On 16/08/10 21:17, g wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 01:02 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
>
>
>> Yes, I had upgraded the original to the latest Netgear .chk file and
>> still had the copy I downloaded, about 3 megs. I reinstalled that
>> with tftp.
> ok. but that is different from if you had installed dd-wrt, di
On 17/08/10 01:37, Darr wrote:
> On Monday, 16 August, 2010 @ 20:05 zulu, g scribed:
>
>> now i will have someone to fall back on when i
>> change my linksys wrt54g. (gbwg)
> I think there are some versions of WRT54G that simply
> can't be converted (version 7 comes to mind)... so check
> its ver
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi all,
I'd like to get a kerberos ticket everytime I login to my f13 box, and
run aklog afterwards automagically. The second part can be handled with
kstart, but how do I get the first part with the new authconfig/sssd
tools done? To make things a li
Hi Matthew,
> Could anyone please tell me:
> 1. the hardware requirements
> 2. features
> 3. applications and utilities included with Fedora.
All of those are listed in here:
http://docs.fedoraproject.org/release-notes/
--
[...@localhost ~]$ uname -r
2.6.27.25-78.2.56.fc9.i686
Don't send priv
On Mon, 2010-08-16 at 22:13 +, g wrote:
> when i get some wireless cameras for surveillances, i will most
> certainly convert it,
Going off on a tangent: I hope you don't require images from them for
security purposes, because it's child's play to kill a wireless signal,
with no need to hack
On Mon, 2010-08-16 at 18:14 -0700, JD wrote:
> I would like to set up my iptables firewall ...
[without using the default GUI tool]
You can try one of the other front ends for managing the firewall. I
think Firestarter is the name of one that's still current. There's
about two or three choices o
On Mon, 2010-08-16 at 20:01 -0700, john wendel wrote:
> I should just keep quiet, but anyhow ...
Yes, why tempt fate, when you can... ;-)
> I just installed the latest evil Nvidia driver, which works great on
> my F11 box, and nothing is broken. I just did 'ls -ltr' in all
> the /usr directories
On Mon August 16 2010, Bob Goodwin wrote:
>
> I believe I did, there was a blinking power on LED and nothing else
> worked. However I was still able to ping 192.168.1.1 and eventually
> found that I could re-install the original system, which fortunately
> I still had, using tftp w
On Mon August 16 2010, g wrote:
> i would like to find something for this 2wire that i have, but nothing
> hits.
>
Based on a quick search I did, it looks like you're out of luck on the
2Wire.
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I just rebooted after the latest update, and when I opened Firefox, it didn't
work right. menus refused to work, and right-clicking on a page doesn't do
anything, like normally it says - open in new tab...
luckily I have Google-Chrome installed...
uh, needless to say I'm talking about Fedora 13.
On 17/08/10 13:01, Paul Cartwright wrote:
> I just rebooted after the latest update, and when I opened Firefox, it didn't
> work right. menus refused to work, and right-clicking on a page doesn't do
> anything, like normally it says - open in new tab...
>
> luckily I have Google-Chrome installed...
I have two desktops, in different locations.
In one, I have a simple ADSL modem with a single ethernet output
connected directly to the desktop.
On the other side of the desktop I have a LinkSys WRT65GL (dd-wrt)
through which all data from other laptops, etc, goes.
In the second location, I have
> From: Rick Stevens
> xscope is NOT xoscope.
typo
> > I just tried to build it and there are a number of
> references to
> deprecated GTK calls such as "GTK_WIDGET_VISIBLE" and
> "GTK_WIDGET_STATE" (all deprecated since GTK V2.2).
> These can be
> gotten around by running "./configure", then e
On 08/17/2010 12:36 PM, Mick M. wrote:
>> From: Rick Stevens
>> xscope is NOT xoscope.
> typo
>
>>> I just tried to build it and there are a number of
>> references to
>> deprecated GTK calls such as "GTK_WIDGET_VISIBLE" and
>> "GTK_WIDGET_STATE" (all deprecated since GTK V2.2).
>> These can be
On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 9:58 PM, Michael Miles wrote:
> TimeZoneClock is a nice little round clock!!!
Oh I see. Thanks.
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Parshwa Murdia
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Hi,
I'm an Austrian sysadmin living in Montpezat, a small village in South France.
