[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> I installed the pppoe 2.8 debian package and configured it with adsl-setup.
> I can connect to my ISP with adsl-start.
> Now I want to have the connection starting at boot time. There are two ways:
>
> 1. I put the following script in /etc/init.d
>
> #!/bin/sh
> /usr
Ales Jerman wrote:
>
> Does anybody know any good pascal compilers? Maybe also for X.
> Thanks!
If you are looking for something extremely powerful, but not "classic"
Pascal, you *do* know about Borland's Kylix project, right?
"Aaron M. Stromas" wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> Does anybody have cyrus-imapd v 1.5.2 (potato Debian package) working
> with Netscape mailer or Mozilla?
> In my case I can get my mail if I configure the MUA to use POP
> protocol but not IMAP. Does anyone have an idea oof why is that? TIA,
>
AFAIK, 1.5.19
r who eagerly anticipated this
product.
Martin Marconcini wrote:
>
> Kylyx is not Free... that is the problem.
>
> anyway... www.borland.com
>
> Regards,
>
> Martin.
>
> > -Original Message-
> > From: Keith G. Murphy [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
Mark Devin wrote:
>
> Nathan wrote:
>
> > goto www.roaringpenguin.com and u can download the rp-pppoe-3.0tar.gz file
> > and
> > untar it and cd into the directory and type ./go to do the setup.
>
> I am still having probles with this ADSL on Telstra Bigpond
>
> I did what you said above. It
marco frattola wrote:
>
> > I feel your pain. Not only is is not open source, it's *quite*
> > expensive, much more so than Windows Delphi. We're talking $1K here,
> > for the *less* expensive version.
>
> there's a rumored free download edition coming out around june (they say).
> without db s
Be careful here: smail is not sendmail; I think it was largely an
attempt to simplify the configuration while retaining command-line
compatibility.
While exim was really a bit of a rewrite of smail.
So smail might have been a pretty good default.
Someone correct me if I got something wrong above
will trillich wrote:
>
>
> Lesson to be learned -- all stereotypes are evil.
Is that a stereotype about stereotypes? In which case... Hmmm.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>
> 3. Then download the startup script and map those same user directories to
> somewhere on the ext2 fs tree.
>
> 4. Access files I created on the NT server (like Lotus notes databases, email,
> etc.)
>
> Is this at all possible just by using samba?
>
Part of it is
Anthony wrote:
>
> Actually it's not a static IP.
>
Almost undoubtedly, then, it's PPPoE, and you need the Roaring Penguin
client. Or a router that will do the PPPoE for you! But RoE works
fine. (Do I have too many P's there?)
Alan Eugene Davis wrote:
>
> I am putting together a four machine (Debian) GNU/Linux network in my
> HS classroom. It's substantially working, and, I might add, much to
> the credit of the Debian team and the excellent install setup. I am
> running 2.2, pretty much "out of the box."
>
> Tonig
Hall Stevenson wrote:
>
>
> So far, it seems that everyone has suggested avoiding internal modems
> and getting an external one. Why ?? If someone is capable of building
> their own PC, I'd hope they're also capable of reading the requirements
> of a modem they purchase. I've used two or three di
Hall Stevenson wrote:
>
>
> Your problem sounds like a Plug-n-Play one. A similar problem occurs
> with some network cards. Disable PnP on the card. Also, in your BIOS,
> disable the "PnP Operating System" option if you have one. From what
> I've read, that should read "Windows", not "PnP O/S".
>
Colin Watson wrote:
>
>
> In the case of Debian, maybe that's just because there's no-one to form
> a strategic marketing alliance with or whatever? :)
I used to think Progeny might do some of that, but I guess that's not
part of their mission.
Hall Stevenson wrote:
>
> * Mike Fedyk ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [010426 15:39]:
> > On Thu, Apr 26, 2001 at 11:16:29AM -0500, Keith G. Murphy wrote:
> > > Hall Stevenson wrote:
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > Your problem sounds like a Plug-n-Play one.
Mike Fedyk wrote:
>
> On Thu, Apr 26, 2001 at 11:16:29AM -0500, Keith G. Murphy wrote:
> >
> > You see, the modem actually does work in the sense that you can send
> > 'AT' strings to it and get 'OK''s back.
