Discussions of private networks typically point the user at the IP address ranges - such as 192.168... - reserved for private networks.
But they often also show those networks named something like "...MyHome.Net" Murphy says that any name you pick will eventually be a real domain to which you want access.
For a private network, you do *not* have to use a ".net", ".com", ".org" ending. I've been happily using an adaption of my street address - i.e., something like ".MainSt123" - for some time, yielding nodes such as Hub.MainSt123 = 192.168.0.1 for a (Linux) gateway, and things like FamilyRoom.MainSt123 for other machines scattered around the house.
I run things such as DNS (early Bind, now Bind8), Apache, Squid, Samba, etc. on the hub machine and have had no configuration problems from *not* using a standard, 3-character ending.
And I sleep easy knowing that I'm *not* using something that may also be a *real* domain name ... at least not in the foreseeable future :-)
Barry Johnson - BarryJJ@IBM.Net
Here's a little Spell ckeck script, I call it "wspell" you can call "wspell" alone, and anwser the questions or place up to two portions of the word into the command line as in
wspell re quir reacquired require required requirement requirements requires requiring
the requirement of this script is, get the first few letters correct
wspell (shell script)
hello,
I just wanted to say, did you know that Playstation 2 is using a
Linux interface, while the Dreamcast is using Windows.
later
(((LeX)))
That's what I though the first time I used the program wget. If you don't know why some port is listening and you are a little bit paranoid and think that's a backdoor, try first this command:
fuser -vnThis will display the program that opened that port, it's PID and the user who executed it. If you are sure that's a backdoor and want to close it, type this:
fuser -knThis will close this port till the next reboot (unless the backdoor program is runned by cron). Check your system to eliminate the backdoor. Here's my 2cents_tip
I have a firewall, and the logs show when a packet is deined. Denied packets from the internet can be a warning sign. But i became tired of searching through the logs for this info, and the ips were not resolved. So i wrote some scripts that look through a log file, pull out the DENY lines, resolve the ip addresses and remove any duplicates.
These scripts are perhaps the height of kludgeyness, but they work. I know i like to learn from examples, so maybe this can help others.
the script to run is show_denied_packets.sh
This script filters out any lines dealing with my local LAN, because I am only looking for packets from the internet. You may want to set LOCAL_LAN to the ip address of your local lan, if you have one.
It then calls strip_log.pl
This perl script takes the info from the log and prints out just the ip addresses and ports involved. This info is then piped into the logresolve program.
logresolve is a c program that came with my apache, although not compiled. i found it in /var/lib/httpd/support/ . To compile it i ran
gcc -o logresolve logresolve.cand then moved the logresolve binary into my bin directory. Its path needs to be set in the show_denied_packets.sh script.
Finally, I was getting many duplicate entries, so i pipe the info to the unix sort command to sort it all, and the unix uniq command to take out all the duplicate entries.
And viola! you now have a list of all the computers that tried to send you packets that bounced off your firewall. To keep an eye on this, i put an entry in my crontab to have this info mailed to me once a week. The line looks like this:
# once a week check for denied packets 0 2 * * mon /home/marc/bin/show_denied_packets.sh
Using different scripts together is a strength of unix. Still, this is a bit kludgy, and if there is any interest, i could whip all this up into one program.
Hi -
First thing, I'd like to thank you for putting out the LG; it's
been a mentor/SuperFAQ/"AHA!" generator ever since I first
installed Linux, over a year ago. Second - a contribution, if you will. Here's one of the shell scripts
that I've written, bkgr; it's been a
really nifty gadget for me, selecting random backgrounds for
my X-Windows. I hope other folx here will find it of as much
use.
Drum roll, please... :)
There is lots of configurable stuff in there - graphics prog,
window manager, etc. - but the comments should make it sorta
simple to adapt. *Hint*: the backgrounds for E-term (this is
where about half of my pics came from) are rather bright and
wonderful...
Keep up the good work!
Dear Jim
Your email did help me to solve the problem with the telnet in
linux. It works fine now. Thanks a million.....
