|   I wish I was a Linux networking guru.     Posted: 21 Apr 2004 02:28 AM PDT Rick wrote:
 
 (1) Have you the correct DNS entries in /etc/resolv.conf ?
 (2) Have you the correct choices in Mozilla=>Edit=>Preferences
 under Advanced=>Proxies ?
 It probably should be "Connect directly to internet".
 (3) What does "traceroute www.google.com" say?
 
 --
 Timothy Murphy
 e-mail (<80k only): tim /at/ birdsnest.maths.tcd.ie
 tel: +353-86-2336090, +353-1-2842366
 s-mail: School of Mathematics, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland
 
 | 
    |   swap drive problems on Mandrake 7.0     Posted: 20 Apr 2004 11:43 AM PDT mjt <ru> wrote:
 
 
 It shows nothing, but in fdisk it looks to be there :
 
 /dev/hda6          3635      3649    120456   82  Linux swap
 
 but swapon returns
 
 swapon: /dev/hda6: Invalid argument
 
 --
 Cliff Stamp
 mun.ca             http://www.physics.mun.ca/~sstamp/
 
 The one unforgivable sin, the offence against one's own integrity,
 is to accept anything at all simply on authority -- Maureen Johnson Long
 
 Anyone can hold the helm when the sea is calm.   -- Publilius Syrus
 
 | 
    |   ECS Group K7SOM+ Motherboard Woes     Posted: 19 Apr 2004 05:52 PM PDT In <comp.os.linux.setup> geolaw <spamnet> wrote: 
 It seems that it's always either RAM or power supply. :-)  Can you post
 output of
 lspci
 lsmod
 cat /proc/cpuinfo
 cat /proc/interrupts
 for the benefit of others?
 
 --
 William Park, Open Geometry Consulting, <ca>
 Linux solution/training/migration, Thin-client
 
 | 
    |   Secure Unix permissions for an Apache website developer     Posted: 19 Apr 2004 09:26 AM PDT James Schnack wrote:..
 
 Good call; don't give any privileges that they don't need.
 
 
 Well, they don't have to be owned by root.  Make them owned by the web
 developer's user.  Or create a group of "webdevelopers" and make your
 developer part of that group with write permissions to the htdocs directory.
 
 Just do not make them owned by the user that the Apache server is
 running as.
 
 
 
 
 Why include root?  All you need to do is create the webadmin group and
 add your web developer(s) to this group.  Just remember to enable the
 write permissions on the required directories.
 
 
 
 WWJD?  JWRTFM
 Rot13 for email address:  yvfgf @ ehqa.pbz
 
 | 
    |   Dual processing and MANDRAKE 10.0     Posted: 19 Apr 2004 08:00 AM PDT (follow up set to alt.os.linux.mandrake as this is really a Mandrakeconfig question)
 
 On Mon, 19 Apr 2004 18:10:50 +0000, nick wrote:
 
 Actually, since the OP has dual Xeon processors, /proc/cpuinfo should list
 4 CPUs as a result of the Intel HyperThreading cores on the Xeon and P4HT
 chips. That is, of course, assuming that he booted with an SMP enabled
 kernel.
 
 - Rob
 
 --
 (to email me, remove "warez.")
 
 
 | 
    |   Problems With Accton EN 2242 Serice MiniPCI Fast Ethernet Adapter - Mandrake 10.0 Community Beta     Posted: 19 Apr 2004 07:37 AM PDT "Woohoo" <syol.com> wrote in message news:...
 Windows
 connection.
 works
 and
 
 
 
 | 
    |   source for OLD Redhat CDs ?     Posted: 18 Apr 2004 01:45 PM PDT In article <0.0.1>,Lenard <0.0.1> writes:
 
 Try posting information on the programs you want to use. Chances are they
 can be made to work in more recent distributions. For instance, if they're
 old binary-only programs, they might just need libc5 libraries; or perhaps
 a simple code patch will get open source programs to compile on more
 recent distributions.
 
 
 I wrote a Web page at that time describing how to build a Joliet CD-R from
 the raw files, before image files became common. It's still available
 online, although I've not updated it in ages:
 
 http://www.rodsbooks.com/rhjol/index.html
 
 --
 Rod Smith, com
 http://www.rodsbooks.com
 Author of books on Linux, FreeBSD, and networking
 
 | 
    |   Why sometimes my ADSL sets to ppp1 instead of ppp0?     Posted: 18 Apr 2004 12:36 PM PDT joseph philip wrote:
 Thanks Bill and Joseph.
 I'll sure try to follow your insight.
 
 Michael Badt
 
 
 | 
    |   updatedb runs automatically, why?     Posted: 18 Apr 2004 12:52 AM PDT -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----Hash: SHA1
 NotDashEscaped: You need GnuPG to verify this message
 
 Jean-David Beyer <com> wrote:
 [..]
 