I'm 100% GNU/Linux since Slackware 7.1 (around 2001). I've been using
Slackware and Debian mostly for a few years, then I started working for the
local town hall and a dozen public libraries around here, to migra
On Tue, Aug 17, 2010 at 6:06 PM, Niki Kovacs wrote:
> I'm an Austrian ...[snip]
Great to know about you.
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Parshwa Murdia
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Guidel
I leave my computer on 24/7 so that my backups can run at night.
Lately, it has been crashing during the night usually leaving no trace
of what happened. Last night it crashed but left this
in /var/log/messages:
Aug 17 01:04:56 steve kernel: INFO: task kjournald:1960 blocked for more than
120 sec
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 08/17/2010 04:51 AM, Christoph Höger wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'd like to get a kerberos ticket everytime I login to my f13 box, and
> run aklog afterwards automagically. The second part can be handled with
> kstart, but how do I get the first part wit
Wow!!! Thanks for the link
--- On Tue, 8/17/10, JB wrote:
From: JB
Subject: Re: Fw: What are the requirements and features of Fedora?
To: users@lists.fedoraproject.org
Date: Tuesday, August 17, 2010, 2:50 AM
Matthew Ramos yahoo.com> writes:
> Hi everyone -I am new to Linux and I am trying t
On Tue August 17 2010, Erik P. Olsen wrote:
> > luckily I have Google-Chrome installed...
> > uh, needless to say I'm talking about Fedora 13..
>
> Latest update of fedora or firefox?
uh, yum update, and I'm not sure if firefox was updated or not, I wasn't
watching the files real close(ly?).
I f
On Tue, 2010-08-17 at 09:44 -0400, Steve Blackwell wrote:
> I leave my computer on 24/7 so that my backups can run at night.
> Lately, it has been crashing during the night usually leaving no trace
> of what happened. Last night it crashed but left this
> in /var/log/messages:
>
> Aug 17 01:04:56
The file you'll want to modify is /etc/sysconfig/iptables. Others have
already posted the appropriate rules. Make sure you have backups; if
you ever run the system-config-security tool again, it'll over write
your changes.
You could go one level up that stack and modify
/etc/sysconfig/system
On 08/15/2010 09:15 PM, Kevin J. Cummings wrote:
>
> My 11:00 email got marked as [SPAM], here are the email headers:
...
>> X-Spam-Status: No, score=0.3 required=4.0 tests=ALL_TRUSTED,BAYES_00,
>> FRT_ADOBE2,NORMAL_HTTP_TO_IP,NUMERIC_HTTP_ADDR,SPF_PASS,URI_HEX
>> autolearn=no
>> version
Hi,
On Sunday 15 August 2010 08:27 PM, JD wrote:
>> > That should be possible. Any errors should be a good reason to send the
>> > drives back.
>> >
>> > James McKenzie
>> >
> Of course. Be sure to zero out the drive if it contains
> sensitive data or private intellectual property before
> sen
On 08/16/2010 10:46 AM, JD wrote:
>
> Clearly, a full setup of DNS server for your domain
> must be set up, per this wiki, along with mx records ...etc.
>
> Does this prevent one from settiing up and using sendmail
> on a LAN to send and receive email to/from the outside world?
Not by itself, but
On 08/17/2010 04:01 AM, Paul Cartwright wrote:
> I just rebooted after the latest update, and when I opened Firefox, it didn't
> work right. menus refused to work, and right-clicking on a page doesn't do
> anything, like normally it says - open in new tab...
>
> luckily I have Google-Chrome insta
On Tue, 17 Aug 2010 18:07:18 +0300
Gilboa Davara wrote:
> On Tue, 2010-08-17 at 09:44 -0400, Steve Blackwell wrote:
> > I leave my computer on 24/7 so that my backups can run at night.
> > Lately, it has been crashing during the night usually leaving no
> > trace of what happened. Last night it c
Hello,
My banshee can not run under KDE. The banshee window closes just after
it appears. The following is the output when execute banshee-1 command
from command line:
[Info 00:01:41.882] Running Banshee 1.6.1: [Fedora13-1.6.1-3.fc13
(linux-gnu, i386) @ 2010-06-26 21:33:22 UTC]
[Warn 00:01:
On 08/17/2010 06:44 AM, Steve Blackwell wrote:
> I leave my computer on 24/7 so that my backups can run at night.