I have a small doubt. Let me explain...... My network has a NT
server, LINUX server and 20 windows 95 clients. I followed your
instructions and added the address of all the clients into the
/etc/hosts file on the LINUX machine and voila the telnet worked
immediately.
But the NT server was the one who was running a DHCP server and
dynamically allocating the addresses to the clients. The clients
were configured to use DHCP and were not statically given and ip
addresses. I managed to see the current DHCP allocation for each
client and add those address into the /etc/hosts file on the LINUX
server but my doubt is what happens when the DHCP address for the
client changes? Then again we'll have to change the address in
the /etc/hosts file right? This seems silly. Is there anyway to
make the LINUX hosts file to automatically pick up the DHCP
address from the NT server?
Also another important thing is I am still unable to ping from the
NT server to the LINUX server using the name. It works only with
the IP address. Is there any way to make the NT DHCP to recognize
the LINUX server?
Well, either you shouldn't use dynamic addressing
(DHCP) or you should use dynamic DNS. You could
also disable TCP Wrappers (edit your /etc/inetd.conf
to change lines like:
(and comment out all of the services you don't
need while you're at it).
Thanks Jim for all your help....you've become my LINUX
guru.............
Perhaps you should consider getting a support
contract (or joining a local users group). I may
not always respond as quickly nor as thoroughly
as you'd like.
"R.Smith" wrote:
Why should I care if Dalnet is trying to connect to ports 23 and 1080?
I don't run any services on port 1080 and port 23 is closed via
hosts.deny. I care because WITH JUST ONE dalnet user, I sometimes have
dozens of syslog messages per day. I have to go through them and decide
if there is a problem. I have to run whois, nslookup, traceroute, etc.
on them to see if they are bogus. And many of the dalnet domain and
IP's ARE bogus.
I could ignore connect attempts to port 23 and miss that one attempt
that really was important. I could ignore port 1080... I could turn off
my firewall and let everyone in...
Imagine what a workload I would have if I was an sysadm with 20-30
people on dalnet.
It is simpler to just drop all connect attempts and let my niece use
other irc services that aren't abusive.
Hi Jeff,
after you compile the network card driver, you should place it an a
directory where insmod searches for it. I think /lib/modules/x.y.z/net
would be appropriate, where x.y.z is your current kernel version, e.g.
2.2.10 or 2.0.38.
Altarnatively you can set the MODPATH environment variable to point to
the directory where your module is located. See "man insmod".
Erik,
I read your question in issue 46 of the Linux Gazette.
To deny remote logins as root, add the following to the
/etc/login.acess file:
This means you can only login as root from a local console.
But if I where you I would disable telnet entirely and use ssh (secure
shell). You can disable telnet by adding a "#" in front of the "telnet"
line in /etc/inetd.conf.
If you are not running a server, I would disable inetd entirely. To do
this, comment out the lines that start inetd in the start-up scripts.
For Debian this is /etc/init.d/netbase, for Slackware the /etc/rc?.d
scripts ("?" is your runlevel, look at /etc/inittab for the default
runlevel). I don't know about Red Hat, but you can do a
"grep inetd /etc/init.d/*" to find it there.
Ian Carr-de Avelon <ian@emit.pl> says:
From: Erik Fleischer <ferik@iname.com>
This is an easy one, at least under Slackware; other distributions may
differ. The file /etc/securetty has the terminals root can use. It looks
something like:
The tty(number) entries are what you use normally with the PC video card and
keyboard. ttyS(number) entries are serial lines, so for example if you connect
to your Linux box via a modem. ttyp(number) entries are "pseudo terminals" which
you get if you come in via telnet. Delete all the ttyp entries and you can't
telnet in as root.
Yours
Jonathan Marsden <Jonathan@XC.Org>
adds:
You don't say what sort of login you have in mind: telnet? FTP? SSH?
rlogin? I'll try to deal with all of those!
(1) Set the file /etc/securetty to contain only the local console
device(s). This is actually what is done in most or all well known
Linux installations by default. It will prevent root login on telnet
connections (or dialin lines, or any tty except the ones listed!).
