On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, guy keren wrote:
>
> On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, Cedar Cox wrote:
>
> > Unusual System Events
> > =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
> > Nov 17 22:36:53 bibi kernel: Packet log: output DENY ppp0 PROTO=6
>192.117.108.105:61707 172.26.140.6:9044 L=40 S=0x00 I=3796 F=0x T=255 (#2)
> > Nov 17
Hi,
but don't you also have to use 64bit file position variables ? I always
thought the 2G limit was due to the 32bit integer variable. What is the
solution to this problem ?
Schlomo
On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, Miki Shapiro wrote:
> > Your generic linux 2.4 and glibc 2.2 support LFS. What are the s
Hmm,
Yaron Zabari runs IL-BSD (AFAIR). I think he's the one to ask.
--Ariel
--
Ariel Biener
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
PGP(6.5.8) public key http://www.tau.ac.il/~ariel/pgp.html
=
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[cc'd to linux-il since several bsd people are known to read it]
hello,
is this (il-bsd) alive? is there anybody out there?
i'm looking to publish "official" pptp patches for the various *bsd
operating systems, openbsd and freebsd for starters. i know that several
people already did it, so if y
On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, Yedidyah Bar-David wrote:
> Hi
>
> I wish to remind everyone, that the current output from the part
> that reads the babylon file keeps the exact order of the chars
> in the file, which is what I can call "reverse visual", which is
> identical to "logical" for hebrew-only tex
Hi
I wish to remind everyone, that the current output from the part
that reads the babylon file keeps the exact order of the chars
in the file, which is what I can call "reverse visual", which is
identical to "logical" for hebrew-only text, but very different
for mixed hebrew-english.
The simple
A couple of other notes:
On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, guy keren wrote:
>
> >
> > On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, Ricardo Villalba wrote:
> >
> > > In first place I was using the "ISO 8859-8" text codec in Qt 2 for
> > > converting hebrew text to unicode, but now thiscode
On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, guy keren wrote:
>
> On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, Ricardo Villalba wrote:
>
> > In first place I was using the "ISO 8859-8" text codec in Qt 2 for
> > converting hebrew text to unicode, but now thiscodec seems that doesn't
> > work in Qt 3 (I've got only one hebrew letter for each he
Daniel Feiglin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> See discussion on export keyword, p. 205 in The C++ Programming
> Language (3rd edn.), Stroustrup. It should do the job, but I don't
> know in GNU c++ implements it.
No. You get
warning: keyword 'export' not implemented and will be ignored
with gcc
See discussion on export keyword, p. 205 in The C++ Programming Language (3rd
edn.), Stroustrup. It should do the job, but I don't know in GNU c++ implements it.
mulix wrote:
> On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, Dan Kenigsberg wrote:
>
>
>>This may seem an ugly feature of C++, but in fact it is better than
On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, Ricardo Villalba wrote:
> In first place I was using the "ISO 8859-8" text codec in Qt 2 for
> converting hebrew text to unicode, but now thiscodec seems that doesn't
> work in Qt 3 (I've got only one hebrew letter for each hebrew text).
>
> So I used with Qt 3 the "ISO 8859
Hello.
I'm trying to port wordtrans to Qt 3, but I'm having some problems with
the English-Hebrew dictionary. Could anyone help me?
In first place I was using the "ISO 8859-8" text codec in Qt 2 for
converting hebrew text to unicode, but now this codec seems that doesn't
work in Qt 3 (I've got o
On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, mulix wrote:
> On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, Shaul Karl wrote:
>
> > > hello,
> > >
> > > if anyone know the answer to these mystery of the universe questions, i
> > > will be most obliged. all deal with sourceforge's services for project
> > > administrators. i can say a lot of good
On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, Shaul Karl wrote:
> > hello,
> >
> > if anyone know the answer to these mystery of the universe questions, i
> > will be most obliged. all deal with sourceforge's services for project
> > administrators. i can say a lot of good things about sourceforge, but
> > 'documentation
after bad mouthing sourceforge earlier today, i now come to praise them
for their quick reponse to my support requests.
On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, Ely Levy wrote:
> On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, mulix wrote:
>
> > hello,
> >
> > if anyone know the answer to these mystery of the universe questions, i
> > will b
> hello,
>
> if anyone know the answer to these mystery of the universe questions, i
> will be most obliged. all deal with sourceforge's services for project
> administrators. i can say a lot of good things about sourceforge, but
> 'documentation' and 'user interface' will NOT be mentioned there.
> Your generic linux 2.4 and glibc 2.2 support LFS. What are the specifics
> of your problem? Large file support should be transparently added to an
> application provided that it is built with _LARGEFILE64_SOURCE and
> _FILE_OFFSET_BITS set to 64.