> Lately, it has been crashing during the night usually leaving no trace
> of what happened. Last night it crashed but left this
> in /var/log/messages:
>
> Aug 17 01:04:56 steve kern
On 08/17/2010 08:20 AM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
> The file you'll want to modify is /etc/sysconfig/iptables. Others have
> already posted the appropriate rules. Make sure you have backups; if
> you ever run the system-config-security tool again, it'll over write
> your changes.
>
> You could go o
Is there a Wifi Monitor in the Fedora Repo ?
Don't want any KDE Plasmoids , they suck .
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On 08/17/2010 08:47 AM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
> On 08/16/2010 10:46 AM, JD wrote:
>> Clearly, a full setup of DNS server for your domain
>> must be set up, per this wiki, along with mx records ...etc.
>>
>> Does this prevent one from settiing up and using sendmail
>> on a LAN to send and receive
On Mon, 2010-08-16 at 15:24 -0400, Gregory Woodbury wrote:
> Get a dyndns.com name for your router public ip address and set up at
> dyndns to get mail delivered to that name.
Of course, if your IP changes, then mail is going to get screwed up
during the time it takes for next delivery attempt to
On Tue, 2010-08-17 at 12:05 -0400, Steve Blackwell wrote:
> I've been looking at my logs some more. I don't understand these
> messages:
>
> Aug 17 10:30:50 steve kernel: CPU0: Temperature above threshold, cpu
> clock throttled (total events = 455)
> Aug 17 10:30:50 steve kernel: CPU1: Temperatu
--- On Mon, 8/16/10, JB wrote:
> Matthew Ramos yahoo.com> writes:
>
> > Hi everyone -I am new to Linux and I am trying to
> compare Fedora’s desktop
> > version Linux to a few other distributors. Could
> anyone please tell me:
> >
> >
> > the hardware requirements
> > features
> > applicat
On Tue, 17 Aug 2010 12:05:44 -0400
Steve Blackwell wrote:
> On Tue, 17 Aug 2010 18:07:18 +0300
> Gilboa Davara wrote:
>
> > On Tue, 2010-08-17 at 09:44 -0400, Steve Blackwell wrote:
> > > I leave my computer on 24/7 so that my backups can run at night.
> > > Lately, it has been crashing during
On 08/17/2010 11:33 AM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
> On 08/15/2010 09:15 PM, Kevin J. Cummings wrote:
>>
>> My 11:00 email got marked as [SPAM], here are the email headers:
> ...
>>> X-Spam-Status: No, score=0.3 required=4.0 tests=ALL_TRUSTED,BAYES_00,
>>> FRT_ADOBE2,NORMAL_HTTP_TO_IP,NUMERIC_HTTP_A
On 08/17/2010 09:25 AM, binary...@comcast.net wrote:
>Is there a Wifi Monitor in the Fedora Repo ?
>
> Don't want any KDE Plasmoids , they suck .
Why kind of monitor are you looking for?
Some time ago, in an older version of kde, it used to be
bundled with kwifimanager which gave you a gui
On Wed, 18 Aug 2010 02:12:16 +0930
Tim wrote:
> On Tue, 2010-08-17 at 12:05 -0400, Steve Blackwell wrote:
> > I've been looking at my logs some more. I don't understand these
> > messages:
> >
> > Aug 17 10:30:50 steve kernel: CPU0: Temperature above threshold, cpu
> > clock throttled (total ev
On 08/17/2010 09:36 AM, Tim wrote:
> On Mon, 2010-08-16 at 15:24 -0400, Gregory Woodbury wrote:
>> Get a dyndns.com name for your router public ip address and set up at
>> dyndns to get mail delivered to that name.
> Of course, if your IP changes, then mail is going to get screwed up
> during the
binary...@comcast.net writes:
> Is there a Wifi Monitor in the Fedora Repo ?
Good old gkrellm? There even is a gkrellm-wifi package available in Fedora.
>
> Don't want any KDE Plasmoids , they suck .
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> users@lists.fedoraproject.org
> To unsubscribe or change subscr
On 08/17/2010 12:09 PM, JD wrote:
> My router's public IP address is static. So that is not a problem.
> But per other replies on this list, it sounds like
> a complicated puzzle to solve.
