On Wed, Jan 17, 2001 at 05:54:45PM -0600, Aaron Malone wrote:
> Honestly, I don't know how to do this with inetd. What needs to be done
> is that if the connection comes from 127.0.0.1, inetd should set the
> environment variable RELAYCLIENT. This instructs qmail-smtpd to allow
> relaying for th
On Wed, Jan 17, 2001 at 05:54:45PM -0600, Aaron Malone wrote:
> Alternatively, is there some reason you can't use tcpserver?
I suppose I should read the rest of the thread before asking questions
that have already been answered. I'm so behind on email. :)
Alternatively -- how do you send email?
On Thu, Jan 11, 2001 at 10:43:40AM +1100, Mary Gardiner wrote:
> The problem is that Mailman mails by connecting to port 25, and qmail
> considers this being asked to relay mail, which it doesn't like to do.
> Does anyone know how to convince qmail controlled by inetd (not by
> tcpserver, which is
On Tue, Dec 26, 2000 at 09:24:35AM -0800, Jen Hamilton wrote:
>
> The best System Administration book I've ever come across is O'Reilly's
> Essential System Administration by AEleen Frisch. I've yet to find a
> decent Sys Admin. book for Solaris, though. Any suggestions?
Sun publishes a couple
Should have mentioned that. I will at least be playing some Quake 3, my
husband is already excited to go head-to-head.
Thanks :o)
-nicole
At 14:53 on Jan 17, Angela Nash combined all the right letters to say:
> Do you plan to run games? That's the only time you really need the kernel
> drive
Do you plan to run games? That's the only time you really need the kernel
drive for the Nvidia cards. I have Nvidia TNT2's and GeForce cards in all
my Linux systems (Debian and others). They work just fine with XF4. I've
used the binary kernel module on several kernels with no problems.
I lik
I have put this question in a few forums but totally forgot about this
one, DUH. It seems I am terribly slow as of late, something to do with not
enough sleep and 18 credits.
Anyway, we (DH and I) are shopping for a new system (YAY!) for me that
will exclusively be running debian. The system wil
Nils, thank you for the very useful piece of information. When I ran the
Red Hat 7 installer at home it just plain out told me that my card wasn't
supported, so I gave up. In my case it definitely tried to force me into
XFree86 4.
Now, tell me, is this true of Mandrake 7.2 as well. The instal
On Tue, 2 Jan 2001 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> That is completely contrary to my experience with the card. I have two,
> and I have run Mandrake 7.0, Caldera 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, Red Hat 6.0, and
> TurboLinux 4.1 with it, all with great success. I tend to run at
> 1024x768x32bpp and never have had so