Re: Time Stamp Problem

2003-07-10 Thread Michael Martinez
The files of relevance are: /etc/sysconfig/clock and /etc/localtime. "/etc/sysconfig/clock" can be modified by hand, and then use the command "/usr/sbin/timeconfig" to update /etc/localtime. The "date" command is used to set your system time. A lot of people run a "time daemon" such as xntp to kee

How to maintain an audit trail of user command history?

2003-07-10 Thread Michael Martinez
Hi guys, We all know that a user's shell maintains a command history, for example bash in ~user/.bash_history. What I would like to find out, is there a way for the system to maintain its own copy of a user's command history, one that is unalterable by the user? In maintaining the audit trail,

Re: How to maintain an audit trail of user command history?

2003-07-10 Thread Jeff Kinz
On Thu, Jul 10, 2003 at 09:12:00AM -0400, Michael Martinez wrote: > What I would like to find out, is there a way for the system to maintain > its own copy of a user's command history, one that is unalterable by the > user? Turn on system accounting, use the "sa -u" command and sort the results

Re: How to maintain an audit trail of user command history?

2003-07-10 Thread Michael Martinez
you mean, "sar -u"? On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 09:29, Jeff Kinz wrote: > On Thu, Jul 10, 2003 at 09:12:00AM -0400, Michael Martinez wrote: > > What I would like to find out, is there a way for the system to maintain > > its own copy of a user's command history, one that is unalterable by the > > user?

Re: How to maintain an audit trail of user command history?

2003-07-10 Thread Jeff Kinz
On Thu, Jul 10, 2003 at 10:01:18AM -0400, Michael Martinez wrote: > you mean, "sar -u"? No. (also - please don't "top-Post") > > On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 09:29, Jeff Kinz wrote: > > On Thu, Jul 10, 2003 at 09:12:00AM -0400, Michael Martinez wrote: > > > What I would like to find out, is there a w

Re: How to maintain an audit trail of user command history?

2003-07-10 Thread Michael Martinez
On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 10:08, Jeff Kinz wrote: > > > you mean, "sar -u"? > No, "sar" does not produce the same info as "sa". To see what commands > each individual user invoked sa is the tool to use. > > > To see detailed information about machine resources are being used on a > per process basi

Re: How to maintain an audit trail of user command history?

2003-07-10 Thread Thomas Dodd
Michael Martinez wrote: I don't have "sa" installed, and I cannot locate the package that it It's probably not in your path. sar is in /usr/bin, but sa is in /usr/sbin. Where do I get the process accounting tools from? your installation disks. # rpm -qf /usr/sbin/sa psacct-6.3.2-27 -Thomas -

Re: glibc installation

2003-07-10 Thread Gordon Messmer
Daniel Tan wrote: i saw a thread from the internet having similiar problem with mine but tat guy can't rpm...so i thought i can't use rpm too...it might be broken...but where do i download latest glibc rpms? the official page only have them in gz or bz format... If you're having problems with rpm,

Re: python installation create havoc

2003-07-10 Thread Thomas Dodd
Daniel Tan wrote: i installed the latest rpm python2-2.2.3-1 from the website and i used this command rpm -Uf --nodeps to enable the installation to go through and did You should have known you'd have trouble. You should not nee to use --nodeps. What dependencies did t

Re: glibc installation

2003-07-10 Thread Thomas Dodd
Daniel Tan wrote: i downloaded glibc-2.3.2 and untar it into a dir coz rpm does not work at all. Bad idea. Red Hat has patch to glibc that you really need. I would be surprized if you had much luck with a tarball version. followed INSTALL guide from glibc then ran configure --prefix=/usr/lo

Re: python installation create havoc

2003-07-10 Thread Tom Diehl
On Thu, 10 Jul 2003, Thomas Dodd wrote: > > > Daniel Tan wrote: > > i installed the latest rpm python2-2.2.3-1 from the website and i used this > > command rpm -Uf --nodeps to enable the installation to go through and did > > You should have known you'd have trouble.

Re: python installation create havoc

2003-07-10 Thread Cliff Wells
On Mon, 2003-07-07 at 23:30, Daniel Tan wrote: > i installed the latest rpm python2-2.2.3-1 from the website and i used this > command rpm -Uf --nodeps to enable the installation to go through and did > the same for pythontools and pythontkinter. > > now try running fetchmailconf and i got this...

usb thumbdrive

2003-07-10 Thread Scott Chaney
Do anyone know how to get a usb thumbdrive to work under RH 8.0? I have done a search on the web and found some information but none of it worked. Has anyone had any success doing this? Thanks in advance, -- Scott Chaney Linux newbie -- Psyche-list mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https:

Re: usb thumbdrive

2003-07-10 Thread Samuel Flory
Scott Chaney wrote: Do anyone know how to get a usb thumbdrive to work under RH 8.0? I have done a search on the web and found some information but none of it worked. Has anyone had any success doing this? Make you try the following: -update to the latest redhat errata kernel -check /proc/