(2) Make sure root is included in the file /etc/ftpusers. Again this
is done by default on most or all curent Linux distributions. This
file lists all users who will be denied FTP login (one user per line),
even if they use the "correct" password for that user.
(3) In /etc/ssh/sshd_config (may be /etc/sshd_config on some
distributions), set PermitRootLogin no. This prevents users logging
in as root using SSH.
(4) Disable rlogin by commenting it out of /etc/inetd.conf, where it
is referred to as the 'login' service -- in other words, put a # sign
before the line that starts with the word login, and then do
kill -HUP `cat /var/run/inetd.pid` to tell inetd of the change.
You will also need to keep current with security updates for your
distribution, avoid running unnecessary services, and generally be
aware of network security issues, if your computer is connected to the
Internet; reading the Linux Security HOWTO and the more comprehensive
"Linux administrator's Security Guide" at
is also worthwhile to learn more about keeping your Linux systems
secure.
Russ Johnson The answer is correct in this that this is a solution but this is not
the only one nor the best. A few months ago I found myself in a similar
situation installing Linux for somebody with a Gericom (a German
company) laptop. Looking around on Internet I found fairly quickly
(don't ask me how as I do not remeber that now, but it was fairly easy :-)
the following web page: Among other things one can find there binaries of an X server supporting
LT PRO which works very well. The card is similar to other ATI Rage
cards but different enough to require a special treatment.
You may also want to consult
ruff.cs.jmu.edu/~beetle/ragefury.htm.
I do not know if LT PRO support found its way in the recent XFree86
releases; pretty likely.
For starters, the bash(1) manual (type "man bash" at the command
prompt) gives a detailed if somewhat cryptic listing of all the shell
language features.
I'd recommend reading a lot of other peoples' shell scripts. For
instance, look at the system startup scripts in /etc/init.d, or (if
/etc/init.d doesn't exist) in /etc/rc2.d.
Rakesh,
First you need to know what authentification method your ISP uses. This
can be PAP or CHAP or just a plain-text password.
Then you need to tell kppp to use that authentification method. I'm not
familiar with kppp, so look at the documentation. :-)
If kppp doesn't have options to configure PAP or CHAP, you'll have to
create a file called /etc/ppp/pap-secrets or /etc/ppp/chap-secrets
yourself.
These files should contain a line in the following format
First comes your login name, then a *, then your password. Lines
beginning with "#" are comments.
For more information read the pppd man-page (type "man pppd" at the
prompt).
I think you should ask this question on the cygwin mailing list:
cygwin@sourceware.cygnus.com
There is als an archive of the mailing lists at
http://www.delorie.com/archives
For more information, check the homepage: http://sourceware.cygnus.com/cygwin/
It looks to me that you want to use Linux as a client, not as a server,
right?
In that case you should use the smbfs utilities. You'll find them at
http://samba.SerNet.DE/linux-lan/
Rick Smith asked for a way to prevent unwanted telnet access.
I recommend a package called portsentry which automatically detects
port scans and multiple failed telnet attempts. It denies access
and doesn't return any IP packets to that host. It's free for
non-commercial use. Available from
http://www.psionic.com/abacus/portsentry/
Bob T.
From: Jim Dennis Yup. Note that even once we have journalling support in ext2, you will
want to occasionally force an fsck over the filesystem just to make sure
there haven't been any errors caused by memory errors, disk errors,
cosmic rays, etc.
If you need your laptop to reboot quickly just before a demo (and your
laptop doesn't have a hiberate feature or some such), something you can
do is to sync your disks, make sure your system is quiscient (i.e.,
nothing is running), and then force a power cycle and let your system
reboot. Your system will then fsck all of your disks, and you can then
shutdown your system, confident that the dreaded "maximal mount count"
message won't appear during that critical demo.
If you know that your system is fairly reliable --- you've been running
it for a while and you're not seeing wierd failures due to cheasy cheap
memory or overly long IDE or SCSI cables, etc. it's actually not so
dangerous to set a longer maximal count time.
