>
> > > could it be possible to automagically add some [linux-il] mention in
the
> > > subject of all posts. That would help a lot the filtering of incoming
Is it that difficult to filter for linux-il in To or CC?
Chen.
=
To uns
On Tue, 21 Dec 1999, Alex Shnitman wrote:
> > could it be possible to automagically add some [linux-il] mention in the
> > subject of all posts. That would help a lot the filtering of incoming
> It had already been discussed here more than once in the past, and was
> vehemently objected to by ma
Hi
I run a RedHat 6.1 Machine with a S3 graphical card called Trio 3D, with
a MAG 770T monitor.
It took me some time to get any kind of graphical display but now it
seems to work
currently I use the generic SVGA X Server:
[ariev@ariev ~]# ls -l /etc/X11/X
lrwxrwxrwx 2 root root
On Tue, Dec 21, 1999 at 08:32:13AM +0200, ilan Bloch wrote:
> not really ontopic matter but truly some organizational stuff we could all
> benefit from (besides it's both linux and israel ;) )
>
> could it be possible to automagically add some [linux-il] mention in the
> subject of all posts. Th
I have a "newbie" question:
I have not not yet installed Linux in my home PC, and I am trying to figure
out which version to install.
What really is the difference (if there is any) between Red Hat, Slackware,
SuSe, Caldera, Debian etc. etc. ?
Which would you recommend to someone who is comp
Hi all,
not really ontopic matter but truly some organizational stuff we could all
benefit from (besides it's both linux and israel ;) )
could it be possible to automagically add some [linux-il] mention in the
subject of all posts. That would help a lot the filtering of incoming
messages, as som
On Mon, Dec 20, 1999 at 11:47:14PM +0200, Nimrod Mesika wrote:
> > As to your first suggestion, maybe there's even a better way -- have
> > licq install signal handlers for e.g. SIGUSR1 and SIGUSR2, switching
> > it online in the former and offline in the latter, and then have the
> > ip-up scrip
I follow bugtraq as well, and...
It's not a wu-ftpd vulnerability, it's a mis-configuration
issue. Most sites do not allow anonymous ftp. Further more,
secure sites would obviously not allow file conversions (although
some large ones still do, but then again, they probably use ncftpd
which checks
Alex Shnitman wrote:
> As to your first suggestion, maybe there's even a better way -- have
> licq install signal handlers for e.g. SIGUSR1 and SIGUSR2, switching
> it online in the former and offline in the latter, and then have the
> ip-up script killall -USR1 licq and the ip-down script killal
well omer, you judge yourself.
i bet its new.
Moran Zavdi
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-Original Message-
From: suid <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: éåí ùðé 20 ãöîáø 1999 21:52
Subject: Security vulnerability in certain wu-ftpd (and derivitives)
configurations (fw
I'm pretty sure no new wuftpd bugs have been recently
discovered. The last one is over two months old, and
has made it into the RH errata page over 2 months ago.
If my memory serves me right (it's running NT), the actual
errata deals with 2 (or 3) vulnerabilities that were unmasked
in quick succe
On Mon, Dec 20, 1999 at 10:05:16PM +0200, Matan Ziv-Av wrote:
> Why don't you touch some file in the ip-up script, and have you program
> select on that file?
>
> I hope you don't use ethernet status as an indication of internet
> connection, since ethernet interfaces are usually up, whether you
Why don't you touch some file in the ip-up script, and have you program
select on that file?
I hope you don't use ethernet status as an indication of internet
connection, since ethernet interfaces are usually up, whether you are
connected to the rest of the internet or not.
--
Matan Ziv-Av
hey,
i saw while ago you all was very
worried about little security hole in the 2.0.x versions of kernel.
today i donno what happend but i
counter till now 10 reports of new security problems on unix and linux
systems.
the thing that frick is you or any
user can execute files you upload
"Muli B.Y." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> The minimal time resolution I'm talking about here is less than a
> second, and the optimal is instantaneous.
What for?
> int main()
> {
> while (1)
> {
> sleep(1)
> do_some_quick_stuff();
> }
> retur
Mike Londarenko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Let me repeat here again (uff...): the role of cache is NOT only in
> > prefetching data; a more import one, especially in the
> > multitasking/heavy-load enviroments is BUFFERING of data, allowing OS
> to
> > communicate with inherintly slow de
Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
>
> "Muli B.Y." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > I have written a small utility, ifup, which will tell you if any network
> > interface is up or down (connected or disconnected).
>
> Can you explain what it does? I mean, is it a wrapper around ifconfig(8)
> or netstat(8)
"Muli B.Y." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I have written a small utility, ifup, which will tell you if any network
> interface is up or down (connected or disconnected).
Can you explain what it does? I mean, is it a wrapper around ifconfig(8)
or netstat(8) or something of the kind? Why is it pr
I have written a small utility, ifup, which will tell you if any network
interface is up or down (connected or disconnected).