> I have a dyndns name. and it maps onto my router's static IP
> address. But I think at&t is blocking port 2
Is it possible to force the kernel to assign a USB driver to a given
vendor/product, if it has a custom product? In my case, I have a
board with a CP2102 usb chip on it, which linux supports, but the
CP2102 has a custom iProduct number so the driver just ignores it.
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On 08/17/2010 10:31 AM, DJ Delorie wrote:
> Is it possible to force the kernel to assign a USB driver to a given
> vendor/product, if it has a custom product? In my case, I have a
> board with a CP2102 usb chip on it, which linux supports, but the
> CP2102 has a custom iProduct number so the dri
Timothy Murphy wrote:
> I have two desktops, in different locations.
>
> In one, I have a simple ADSL modem with a single ethernet output
> connected directly to the desktop.
> On the other side of the desktop I have a LinkSys WRT65GL (dd-wrt)
> through which all data from other laptops, etc, goes
> Make sure you have pulseaudio-utils installed and run it
> with the padsp wrapper to intercept access to the soundcard:
>
yum says itis the latest
> $ padsp /path/to/xoscope
>
> Regards,
> Bryn.
[m...@localhost xoscope-2.0]$ padsp ./xoscope
No valid data sources found... exiting
(xoscope:1
On 08/17/2010 12:36 PM, Tim wrote:
> Dyndns, and other such things, are useful for giving yourself a hostname
> that you can control, to a static IP. But aren't going to be much good
> if you have a dynamic IP. Private webserving's easy enough with a
> varying IP, mail serving's another matter
On Tue, Aug 17, 2010 at 10:09:55AM -0700, JD wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 09:36 AM, Tim wrote:
> > On Mon, 2010-08-16 at 15:24 -0400, Gregory Woodbury wrote:
> >> Get a dyndns.com name for your router public ip address and set up at
> >> dyndns to get mail delivered to that name.
> > Of course, if your
On 08/17/2010 12:56 PM, PaulCartwright wrote:
>On 08/17/2010 12:36 PM, Tim wrote:
>> Dyndns, and other such things, are useful for giving yourself a hostname
>> that you can control, to a static IP. But aren't going to be much good
>> if you have a dynamic IP. Private webserving's easy enough
On 08/17/2010 11:12 AM, fred smith wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 17, 2010 at 10:09:55AM -0700, JD wrote:
>>On 08/17/2010 09:36 AM, Tim wrote:
>>> On Mon, 2010-08-16 at 15:24 -0400, Gregory Woodbury wrote:
Get a dyndns.com name for your router public ip address and set up at
dyndns to get mai
Gerrard Geldenhuis wrote:
> Hi
> The database name NetscapeRoot I assume is a leftover from when 389 was a
> netscape product. Is there any plans to eventually change this to 389-root or
> something similar. It would be a purely cosmetic change though and probably
> way to much work and introduc
Gerrard Geldenhuis wrote:
>> Something else occurred to me. If you have a shared/replicated NetscapeRoot
>> database and lets say 12 servers over 3 datacentres, 6 providers and 6
>> consumers. >You will end up with 12 servers in a multimaster group for the
>> netscaperoot database but only 6 ser
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Am 17.08.2010 15:45, schrieb Stephen Gallagher:
> On 08/17/2010 04:51 AM, Christoph Höger wrote:
>> Hi all,
>
>> I'd like to get a kerberos ticket everytime I login to my f13 box, and
>> run aklog afterwards automagically. The second part can be handl
Niki Kovacs writes:
> Hi,
>
> I'm an Austrian sysadmin living in Montpezat, a small village in South
> France.
Hi Niki,
Welcome aboard!
PS: you should try the Gnome version as well. It's how Centos 6 will
probably look like ;-)
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www.nux.ro
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Hi,
I'm using KMail on my IMAP mail account with the french service provider Free.
So far, everything works fine. (Last time I've been using KMail was with KDE
3.2, if I remember correctly, the one that shipped with Slackware 10.2... Back
then, filtering an IMAP account made the darn thing cras
Once upon a time, JD said:
> Well, that would require that sendmail would have to listen
> on that alternate port. How is that accomplished?
Change DaemonPortOptions.