One approach if your system is constantly getting shutdown and restarted
is to set the filesystem so it uses the time the filesystem was last
checked as a criteria instead of a maximal count. For example:
This will cause the filesystem to be checked after 100 mounts, or 3
months, whichever comes first.
(It should be safe to change some values when you have a
filesystem mounted read-only; though it might be worth asking
an expert, so I've copied Ted T'so and Remy Card on this
message).
Yes, it's safe these values if the filesystem is mounted read-only. If
you're ***sure*** that the filesystem is quiscent, and nothing is
changing on the filesystem, you can even get away with changing it while
the filesystem is mounted read-write. It's not something I'd really
recommend, but if you know what you're doing, you can get away from it.
It really depends on how much you working without a safety net.
You can use the volume label in your /etc/fstab if you like: For
example:
or
The advantage of doing this is that the filesystems are specified in a
device independent way. So for example, if your SCSI chain gets
reordered, the filesystems will get mounted corrected even though the
device names may have changed.
- Ted
NVidia has released its own drivers for Riva TNT / TNT 2 under XFree86
Check them out at:
www.nvidia.com/Products.nsf/htmlmedia/software_drivers.html
This fix for Netscape distributed with RH6 appears at http://www.linux-now.com
I do not take credit for this, it is not my work...
Tue, 28 Sep 1999 21:18:37 -0500
This is a reply to: mjaganna@us.oracle.com
He wrote on Mon, 20 Sept, 1999:
Mahesh
I had the same problem on Red Hat 6.0.
I fixed Netscape Comm 4.6, but 4.5.1 was broken in the same way.
Use this URL to Netscape's knowledge base:
help.netscape.com/kb/consumer/990807-8.html
In case you can't reach it: Note that "/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/75dpi:unscaled" will be listed.
You still need the one without the ":unscaled" suffix.
Larry Settle
Mon, 11 Oct 1999 23:34:43 -1000
Yes, it's a known bug with Redhat 6.0. The fix is simple, type this (as
root) in a console window:
For more bugs/fixes/issues with Redhat 6.0, check out:
www.redhat.com/cgi-bin/support?faq
Wed, 27 Oct 1999 07:50:36 +1300 (NZDT)
It's a well known bug and Netscape is one of the worst piece of
software on Linux IMHO. Do a search on
www.searchlinux.com or dejanews
and you'll see how many hate postings there're on Linux newsgroups.
Anyway, there's one way to stop Netscape crashing as often. Do you
download netscape from their ftp server or from your distro? If you
download from netscape, don't use the link from their http pages. They
only have a links to binaries that's linked to libc5 which crashes very
often on my redhat 6.1 box. On their ftp server, there's another
set of binaries linked to glibc2.0 which is much more stable. Try them
out and see which ones are better.
PS. I always turn java off.
To avoid possible BIOS limitations just make a /boot partition which
ends before cylinder 1023.
-Noah
Regarding the posting "Re: Help wanted for a (Cheap) COBOL compiler for
Linux", we offer a product called CobolScript for US$49.95.
CobolScript=99 is a COBOL-like interpreted language with specialized
syntax for file processing, CGI programming, and
internetworking. CobolScript also has a wide range of advanced math and
business functions available to facilitate quick and easy calculating.
See www.cobolscript.com
for more information.
Whoops, a small error in the address. This will work!
This is an email I sent to our local linux users group after a somewhat
tricky setup of a zip drive. You might want to add some of the info here
to the atapi zip drive entry in 2cent tips and tricks.
I have an ATAPI zip on the second IDE interface as the slave device - ie
/dev/hdd.
Oh, and thanks for the tips and tricks article - it was a great help for
most of the job.
Thanks to all those who replied, particulary Derek Clarkson and
George Georgakis - the answer was in the fine detail.
The important points to note that aren't so clear from the HOW-TO:
1) Compile in IDE Floppy support in the kernel - there is no need
for scsi emulation unless you want auto-eject support. Also remember to
compile in support for the filesystems you wish to have on your zip
disks.