Now, what I really need is a way to get a notification when an
interface changes its status. Is there any way to do this under linux?
(Of course I can sleep() and cont
On Mon, Dec 20, 1999 at 05:06:38PM +0200, Evgeny Stambulchik wrote:
> Mike Londarenko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > On Fri, Dec 17, 1999 at 01:51:54AM +0200, Evgeny Stambulchik wrote:
> >
> > > As far as performance is considered, it's not RPM that usually matters
> > (inspite
> > > of a
Mike Londarenko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Fri, Dec 17, 1999 at 01:51:54AM +0200, Evgeny Stambulchik wrote:
>
> > As far as performance is considered, it's not RPM that usually matters
> (inspite
> > of a big hype), but the amount of cache on disk. Until recently (1-2
> years), the
>
Ben-Nes Michael wrote:
> Lilo is not working with scsi :-(
> what should i do/read to solve this proble ?
>
> fdisk /dev/sda
>
> The number of cylinders for this disk is set to 1115.
> There is nothing wrong with that, but this is larger than 1024,
> and could in certain setups cause problems w
I've installed RH6.0 on 3 computers with 8 Giga SCSI drives on a more than
5G partition.
Lilo worked fine, out of the box. no tinkering was necessary.
I assume you just saw the fdisk warning and was scared.
If you have an actual problem - I'd like to see the problem (what does lilo
say? what is
On Mon, 20 Dec 1999, Mike wrote:
the 2nd and 3rd number and not 2nd/3rd level sizes. They are 1st level
number of directories and 2nd level number of directories. Thus, 128 256
means you have 128 dirs 1st level, and each has 256 dirs in it.
That is AFAIK.
--Ariel
> Hi list.
> I just installe
Hi list.
I just installed squid 2 stable (rpm) on my linux server.
now, there is the record that tells squid where to put the cached objects.
in this i have a little problem.
here is what i wrote :
cache_dir /proxy/cache 8000 128 1024
as i understand 8000 MB represent the total size of the cache
Title: RE: lilo/scsi
http://customer.support.redhat.com/rhoaprod/plsql/xxrh_know_pkg.srch2?p_id=192
Not sure this will help you, but this makes some order in LILO mess.
-Original Message-
From: Ben-Nes Michael [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: á 20 ãöîáø 1999 16:11
To: ILUG
Subjec
On Mon, 20 Dec 1999, Ben-Nes Michael wrote:
It works fine for me, with > 1024 cyls on a scsi (9gig) disk.
--Ariel
> Hi
>
> Lilo is not working with scsi :-(
> what should i do/read to solve this proble ?
>
> fdisk /dev/sda
>
> The number of cylinders for this disk is set to 1115.
> There is
Hi
Lilo is not working with scsi :-(
what should i do/read to solve this proble ?
fdisk /dev/sda
The number of cylinders for this disk is set to 1115.
There is nothing wrong with that, but this is larger than 1024,
and could in certain setups cause problems with:
1) software that runs at boot t
On Fri, Dec 17, 1999 at 01:51:54AM +0200, Evgeny Stambulchik wrote:
> On 15-Dec-99 Eli Marmor wrote:
>
> > As Gavrie noted, there is no difference between the technologies which
> > should cause any difference in quality. The mechanics is similar.
>
> As far as performance is considered, it's
kernel 2.2.5 support more than one giga swap partion with no problem as
far as I know..
ll&p
Ely Levy
System group
Hebrew University
Jerusalem Israel
On Mon, 20 Dec 1999, Stanislav Malyshev a.k.a Frodo wrote:
| M>> Can linux support more then 1 GB of swap ?
| M>>
| M>> i want to run squi
Hi
I run a RedHat 6.1 Machine with a S3 graphical card called Trio 3D, with
a MAG 770T monitor.
It took me some time to get any kind of graphical display but now it
seems to work
currently I use the generic SVGA X Server:
[ariev@ariev ~]# ls -l /etc/X11/X
lrwxrwxrwx 2 root root
NOVM was a version of Squid 1.1 and was unified with the regular
version in Squid 2.x.
Ira Abramov wrote:
>
> squid has two versions, one of them, for REAL preofessional use is the
> one marked "NO VM", and it makes sense to have a cache server decide
> when to cache to memory and when to the di
> > > Shouldn't we invite to them to give a lecture to ILUG ?
Seriously guys, I think it a great idea!
When is our next meeting? is there anyone out there who can arrange such a
thing? are we willing to pay for the lecture?
Chen.
=
Hi.
I look for sco sys admin courses in Israel ?
Thanks,
Tal
=
To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with
the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command
echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Mon, 20 Dec 1999, Tal Fainberg wrote:
>
> Hi.
> I look for sco sys admin courses in Israel ?
seeing that sco is looking more and more to assimilate and resemble
Linux in the last 6 months, don't waste your money and study Linux
instead (and I'm not only saying this to pull your question back
35 matches
Mail list logo