If you are using the .mc (recommended) way of configuring sendmail, do
something like:
dnl for local connections
DAEMON_OP
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On 08/17/2010 03:25 PM, Christoph Höger wrote:
> Am 17.08.2010 15:45, schrieb Stephen Gallagher:
>> On 08/17/2010 04:51 AM, Christoph Höger wrote:
>>> Hi all,
>
>>> I'd like to get a kerberos ticket everytime I login to my f13 box, and
>>> run aklog a
On 08/17/2010 10:37 AM, Suvayu Ali wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Sunday 15 August 2010 08:27 PM, JD wrote:
That should be possible. Any errors should be a good reason to send the
drives back.
James McKenzie
>> Of course. Be sure to zero out the drive if it contains
>> sensitiv
On Tue, Aug 17, 2010 at 11:26:11AM -0700, JD wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 11:12 AM, fred smith wrote:
> > On Tue, Aug 17, 2010 at 10:09:55AM -0700, JD wrote:
> >>On 08/17/2010 09:36 AM, Tim wrote:
> >>> On Mon, 2010-08-16 at 15:24 -0400, Gregory Woodbury wrote:
> Get a dyndns.com name for your
On Tue, 2010-08-17 at 12:25 -0400, binary...@comcast.net wrote:
> Is there a Wifi Monitor in the Fedora Repo ?
>
> Don't want any KDE Plasmoids , they suck .
There used to be but I can't find it anymore.
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> > Ok, since my university does not give me any infos about that LDAP (and
> > I do not want to rely on their IT for logging in locally), is there no
> > other solution to simply run kstart from pam and querying for the ticket
> > password at startup with sssd?
>
> SSSD isn't going to help you i
On 08/17/2010 09:33 AM, JD wrote:
> Re: a.b.c.d ==> valid.host.name
> and valid.host.name ==> a.b.c.d
> does not seem to apply to the google smtp server I use for Thunderbird.
You did your test entirely backward. You did a forward lookup first,
and then checked the PTR of the IP which was ret
On 08/17/2010 11:26 AM, JD wrote:
> Well, that would require that sendmail would have to listen
> on that alternate port. How is that accomplished?
That's probably a step you don't need to take. You just need your
router to forward a port other than 25 to your sendmail server's port
25. The po
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
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On 08/17/2010 04:23 PM, Christoph Höger wrote:
>
>>> Ok, since my university does not give me any infos about that LDAP (and
>>> I do not want to rely on their IT for logging in locally), is there no
>>> other solution to simply run kstart from pam an
On 08/17/2010 10:09 AM, JD wrote:
> But I think at&t is blocking port 25.
Normally they will, and that's good. It prevents infected Windows
desktops from sending spam directly.
You'll want to arrange a smart-host through which you can route all of
your outbound mail.
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use
> If you had access to the school's LDAP setup (and I suspect they'd tell
> you if you asked) SSSD does what you're looking for internally.
Neither do I have access to that LDAP (though it might be technically
possible to connect to it, this is just not a supported use case) nor do
I want to rely
On 08/17/2010 12:53 PM, Chris Adams wrote:
> Once upon a time, JD said:
>> Well, that would require that sendmail would have to listen
>> on that alternate port. How is that accomplished?
> Change DaemonPortOptions.
>
> If you are using the .mc (recommended) way of configuring sendmail, do
> som
On 08/17/2010 01:27 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 09:33 AM, JD wrote:
>> Re: a.b.c.d ==> valid.host.name
>> and valid.host.name ==> a.b.c.d
>> does not seem to apply to the google smtp server I use for Thunderbird.
> You did your test entirely backward. You did a forward lookup
On 08/17/2010 01:29 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 11:26 AM, JD wrote:
>> Well, that would require that sendmail would have to listen
>> on that alternate port. How is that accomplished?
> That's probably a step you don't need to take. You just need your
> router to forward a port oth
On 08/17/2010 01:30 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 10:09 AM, JD wrote:
>> But I think at&t is blocking port 25.
> Normally they will, and that's good. It prevents infected Windows
> desktops from sending spam directly.
>
> You'll want to arrange a smart-host through which you can rout
On 08/17/2010 02:25 PM, JD wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 01:27 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
>> On 08/17/2010 09:33 AM, JD wrote:
>>> Re: a.b.c.d ==> valid.host.name
>>> and valid.host.name ==> a.b.c.d
>>> does not seem to apply to the google smtp server I use for Thunderbird.