2) Zip drives actually appear to have two mount points depending on
the history of the zip disk. If the disk has previously been password
protected by Iomega's zip tools it needs to be mounted at /dev/hdd1 (or
what ever the /dev/hd location for your system). Whereas if the drive
was never password protected it gets mounted at /dev/hdd4. This is
where I think I got caught.
3) vfat is the filesystem type, but msdos and auto will work fine as
long as you get the mount point right.
4) ext2 (ie Linux) formatted disks mount at /dev/hdd ie without the
extra number - whether the disk has been password protected before or
not.
5) Formatting a disk from vfat to ext2 and back to vfat does not
clear the previous password protection stuff - interesting huh!
Hi Dave,
You seem to have installed Linux with your Cd-Rom in working condition
so it must be ok.
Your cdrom has worked in Winxyz, I presume. My advise is first to check
cabeling and jumper setting.
Let's assume you have one hard disk and one cdrom. /dev/hda will be the
device for communicating with your harddisk ( I am leaving out the
numbers to describe which partition, but you get my drift). Now the
question is where did you put your cdrom?
1 In case of: slave on primary IDE controler: it should be /dev/hdb, if
so did you jumper the cdrom accordingly?.
2 In case of master on secondary IDE : it should be /dev/hdc ( you think
it is ) you should check the jumpersetting. In the sloppy DOS/Win world
it will work fine with good or bad jumpersettings. Not so in Linux. You
must be sure that you jumpered it master. If you did there remains one
thing to do ( it worked fine for me) at boot time, type at the LILO
boot: hdc=cdrom The kernel will display at boottime: hdc=cdrom? which
means it will accept your instruction but does not grok the message.
Your cdrom should work after that. This is a so called boot parameter
and can be inserted in de LILO configuration file.
3. In case of slave on 2nd IDE, check jumpersettings. Cdrom should work
in /dev/hdd and you should at boottime instruct the kernel that
hdd=cdrom.
The reason, I think, is that it is logical ( in the Vulcan sense:-) ) to
put the cdrom in the next empty spot: /dev/hdb ( slave on first IDE). It
will probe at boottime the slave on primary IDE and if it detects zilch
it 'knows' there will be no other devices. So no cdrom on master on IDE2
will be detected. There for if you instruct the kernel with: hdc=cdrom
it will respond with, ok I will accept what you said but I think that's
stupid because it's not loggical...:-).
Good luck...
PS. if this does not work you should check your fstab file in /etc
(?)...
groetjes pari@si.han.nl ( Paul).
Manuel & everybody,
There are several well-used channels.
On the Undernet IRC Network, you can get on via us.undernet.org or
eu.undernet.org
On the EfNet Network, try irc.emory.edu
On DalNet try irc.dal.net
Then, when connected, go to the #Linux channel.
Chris
There are a couple of choices. First, there is the ImageMap plug-in for
the Gimp. It wil allow you to define hot spot regions and outputs the HTML
tags for the image map. Another option is MapEdit, from Thomas Boutell. It does pretty much the
same thing the first option does, but with a different interface.
/www.boutell.com/mapedit/
Hope that helps.
I have a 690c and encountered the same problem (printing from KDevelop
using enscript), that following the text a solid black line was printed.
After much trial and error I found using the cdj550 driver solved the
problem
and still allowed me to print in colour.
In /usr/local/bin/psjetfilter: In the FAQ you say that PDF is only visible by a custom viewer.
Actually gv and xpdf both can display PDF files. Also, if you do the
Netscape "Print to file....", and get a postscript file, using ps2pdf in
the ghost(script/view?) package then you can get PDF files.
Tips in the following section are answers to questions printed in the Mail
Bag column of previous issues.
ANSWER: Telnet trouble
Sat, 25 Sep 1999 01:28:37 -0700
From: Jim Dennis <jimd@starshine.org>
telnet stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd in.telnetd
... to look more like:
telnet stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/in.telnetd in.telnetd
ANSWER: Why should I care?
