logrotate should care for filesize and pack them.
My Problem is, th
Hello dear list,
I've running an Debian Lenny and can't upgrade to Squeeze for the
moment because of special software ...
Now the Server crashed two times.
The error message is every time (taken from the console):
"Filesystem "dm-2": XFS internal error xfs_trans_cancel at line 1163
of fs/xfs/xfs
2012/7/20 Muhammad Yousuf Khan :
> i was reading a document where a person has configured physical volume
> and didn't use fdisk
> he just directly created the partition by "pvcreate /dev/sda"
>
> and there are some documents which shows the utilization of fdisk and
> converting sda1 to "8e" type
>
>
> Also, from the FAQ mentioned:
>
> "3.14.1 Why doesn't lsof report socket options, socket states, and TCP
> flags and values for my dialect?
> ...
>
> Linux
> No socket options and values, socket states, or TCP
> flags and values are reported. The support for "-Tf"
>
Thanks for help,
problem was the web proxy from the company ... :-(
Kindly regards Meike
2012/1/17 Scott Ferguson :
> On 17/01/12 22:20, Meike Stone wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> I use Debian 6 and tried to upgrade my system. I made as root a
>> ~# aptitude update
>> ~
Hello,
I use Debian 6 and tried to upgrade my system. I made as root a
~# aptitude update
~# aptitude safe-upgrade
an got following error:
..
..
Setting up linux-libc-dev (2.6.32-39squeeze1) ...
E: Failed to fetch
http://security.debian.org/pool/updates/main/l/linux-2.6/linux-image-2.6.32-5-amd64
>>
>> I tried this and it that seems that this file is not very reliable, or
>> the logrotate does delete all other. The system is from 2008 an the
>> term.log shows me only two entires from 2011.
>
> Yup, that's for the "latest" update run.
>
> The remainder updates are archived under "/var/log/a
>> On rpm systems, I can use rpm -qa --last. Is there any similar command
>> on debian?
>
> You could go for
>
> % ls -rtl /var/lib/dpkg/info/*.list
Thanks, that solves my Problem ..
Meike
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Troubl
>> how can I get information when the last upgrade ("update") was done
>> (apt-get upgrade or aptitude *-upgrade).
>
> "/var/log/apt/term.log" should tell.
>
Hello,
I tried this and it that seems that this file is not very reliable, or
the logrotate does delete all other. The system is from 2008
Hello,
how can I get information when the last upgrade ("update") was done
(apt-get upgrade or aptitude *-upgrade).
I have a few machines here, and I want to know when the last "system
update" was executed.
The Distributions are debian 5 and 6
Kind regards and thanx for help
Meike
--
To UNS
16 matches
Mail list logo