> >
> > It's j
Karsten Bolding wrote:
>
> Hello
>
> Here is what I want:
> get mail via fetchmail - sort into maildir format (~/Maildir) - works!
> use mutt to read mail when at the console - works!
> Run an imapd to serve the ~/Maildir directory structure - problems
> Use netscape to read mail when not at cons
I just applied the suggested security update to htdig (running Potato).
I'm getting this error:
# htdig -iv
DB2 problem...: illegal flag specified to db_open
htdig: Unable to open/create document database
'/var/spool/htdig/db.docdb'
I got some similar errors during the install.
Anybody have a c
Ken Januski wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I've run into an odd problem over the last few months. More than half
> the *gz files I download from Netscape refuse to unzip with gunzip. I
> always get the message XXX is "not in gzip format."
> Running file on XXX gives me "GNU tar archive." Does anyone have any
I just applied the suggested security update to htdig (running Potato).
I'm getting this error:
# htdig -iv
DB2 problem...: illegal flag specified to db_open
htdig: Unable to open/create document database
'/var/spool/htdig/db.docdb'
I got some similar errors during the install.
Anybody have a c
Andreas Leitner wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I hope this is not too offtopic here. I have now successfully set up a
> cyrus imap/exim based mail server using debian testing for my personal
> use. The goal is to use this server as my main mail archive. And there
> are lot's of mails in there, most come from
Stan Brown wrote:
>
> I'm runing potato + Progeny + 2.4.9 kernel packages. I'm using gnome, and
> have it set up to start the svreen saver after 5 minutes, which it does.
> However, sometime later the whole screen balnks. I've noticed that the
> 2.4.9 kernel packagges do not include apm, so I'm as
I'm using Mutt 1.3.12i on Potato against Cyrus IMAP. I can browse my
IMAP folders fine using 'c'. Question is, how can I see the *messages*
in a subfolder once I've navigated to it? Using TAB to get the message
view only takes me back to the messages in my top INBOX.
I hope this is not too off-
Stan Brown wrote:
>
> I have a Debian potato + Progeny box siting in my office, right next to a
> FreebSD box. Both are conected to the same network subnet. The FreeBSD box
> can get to the timeserver, Tthe Debian one cannot. I must be doing
> something really stupid here.
>
> Here is the info of
"Justin R. Miller" wrote:
>
> Thus spake David J. Roundy ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
>
> > I'm guessing you want to hit return.
>
> Actually, you'll want to hit 'space' to change into a folder, since
> Cyrus supports folders with both subfolders and messages.
>
You get the prize for right answer. You
Shri Shrikumar wrote:
>
> Hi All,
>
> As the title suggests, are there any linux packages that can be used to
> access mdb files. Im running sid.
>
Can't access it directly, since it's proprietary Microsoft stuff.
If you have a networked Windows box available, run DBI::ProxyServer and
DBD::ODBC
I have an old mouse from an outfit called IMSI. It has 3 buttons. I
can simulate a middle button with the "chord" X setting, but does anyone
have a clue or driver to get the middle button to actually work?
It works OK now (other than the middle button) using the Microsoft mouse
selection under
Craig Dickson wrote:
>
> Since we seem to be talking about Mutt a lot today, there's one thing I
> haven't found the time to track down an answer to, so perhaps Karsten or
> someone else knows.
>
> When I get mail from someone who uses one of those nasty email clients
> that doesn't wrap lines (o
Ken Williams wrote:
>
>Hi Stuart,
>
> In addition to the helpful advice other people on the list
> have already given I'd also say it might be easier for you
> to obtain a linuxdistro from a linux-related magazine.
I hate to see that recommended, 'cause I've seen lots of problems on
these
dman wrote:
>
> On Thu, Nov 01, 2001 at 05:15:02PM -0600, Keith G. Murphy wrote:
> | I have an old mouse from an outfit called IMSI. It has 3 buttons. I
> | can simulate a middle button with the "chord" X setting, but does anyone
> | have a clue or driver to get the
andreas wrote:
>
> Dear Debian users,
>
> on a testing/unstable system:
>
> 1. I wrote my own little patch for xmms. Next, I got the xmms sources with
> apt-get source xmms. However, from the source package itself I can't
> find out how to create a binary deb from the source.