Sat, 25 Sep 1999 07:34:24 -0400
From: Rick Smith <rsmith13@tampabay.rr.com>
Sir,
Since my previous letter about Dalnet providers trying to connect to my
Linux box via telnet port 23, I have found out that they are also trying
port 1080. I have instigated a policy of dropping all incoming
connections via a command run by host.deny:
/sbin/ipfwadm -I -i deny -S %a
I hate to do this to my niece, but I don't know of any alternative until
these dalnet jerks stop this intrusive practice.
Anyway, my niece has moved to other irc providers that don't
do this kind of thing.
ANSWER: Compiling network driver
Sun, 26 Sep 1999 14:01:58 +0200 (CEST)
From: Roland <rsmith@xs4all.nl>
ANSWER: How to prevent remote logins as root
Sun, 26 Sep 1999 14:17:48 +0200 (CEST)
From: Roland <rsmith@xs4all.nl>
-:root:ALL EXCEPT LOCAL
For security reasons, I would like to make it impossible for anyone
logging in remotely (via telnet etc.) to log in as root, but so far
haven't been able to figure out how to do that. Any suggestions?
tty1
tty2
tty3
tty4
tty5
tty6
ttyS0
ttyS1
ttyp0
ttyp1
Ian
[Jeremy Johnstone <
wizdem25@hotmail.com> and
Stephen Crane <scrane@flexicom.com>
also sent in the same suggestion. -Ed.]
ANSWER: Re: reply to Linux on a laptop
Sat, 2 Oct 1999 16:42:12 -0600 (MDT)
From: Michal Jaegermann <michal@ellpspace.math.ualberta.ca>
You bet there's a solution. It's not perfect (yet) but it works well
until XFree86 gets a new server out there. The solution is to use the
Frame Buffer server. Details are here: www.0wned.org/~cain/ragefury.htm
Other than that, the only solution available is to purchase a commercial
X server.
www.fachschaften.uni-bielefeld.de/physik/leute/marc/X/
ANSWER: Shell programming
Sun, 26 Sep 1999 14:23:41 +0200 (CEST)
From: Roland <rsmith@xs4all.nl>
ANSWER: Internet connection problem
Sun, 26 Sep 1999 14:35:48 +0200 (CEST)
From: Roland <rsmith@xs4all.nl>
# client server secret IP addresses
rsmith * foobar
ANSWER: Run-time error on cplusplus programme
Sun, 26 Sep 1999 14:45:31 +0200 (CEST)
From: Roland <rsmith@xs4all.nl>
ANSWER: Making Linux talk to an NT network
Sun, 26 Sep 1999 15:08:26 +0200 (CEST)
From: Roland <rsmith@xs4all.nl>
ANSWER: Preventing unwanted telnet access
Sun, 26 Sep 1999 09:41:10 -0400 (EDT)
From: Robert Tennent <rdt@cs.queensu.ca>
ANSWER: Maximal mount reached; check forced
Mon, 27 Sep 1999 00:35:03 -0400
From: Ted <tytso@mit.edu>
We call that "losing the lottery." It always seems to
happen when you're in a hurry to get the system back up and
running.
If you want to live dangerously you can change the
the maximal mount count value on a filesystem
using the 'tune2fs' command's -c option. You can also
manually set the mount value using the -C (upper case)
option. You can see the current values using a command
like:
tune2fs -l /dev/hda1
tune2fs -c 100 -i 3m /dev/hda1
As far as I know there is no way in which this
volume label is currently used. It seems to be a
wholly optional feature; I guess we can use these
to keep track of our removable media or something.
LABEL=temp /tmp ext2 defaults 1 2
UUID=3a30d6b4-08a5-11d3-91c3-e1fc5550af17 /usr ext2 defaults 1 2
ANSWER: Riva TNT 2
Mon, 27 Sep 1999 18:01:07 +0200
From: Peter "Blacky" Van Rompaey <peter.van.rompaey@xylos.com>
ANSWER: Netscape and Java
Fri, 24 Sep 1999 19:59:51 -0500
From: Aaron Douglass Miller <amiller3@nd.edu>
Edit the file: /etc/X11/fs/config
change this:
catalogue = /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/misc:unscaled,
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/75dpi:unscaled,
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/100dpi:unscaled,
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/misc,
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/Type1,
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/Speedo
to this:
catalogue = /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/misc:unscaled,
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/75dpi:unscaled,
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/100dpi:unscaled,
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/misc,
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/Type1,
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/Speedo,
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/75dpi
And then restart the font server with this command:
/etc/rc.d/init.d/xfs restart
From: Larry Settle <lsettle@mail.com>
I am running Netscape Comm 4.51 on Red Hat Linux 6.0.
