ingle email I get from this person shows up with an attachment and a
lot of screen real estate is taken up displaying the card.
-- Evan Klitzke
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Hi,
I have an account on a server that lets users SSH in with password
based authentication. That is OK, but for my account I would prefer
to restrict SSH access to key based authentication. Is there an
option I can put somewhere in ~/.ssh/ to enforce this?
-- Evan Klitzke
--
gentoo-user
up a terminal and proceed with the regular Gentoo
installation process. At least that's how I would do it.
-- Evan Klitzke
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
. You will need
to have PAM enabled.
-- Evan Klitzke
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
On 6/26/06, Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Is there a way to shut the power of my laptop down and then power it
back on and have it resume right where it was when it was powered
down? I think this is called suspend/resume. I see there is a kernel
called suspend2-sources. Is there any way to
On 6/25/06, krgn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I know this must have been asked a few times, but I need to quick and
can't search a lot for info on the net. I would like to remove, say KDE
and GNOME from a system with all the packages they come with, and would
like to find a cmd-line option to emerg
On 6/26/06, Arturo 'Buanzo' Busleiman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
If you are using kde:
konqueror sftp://[EMAIL PROTECTED]/path]
Incidentally you can do the same thing in nautilus :-) Ctrl-L will
bring up a location dialog, and then you can use
sftp://[EMAIL PROTECTED]/path] to open up the fol
functionality built in. Just click Places | Connect to
Server, and fill in your info. This will create a normal nautilus
window that you can drag and drop from.
-- Evan Klitzke
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
l, and disable support for modules entirely.
The reason for this is that if someone can load malicious modules on
your system they can basically circumvent any security systems you are
using, including things like SELinux and grsec.
-- Evan Klitzke
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
won't even change anything. Also, the settings in
make.conf rarely change from version to version.
-- Evan Klitzke
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
AFAIK, the only thing that you need to compile twice is GCC. And you
don't even really need to do that twice. The second pass will may
pass on new optimizations that will make it more efficient, but the
code it outputs will be exactly the same.
-- Evan Klitzke
On 6/7/06, Richard Fish &l
The pam-login/shadow blocking issue was a portage specific thing --
you would have gotten it no matter what version of gcc you were
running. In this case it was because pam-login being deprecated.
On 6/7/06, Mike Huber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I had some weird problems with the emerge -e syst
On 6/6/06, Michael Crute <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I agree with Daniel, if you learn on a GUI its far too easy to make
bad websites. Start with VI and a good book, and do yourself a favor
learning CSS and XHTML since that is where web design is headed.
It is probably a good idea to start with
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