>> You did your test ent
I'm trying to do an install from a network export of the install DVD and
a repo created from /var/cache/yum which has every upgrade and install
RPM I've ever pulled off the network. I tried putting the copy of
/var/cache/yum in a subdirectory and running 'createrepo' (worked AFAIK)
but I can't
Steve Blackwell wrote:
> This happened in the middle of the backup which started at 1:00am and
> finished (successfully) at 1:28am so perhaps the backup blocked the kjournald
> process but it didn't crash the computer because there are later messages in
> the backup log and the messages file.
>
On Tue, 2010-08-17 at 19:12 -0400, Bill Davidsen wrote:
> I'm trying to do an install from a network export of the install DVD and
> a repo created from /var/cache/yum which has every upgrade and install
> RPM I've ever pulled off the network. I tried putting the copy of
> /var/cache/yum in a su
On 08/17/2010 02:28 PM, JD wrote:
> So, why would any mail client/server send an email message
> to my ip address on a port other than 25?
They never would.
> Seems that I would need to configure the dydns account to
> forward the email to me on that alternate port, no?
Yes. I merely meant that
Remember the old joke GIF image, with the box which said
you have moved your mouse
in order for this change to be effective you must reboot your system
It's getting so keeping systems up to date with current patches is
incompatible with reasonable uptime goals. More and more upgrades
requir
On 08/17/2010 03:35 PM, Daniel B. Thurman wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 02:25 PM, JD wrote:
>>On 08/17/2010 01:27 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
>>> On 08/17/2010 09:33 AM, JD wrote:
Re: a.b.c.d ==>valid.host.name
and valid.host.name ==>a.b.c.d
does not seem to apply to the goog
On 08/17/2010 04:35 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 02:28 PM, JD wrote:
>> So, why would any mail client/server send an email message
>> to my ip address on a port other than 25?
> They never would.
>
>> Seems that I would need to configure the dydns account to
>> forward the email to m
On Tue, 2010-08-17 at 16:47 -0700, JD wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 03:35 PM, Daniel B. Thurman wrote:
> > On 08/17/2010 02:25 PM, JD wrote:
> >>On 08/17/2010 01:27 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
> >>> On 08/17/2010 09:33 AM, JD wrote:
> Re: a.b.c.d ==>valid.host.name
> and valid.host.name
On 17 August 2010 13:25, wrote:
> Niki Kovacs writes:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I'm an Austrian sysadmin living in Montpezat, a small village in South
>> France.
>
> Hi Niki,
>
> Welcome aboard!
>
> PS: you should try the Gnome version as well. It's how Centos 6 will
> probably look like ;-)
>
If you like
On Tue, 2010-08-17 at 16:50 -0700, JD wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 04:35 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
> > On 08/17/2010 02:28 PM, JD wrote:
> >> So, why would any mail client/server send an email message
> >> to my ip address on a port other than 25?
> > They never would.
> >
> >> Seems that I would need to
On 08/17/2010 04:56 PM, Craig White wrote:
> On Tue, 2010-08-17 at 16:47 -0700, JD wrote:
>> On 08/17/2010 03:35 PM, Daniel B. Thurman wrote:
>>>On 08/17/2010 02:25 PM, JD wrote:
On 08/17/2010 01:27 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 09:33 AM, JD wrote:
>> Re: a.b.c.d
On Tue, 2010-08-17 at 17:10 -0700, JD wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 04:56 PM, Craig White wrote:
> > On Tue, 2010-08-17 at 16:47 -0700, JD wrote:
> >> On 08/17/2010 03:35 PM, Daniel B. Thurman wrote:
> >>>On 08/17/2010 02:25 PM, JD wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 01:27 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
>
On 08/17/2010 02:08 AM, Tom H wrote:
#! /bin/sh
> IPTABLES="/sbin/iptables"
> $IPTABLES --table filter --policy INPUT ACCEPT
> $IPTABLES --table filter --policy FORWARD ACCEPT
> $IPTABLES --table filter --policy OUTPUT ACCEPT
Not saying I'm commenting on the wisdom of the rules one way or
ano
On 18 August 2010 09:22, Bill Davidsen wrote:
>>
> If this line is for real:
> 194 Temperature_Celsius 0x0022 116 253 000 Old_age Always
> - 34
>
> Then your drive is running hotter than boiling water and has been close to
> melting point of solder. In spite of that the erro
How about NetworkManager? Works fine for me:
http://projects.gnome.org/NetworkManager/
On Wed, Aug 18, 2010 at 4:15 AM, Aaron Konstam wrote:
> On Tue, 2010-08-17 at 12:25 -0400, binary...@comcast.net wrote:
> > Is there a Wifi Monitor in the Fedora Repo ?