>
> - Could som
Robert Waldner wrote:
> (swap is on hda3 and equals the size of my
> physical RAM (128 MB), I remember something about swap shouldn´t be
> more than physical RAM or the like, somebody could fill in hard facts
> on that?)
>
That's complete and utter bullshit, superstitious oral tradition.
You a
Johnny Ernst Nielsen wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> scanner help needed.
>
> I just installed a fresh Debian 2.2R3 and wanted to scan.
> So I installed sane.
>
> But when I run xscanimage it says it can't find any devices.
>
> That makes me wonder, because:
>
> During bootup the the BIOS finds my SCSI sc
DvB wrote:
>
> "Brooks R. Robinson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > > > the worm wouldn't even know the difference, to it it looks like it would
> > > > hit microsofts site from your url if it tries those extentions.
> > >
> > > Not correct, it gets a Redirect as the response, and it's its
> >
dman wrote:
>
> On Fri, Sep 21, 2001 at 09:29:11AM -0500, Keith G. Murphy wrote:
> | DvB wrote:
> ...
> | > You could always set up a tarpit:
> | >
> | > http://www.hackbusters.net/LaBrea/
> | >
> | How is this different from, or better than, CodeRedneck?
Barreto Barreto Jose Luis wrote:
>
> Les mando este mensaje para hacer una pregunta sobre la mejor versión de
> Debian que podría instalar en mi ordenador sin que se ralentize o tenga
> problemas. El ordenador que poseo tiene las siguientes características:
>
> -Pentium 100
> -24 Mb RAM EDO
> -40
Rino Mardo wrote:
>
> "...you can check in anytime you want, but you can never leave..."
>
> i sent an unsubscribe to the listbot three days ago and up to now it
> hasn't acted on it. failing that i sent a request to the list
> maintainer and that too hasn't acted on it.
>
Question to more savv
"Karsten M. Self" wrote:
>
> on Tue, Oct 09, 2001 at 09:55:37AM -0500, Keith G. Murphy ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
> wrote:
> > Rino Mardo wrote:
> > >
> > > "...you can check in anytime you want, but you can never leave..."
> > >
> >
"Paul A. Thomas" wrote:
>
> > Given that you're still in windows (and you want to view the docs
> > on-line) I recommend the HTML format :
> >
> > http://newbiedoc.sourceforge.net/tarballs/newbiedoc-html-0.3.0.tar.gz
> >
> > They also have the HTML docs available directly on their web server
"Keith G. Murphy" wrote:
>
> "Paul A. Thomas" wrote:
> >
> > > Given that you're still in windows (and you want to view the docs
> > > on-line) I recommend the HTML format :
> > >
> > > http://newbiedoc.sourceforge.net/t
martin f krafft wrote:
>
> also sprach dman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002.01.09.0231 +0100]:
> > | echo .muttrc | vim -
> >
> > ls .muttrc | xargs vim
>
> aha, the '-' is the problem.
>
> > I didn't think that would work (once I straightened out my
> > understanding of the stdin stuff), but it does.
Stan Brown wrote:
>
> I'm tryng to set up my woody machine to send faxes (as a clinet to an
> existing Hylafax server).
>
> I edited /etc/hylafax/hyla.conf and added:
>
> Host: black
>
> Where black is the servers name.
>
> But whn I run sendfax, I get the following error:
>
Dmitriy wrote:
>
> On Mon, Jan 21, 2002 at 09:05:44PM -0500, alex wrote:
> [snip]
> >
> > If an ISP doesn't use a SPAM blocker service, the message passes but
> > then a filter that directs the mail to a Debian
> > mailbox may instead treat it as general mail, depending on how the
> > filter is
Bruno Boettcher wrote:
>
> Hello!
