think it just shows there isn't one right way. I like that every piece of
software I configure or write I can go to one of two places --
~/doc/[apache,ssh,mutt,etc..etc]/.. or ~/src/[c,sh,bash,python,perl]/... --
a structure that can include revisions and updates and follow the flow. It
doesn't pr
On Thu, 2012-08-23 at 14:32 -0700, Joe Zeff wrote:
> I've always been a great believer in putting documentation of this
> type directly into the config file concerned.
I used to do that until I found that certain things, like Apache, took
an age to start up as they had to parse through huge config
On 08/23/2012 01:03 PM, gary artim wrote:
(tom) thanks will check that out. (joe) yes I doc everything in a
filestructure like ~/doc/product/ will review and compare, but
quite frustrating...any samba switches that will track a specific user
and log...just being lazy.
My Linux experience is
(tom) thanks will check that out. (joe) yes I doc everything in a
filestructure like ~/doc/product/ will review and compare, but
quite frustrating...any samba switches that will track a specific user
and log...just being lazy.
On Thu, Aug 23, 2012 at 12:09 PM, Joe Zeff wrote:
> On 08/23/2012
On 08/23/2012 11:52 AM, Tom Horsley wrote:
I had to throw some "acl check permissions = false" settings
into my /etc/samba/smb.conf file at some point on a recent
samba upgrade in order to keep my anonymous guest shares
actually working correctly (i.e. my definition of correctly,
not cifs develop
I had to throw some "acl check permissions = false" settings
into my /etc/samba/smb.conf file at some point on a recent
samba upgrade in order to keep my anonymous guest shares
actually working correctly (i.e. my definition of correctly,
not cifs developer definition of correctly :-).
https://bugz
I got a dozen or so people using smb/cifs on both fedora desktop and
virtualbox/win7. Recently I upgraded a desktop to fc17 and her linux
desktop dolphin file browser stalls/hang and she can still run other
apps, but libre and dolphin and hung. I have double checked the
setting and they looked the