> >
> > Don't want any KDE Plasmoids ,
On 08/17/2010 05:10 PM, JD wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 04:56 PM, Craig White wrote:
>> On Tue, 2010-08-17 at 16:47 -0700, JD wrote:
>>> On 08/17/2010 03:35 PM, Daniel B. Thurman wrote:
On 08/17/2010 02:25 PM, JD wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 01:27 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
>> On 08/17/20
On 08/17/2010 06:31 PM, Genes MailLists wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 02:08 AM, Tom H wrote:
> #! /bin/sh
>> IPTABLES="/sbin/iptables"
>> $IPTABLES --table filter --policy INPUT ACCEPT
>> $IPTABLES --table filter --policy FORWARD ACCEPT
>> $IPTABLES --table filter --policy OUTPUT ACCEPT
>
> Not sa
On 08/17/2010 07:50 PM, Daniel B. Thurman wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 05:10 PM, JD wrote:
>>On 08/17/2010 04:56 PM, Craig White wrote:
>>> On Tue, 2010-08-17 at 16:47 -0700, JD wrote:
On 08/17/2010 03:35 PM, Daniel B. Thurman wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 02:25 PM, JD wrote:
>> On
Le mercredi 18 août 2010 01:56:17, suvayu ali a écrit :
>
> If you like lightweight desktops, I would recommend XFCE or LXDE. I
> use XFCE myself, it has all the conveniences of a modern desktop with
> none of the intensive stuff. It comes with a very decent collection of
> default apps too. :)
>
On 08/17/2010 11:23 PM, JD wrote:
>> g
> It's strange, but I assume that you start with a promiscuous
> filter, and then you add rules to button it up.
> I really do not know how these rules are consulted,
> and which rule takes precedence .
>
That is not standard practice no - it is the norm
On 08/17/2010 10:19 PM, Dick Roark wrote:
> How about NetworkManager? Works fine for me:
Dont think it shows all the AP's and their MAC addresses, nor their
current quality etc - i dont even think it shows the mac for the AP
you're currently connected to - it certainly doesn't show you all t
On 08/17/2010 08:32 PM, Genes MailLists wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 11:23 PM, JD wrote:
>>>g
>> It's strange, but I assume that you start with a promiscuous
>> filter, and then you add rules to button it up.
>> I really do not know how these rules are consulted,
>> and which rule takes precedence
On 08/17/2010 11:36 PM, JD wrote:
> Well, what does your iptables start out with?
iptables -P INPUT DROP
iptables -P OUTPUT DROP
iptables -P FORWARD DROP
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On 08/17/2010 08:40 PM, Genes MailLists wrote:
> On 08/17/2010 11:36 PM, JD wrote:
>
>> Well, what does your iptables start out with?
> iptables -P INPUT DROP
> iptables -P OUTPUT DROP
> iptables -P FORWARD DRO
Sorry, my question was not clear.
I meant cat the first few lines of y
Bill Davidsen wrote:
> Remember the old joke GIF image, with the box which said
>
> you have moved your mouse
> in order for this change to be effective you must reboot your system
>
> It's getting so keeping systems up to date with current patches is
> incompatible with reasonable uptime goal
On Tuesday 17 August 2010 01:05 PM, Robert Nichols wrote:
>> I have contacted Western Digital, but I am yet to hear from them. In the
>> > mean time I want to minimize what ever problems I have since I have to
>> > run my machine with this drive until they confirm my RMA.
>> >
>> > I came across
Say, hypothetically, I have 8 identical Intel DG45ID motherboard-based
system with 8GB memory and a single drive with a cheap-o generic 300w
power supply. All running Linux, so sorta on-topic.
Say those systems have been running for over a year, but lately they've
been really flaky. Random lo
On Tue, 2010-08-17 at 13:08 -0400, Steve Blackwell wrote:
> On Wed, 18 Aug 2010 02:12:16 +0930
> Tim wrote:
>
> > On Tue, 2010-08-17 at 12:05 -0400, Steve Blackwell wrote:
> > > I've been looking at my logs some more. I don't understand these
> > > messages:
> > >
> > > Aug 17 10:30:50 steve ke
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