It crashes invariably if I load a site with any Java applet etc.
Is there something I am missing or is this a known bug?
execute: chkfontpath --list
If "/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/75dpi" is not listed
execute: chkfontpath --add /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/75dpi
From: Kevin Brammer <kncbram@hawaii.rr.com>
chkfontpath --add /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/75dpi
From: Tobor <sc.wong@ieee.org>
ANSWER: Installing Linux on large drives
Wed, 29 Sep 1999 19:02:52 -0400
From: Noah White <noah@silverbacktech.com>
ANSWER: Reading Linux partitions from NT/95
Tue, 05 Oct 1999 08:49:49 +0200
From: Gwenael Lambrouin <glambrouin@csi.com>
uranus.it.swin.edu.au/~jn/linux/explore2fs.htm
ANSWER: COBOL compiler
Wed, 06 Oct 1999 12:36:17 -0400
From: Matthew Dean <dean@deskware.com>
ANSWER: Mounting a zip disk
Mon, 11 Oct 1999 13:38:46 +1000 (EST)
From: Richard Wraith <rgw@trinity.unimelb.edu.au>
Date: Mon, 11 Oct 1999 13:25:21 +1000 (EST)
From: Richard Wraith
To: Linux Users of Victoria <luv@luv.asn.au>
Subject: Re: Mounting a zip disk
ANSWER: CDROM is not a block device
Wed, 13 Oct 1999 16:34:27 +1000
From: Edwin Rikken <Edwin.Rikken@si.han.nl>
ANSWER: Compiling IRC
Mon, 18 Oct 1999 23:07:57 +0200
From: Scott Swafford <320053139930-0001@t-online.de>
I noticed your article in the Gazette about problems
compiling IRC, and while I haven't done it in Linux, I compiled IRC and
run it on my site (http://www.pfpconsortium.org). I did it under Solaris
2.7 (Sparc HW), so I'm not sure how 'portable' will be my help, but I'm
willing to try.
Could you please send me information on what error
messages you were getting when trying to compile, your compiler (gcc, cc,
etc) and platform ? I noticed a few tweaks during the configuration process,
and a few library files needed during the compile, but other than that
it was straight forward (the hard part was getting the executable to run
with the right arguments, and setting up the ircd.conf file correctly,
if I remember correctly).
Anyway, send your details and I'll try to take a
look.
Cheers,
Scott Swafford
ANSWER: Chat server
Sun, 24 Oct 1999 15:11:45 -0400
From: Chris Campbell <campbelc@infi.net>
ANSWER: Imagemap
Wed, 27 Oct 1999 11:07:38 -0600 (MDT)
From: Michael J. Hammel <mjhammel@graphics-muse.org>
In the need to define hotspots on some images in HTML documents, I found
a total lack of programs for Linux that enable you to accomplish this
task. Does somebody know what I'm searching for?
ANSWER: Printing lines of black
Wed, 27 Oct 1999 11:07:38 -0600 (MDT)
From: Michael <michael@cimmj.freeserve.co.uk>
/usr/bin/gs -q -dSAFER -dNOPAUSE -sDEVICE=cdj550 -sOutputFile=- -
ANSWER: FAQ and printing...
Thu, 30 Sep 1999 16:19:30 +1000
From: Mark Kuchel <m.kuchel@ugrad.unimelb.edu.au>
Subject: FAQ and printing...
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Copyright © 1999, Specialized Systems Consultants, Inc.
Published in Issue 47 of Linux Gazette, November 1999