>
> despite their promise, iname.com/mail.com will now charge for the
> forwarding service they offer, forcing myself, at least for a
> transitional period to assert who is using my address there to use their
> webmail interface (which is ugly, slow and full of a
Benjamin Krueger wrote:
>
> * Branden Robinson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [020126 01:05]:
> > On Wed, Jan 23, 2002 at 10:59:04PM -0500, Charles wrote:
> > > I have published multiple radio stations from a single box using 22khz
> > > stereo
> >
> > Kindly get this bullshit thread off of debian-x. In all
Alvin Oga wrote:
>
> hi ya
>
> I'd use disk as backups... if i was starting from scratch
> - nothing need be done...unlike tapes that requires regular
> possibly daily interaction )
>
Are you not concerned that your disk controller will go wacky, fubarring
both drives?
I'd be in
Stephen Broadbridge wrote:
>
> Hi All
>
> I cannot get my HP Travan T4000S Scsi tape drive to work. I have gathered
> all the information I can find about the problem into the rest of this email.
> Am I missing something obvious? Thanks in anticipation of any assistance
> given.
>
> This i
"Shawn P. Garbett" wrote:
>
> Okay I recompiled the kernel to get my CDBurner to work. Everything is cool
> until I goto print. The printer device is totally hosed. I've tried a wide
> variety of things to get it to work. I'm at a loss as to what to do next. I
> compiled parport and parport_pc as
Sebastian Canagaratna wrote:
>
> Hi:
>
> Are there any programs around for linux which provide the sort of
> programming environment given by Microsoft Visual Basic and Visual
> C++?
>
The closest I can think of is Borland's Kylix; I haven't tried it yet,
but I love Delphi, its Windows equ
Leif B. Kristensen wrote:
Hi,
I'm still fairly new to Debian and am trying to find my way around the
system. I've got some gripes about the naming practice and poor
documentation of Perl modules. As an example, I started out today to
find a package which I have used a lot on my W2K system, named
D
I've downloaded libkrb53 and krb5-user from testing.
I immediately get segfaults upon running either kpasswd and kadmin.
Is there some known problem here? Has anyone else tried to use these?
There's a very good chance I don't know what I'm doing...
Paul 'Baloo' Johnson wrote:
>
> OK, to whomever piped the latest message on debian-announce through
> razor-report, I wish to officially declare you a moron.
>
I agree, but that's what's kept me from using it (Vipul's Razor, I
assume you mean): what keeps morons from doing this and causing a bunc
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Hi all, Im working ina medical group that uses Microsoft Access,
>
> is there any software that can interact with Access?
>
If you're thinking about doing some lightweight work with Access from
Linux, and it's OK for it to be Perl-based, you might want to check out
D
Mike Thompson wrote:
>
> at the end of /etc/exim/exim.conf write
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" Ffr
>
> or similar.
>
Also, look at the really nice rewriting rule that is commented out at
the end of the default exim.conf provided in the Debian package. It
uses /etc/email-addre
DSC Siltec wrote:
>
[cut]
>
> One scan attack attacked my proxy server's proxy port, from 1031,1032,
> 1033,1034, 1035... and expired about 8 minutes later.
>
[cut]
>
> I also have a windows system -- and, sometimes using the same network
> connection [manual plug-over] a macintosh, and it is
Michael Madden wrote:
>
> I've setup mgetty & pppd to allow incoming connections to my home computer
> with a broadband connection. I can successfully dial up, login, and
> obtain an ip address, but I can only connect (ping, ftp, telnet, etc)
> to the box I dialed into. I cannot connect to other
Brian wrote:
I am using a Seagate Travan 10 GB uncompressed tape drive to backup a
file server, (on the same machine). Does anyone have problems with this
drive and/or the driver? Sometimes it will return with an I/O error and
a tape is in the drive. Another time it will work fine. Or it may
I noticed the announcement of the patch to SSH (version 3.3) in
security-announce. I tried to upgrade to the patched Potato version.
This was the pertinent line in my sources.list:
deb http://security.debian.org stable/updates main contrib non-free
^^
After
Colin Watson wrote:
On Tue, Jun 25, 2002 at 09:53:07AM -0500, Keith G. Murphy wrote:
I noticed the announcement of the patch to SSH (version 3.3) in
security-announce. I tried to upgrade to the patched Potato version.
This was the pertinent line in my sources.list:
deb http
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