Yup. Recompiled my 2-gig-file-creation test prog
Dan Kenigsberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> This may seem an ugly feature of C++, but in fact it is better than
> the C counterpart - macros.
Inlined functions are supposed to be a standard C feature in C99. GCC
has had them for years.
> In fact, writing the implementation of inline functions
Hi,
I have also played a little with the different codes, and came up to
similar results. That is why I have included only Ovda, Ben Gurion and
Eilat in the patch I submitted to Ximian. Maybe, Ximian can change the
server they query from. However, I seriously doubt it. Evolution is in
total freez
Anyone know where I can get an old fixed frequency workstation monitor?
In other words, I'd like a large, good quality monitor for not much
money.. wouldn't everyone ;) I know the details involved with driving
these beasts from PC video cards.. I actually have a few of them the USA.
BTW, if
On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, mulix wrote:
> hello,
>
> if anyone know the answer to these mystery of the universe questions, i
> will be most obliged. all deal with sourceforge's services for project
> administrators. i can say a lot of good things about sourceforge, but
> 'documentation' and 'user inte
On Sun, Nov 18, 2001 at 11:44:45AM +0200, Miki Shapiro wrote:
> Hi everyone.
>
> I must have missed something:
>
> SuSE Linux 7.0
> Custom-tailored 2.4.9 kernel
> Absolutely latest reiserfs binaries (from yesterday - the 3.x... version)
> shell-limit (limit/unlimit) filesize removed
> If it matt
hello,
if anyone know the answer to these mystery of the universe questions, i
will be most obliged. all deal with sourceforge's services for project
administrators. i can say a lot of good things about sourceforge, but
'documentation' and 'user interface' will NOT be mentioned there.
1. how do
On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, Dan Kenigsberg wrote:
> This may seem an ugly feature of C++, but in fact it is better than the C
> counterpart - macros. In fact, writing the implementation of inline functions
> in header file is a beautiful gem, comparing to writing the implemetation of
> calss templates i
Doesn't http://www.reiserfs.org has more info?
There seems to be a supporting mailing list too.
> Hi everyone.
>
> I must have missed something:
>
> SuSE Linux 7.0
> Custom-tailored 2.4.9 kernel
> Absolutely latest reiserfs binaries (from yesterday - the 3.x... version)
> shell-limit (limit/un
>
>
> On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, Shaul Karl wrote:
>
> > > you have put an inline function inside a '.cc' file. since it is inline,
> > > it will NOT be included in the object file 'base.cc', and thus, during
> > > link, there base constructor will be undefined. this is your bug - not
> > > g++'s.
>
Cedar,
In the prerouting you send packets with destination = 172. to the log
masq is done in the postrouting.
Dani
On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, Cedar Cox wrote:
>
> Well, I guess they're probably not that "strange".
>
> Unusual System Events
> =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
> Nov 17 22:36:53 bibi kernel: Pac
On 18 Nov 2001, Shai Bentin wrote:
>
> The following codes are the official city codes. Some are not updated
> regularly, some seem to not be carried by the ximian weather server:
That's probably because the codes use are based on aviation location
indicators and are probably automatically upd
The following codes are the official city codes. Some are not updated
regularly, some seem to not be carried by the ximian weather server:
OK
LLOV - ovda
LLBG - Ben Gurion
LLET - Eilat
Not Updated on a daily basis
LLJR - Jerusalem
LLIB - Rosh Pina
LLBS - Beer Sheva
Not Carried
LLSD - Sde Dov
L
On Sun, Nov 18, 2001, Miki Shapiro wrote about "2Gig filesize limit problem":
>...
> SuSE Linux 7.0
> Custom-tailored 2.4.9 kernel
> Absolutely latest reiserfs binaries (from yesterday - the 3.x... version)
> shell-limit (limit/unlimit) filesize removed
> If it matters, the partition was creat
Hi everyone.
I must have missed something:
SuSE Linux 7.0
Custom-tailored 2.4.9 kernel
Absolutely latest reiserfs binaries (from yesterday - the 3.x... version)
shell-limit (limit/unlimit) filesize removed
If it matters, the partition was created by the new mkreiserfs util.
Is there ***ANY*** d
Try pinging that IP, and then doing "arp -a". Compare the MAC address to
the other machines on your network.
If the arp table doesn't contain your IP, then this looks like a
masquareded source IP. If the arp table does have the IP, but the MAC
address is none of your machines, you can be prett
Well, I guess they're probably not that "strange".
Unusual System Events
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Nov 17 22:36:53 bibi kernel: Packet log: output DENY ppp0 PROTO=6
192.117.108.105:61707 172.26.140.6:9044 L=40 S=0x00 I=3796 F=0x T=255 (#2)
Nov 17 22:36:58 bibi kernel: Packet log: output DENY p
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