On Fri, 30 Aug 1996, Alex Romosan wrote:
> the links were okay, the problem is elsewhere. if i telnet into the
> machine and log in as alex gawk works fine. what i usually do is to
> rlogin from an sgi to a different account and then su to alex. under
> these circumstances gawk fails with permissi
On Fri, 30 Aug 1996, Bruce Perens wrote:
> It's the permissions of /dev/ttyp1 that apply here, not those of /dev/fd/2 .
Just like in a symbolic link.
Guy
The only thing you have to do is to customize the
/etc/dhcpd.conf file a bit to get it going on your machine. (That is if it
works for you)
Available at
ftp://ftp.fuller.edu/Linux/debian/dhcpd*
Please report back to me your experiences. If some people run it
successfully then I will submit it
I agree. I would very much like to be running the F beta in its entirety,
and with Debian I do not know how to go about doing that and being
positive I am not breaking anything in the process. I realize that the
owner of this package does not plan to release any of the beta versions as
a Debian pac
Hi there. I have a couple of questions, the first of which is: is it
possible to install *components* of Debian without having to totally
blast away all of the Slackware garbage I have now? The version I have
is old enough that it's due upgrading anyway, and I'd like to switch to
Debian piece
Mark Eichin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >> w3 can be found via anonymous ftp to ftp.cs.indiana.edu:/pub/elisp/w3.
>
> More usefully, w3 can be found in the binary-i386/net/w3-el_2.2.25-4.deb
> on any debian mirror...
Yeah, but those 2.2.x w3's are way slower than the 2.3 & now 3.0
beta
Ed Donovan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> (me) writes:
>>Mark Eichin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> More usefully, w3 can be found in the binary-i386/net/w3-el_2.2.25-4.deb
>> on any debian mirror...
> Yeah, but those 2.2.x w3's are way slower than the 2.3 & now 3.0
> betas, which are very usable.
From: Barid Bel Medar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Is it possible to install *components* of Debian without having to totally
> blast away all of the Slackware garbage I have now? The version I have
> is old enough that it's due upgrading anyway, and I'd like to switch to
> Debian piecemeal 'cause of
Hi Barid --
> I assumed that the logical approach would be to download the source to
> dpkg and dpkg-ftp, install them, and then install some of the more
> critical pacakges via ftp.
Well, the better thing to do is to
-- download boot1440.bin, root.bin,
base14-1.bin, base14-2.bin, and base14
Bill Wohler writes ("Making filesystems at installation time"):
...
> The idea with all this installation stuff is to avoid having user
> actions interspersed with automatic actions that take a while. This
> also goes for dpkg -GROEB --configure--all the packages that require
> user interv
>With the integration of color-ls directly into the fileutils
>package, a few things have changed. dircolors no longer sets
>up aliases or shell scripts to colorize ls, dir, and vdir.
>
>Here is an excerpt from a .bashrc which sets up aliases after
>running dircolors:
>
> # set up color-ls
On Fri, 30 Aug 1996, Shawn Asmussen wrote:
> I agree. I would very much like to be running the F beta in its entirety,
> and with Debian I do not know how to go about doing that and being
> positive I am not breaking anything in the process. I realize that the
> owner of this package does not plan
If so, I'd appreciate a short note from you. I'd like to know if you
use SLIP because PPP is unavailable, more expensive, or otherwise
inconvenient.
Thanks
Mike
one thing I hope to do when I get acquainted(future,hopefully near )is
to open consoles so mt family has, in effect simultaneous access to the
computer so I can make upgrades nto one computer rather than buy and
maintain several since hardware tends not to be cheap, I'm trying to
think(and save
Hi!
>Have you succeeded in installing Debian?
Yes and no. Following advice from Syrus, I tried different sets of disks. The
"fixed" set of disks seem to have worked, but I think I may need to do FIPS
again
since I did not get/make a swap partition. I need to get some apps running and
see wha
I have installed Netscape 3.0 (had to pull the deb package from the
incoming directory since for some reason the packages file still has the
last beta as the current version) on my debian system.
The browser works fine, but I can't get any java applets to work. I have
the setting set right and use
> one thing I hope to do when I get acquainted(future,hopefully near )is
> to open consoles so mt family has, in effect simultaneous access to the
> computer so I can make upgrades nto one computer rather than buy and
> maintain several since hardware tends not to be cheap, I'm trying to
> thin
I get the feeling that I am obtusely missing some important underlying
point here that only tete a tete communication will solve. So if
anyone in Kalamazoo-Three Rivers vector is willing to help me I'd be
ever so grateful ..Mike List
Hello DEBIAN user/programmers,
After kernel v2.0.0 I have been unable to produce any sound on my SB16
sound card.
Is there a known bug (up until kernel 2.0.15) in the SB16 code of USS that I
missed during my vacations?
The sparing comments in the source point to an IRQ or DMA conflict when one
I'm not sure this is the right place to send this bug report...
There's an inconsistency in Debian 1.1. When the aout-svgalib
package is installed, it puts the libary files in
/usr/i486-linuxaout/lib, but ld.so is not configured to look there for
libraries, so the aout svgalibs are unusable
On Sat, 31 Aug 1996, David Morris wrote:
> The browser works fine, but I can't get any java applets to work. I have
> the setting set right and used the package setup that Brian put together,
> but something still isn't working. I don't receive any errors when I aim
> at a page that I know has an
My disk controller seems to be wanting to be "reset", but the
Debian install boot doesn't do this. As a consequence, it just
keeps repeating
hda: hda: Status error: status=0x01 { Error }
hda: Status error: error=0x04 { DriveStatusError }
hda: Drive not ready for command.
The Slackware i
Well, how many times can I follow myself up? Let me know if I get near
a record.
Ed Donovan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Well, wait, I didn't add: there is also a 2.2.26 release version, which
> I'm pretty_ includes the fast new parser, though not this and that
> spiffiness, blah, blah...
Uh,
I've been running the original 1.1 distribution for a while, and I'm
finally getting around to patching the kernel up to the current level.
This isn't going quite as smoothly as I expected. I fetched all the
patches and tried to apply them and experienced:
/usr/src # linux/scripts/patch-kernel li
On 16:47:57 Mike Taylor wrote:
>>If so, I'd appreciate a short note from you. I'd like to know if you
>use SLIP because PPP is unavailable, more expensive, or otherwise
>inconvenient.
>
>Thanks
>Mike
Yes, I do. At home I use SLIP (slattach) to connect two other machines
(both running MiniLinux :
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