 
 Yep, that's what I run too, did upgrade to kernel 2.6.5, upgraded
 X to 4.0.4, mistakenly, but it runs fine. Upgraded to lvm2, some
 trouble with the new device-mapper, Updated a few other things,
 iostat stopped working with 2.6, upgrading the package to
 5.0.3 resolved the issue. xosview stopped working completely,
 found a patched rpm, which works 95%.
 
 Mentioned that recompiling packages for athlon, speeds up things
 tremendously, Ie. awk about 5x!
 
 The only issue remaining is PC-Speaker isn't working anymore.
 ;)
 
 --
 Michael Heiming (GPG-Key ID: 0xEDD27B94)
 
 Remove +SIGNS and www. if you expect an answer, sorry for
 inconvenience, but I get tons of spam.
 -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
 Version: GnuPG v1.2.1 (GNU/Linux)
 
 iD8DBQFAhFlmAkPEju3Se5QRArMWAJ4nmhml8mp63YZXosIkeR  ZcAMUCYACdEiGp
 3t2qZ85og1lVyqMCMAcPotQ=
 =MXGu
 -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
 
 | 
    |   need small Linux for laptop     Posted: 17 Apr 2004 11:13 PM PDT stewart allen wrote:
 
 .... does it have a bootable CD drive? if so, try
 on of the run-from-cd distros, such as knoppix
 ..
 --
 <<   http://michaeljtobler.homelinux.com/   >>
 If a camel is a horse designed by a committee, then a
 consensus forecast is a camel's behind. - Edgar R. Fiedler
 
 
 | 
    |   Mandrake 9.2 connecting to the internet     Posted: 17 Apr 2004 01:30 PM PDT On Sat, 17 Apr 2004 21:30:35 +0100, Robert Cook wrote:
 
 
 Looks like a dns prob. In kppp setup, there is a dns setting, make sure
 its set to automatic.
 
 HTH
 
 Dave
 --
 Linux,  breaking the pain of Windows
 
 
 | 
    |   ppp0 doesn't exist     Posted: 17 Apr 2004 11:49 AM PDT No idea what these sentences mean. Far to many ambiguous referents.Samething, it, it, it, something, it, them.
 None of those have anything that they refer to .
 
 
 Same thing as to  My Linux machine says that the it can't find the ppp make
 sure that it is installed. but I do see it in the root/etc area and the ppp0
 is when you make your network.  under drake config you will find something
 dealing with ppp0 ppp1 etc.  but according to my Linux it could not find the
 ppp daemon.
 
 
 
 | 
    |   How to PostMortem?     Posted: 16 Apr 2004 08:03 PM PDT If your three UPSes have serious surge protectors, then youcan provide the numerical specifications that describe how
 well they perform for each type of surge.  I keep asking for
 and no one has ever been able to provide specs to prove this
 protection.  Furthermore how does that UPS earth the typically
 destructive transient when it is, virtually, not connected to
 earth.
 
 You are confusing safety ground with earthing.  To be
 effective, the UPS must make a less than 10 foot connection to
 EARTH ground.  That means UPS must be part of or at breaker
 box.  Building wide UPSes are effective because a short earth
 ground is part of the installation. But plug-in UPSes are not
 located and connected less than 10 foot from earth ground.
 Earth ground - not safety ground - is essential for effective
 protection.  That fault light reported a safety problem - and
 could never report the existence of earth ground.  No earth
 ground means no effective protection.
 
 Your description of a green wire connection back to breaker
 box is an earthing path?  But if that green wire does carry
 the destructive 'direct strike' surge, then green wire only
 induces that transient on all other adjacent wires.  Now we
 have additional induced transients throughout the building as
 well as the direct strike.  Not only must the connection from
 each utility wire to earth ground be less than 10 feet.  It
 must also have no sharp bends, no splices, and not be bundled
 with other non-earthing wires. Destructive transient must be
 dumped into earth before that transient can enter a building.
 Well proven concept from before WWII. Green wire ground
 violates all three criteria for effective protection.
 
 This problem with a green wire safety ground is why your UPS
 manufacture avoids the entire discussion.  Notice that
 discussion about earthing never comes from the manufacture of
 ineffective protectors.  But real world (serious)
 manufacturers discuss earthing extensively:
 http://www.polyphaser.com/ppc_technical.asp
 http://www.polyphaser.com/ppc_pen_home.asp
 
 Does not matter if you brother-in-law had two wire
 receptacles upgrades to three wire (had safety grounds
 installed).  That rewiring was essential to human safety and
 did nothing for surge protection.  Fault light was only
 reporting a human safety problem and could never report a
 missing earth ground.  Again and so important - the less than
 10 foot connection.  That distance to earth is critical.
 
 Running a dedicated circuit to computers is nice.  But it
 does not do anything worthwhile for noise or transient
 protection - from a computer's perspective.  Nothing in the
 house creates noise or transients that adversely effect a
 computer.  Computer power supplies are some of the most
 resilient devices in the house.   So resilient that this UPS
 creates 120 VAC in battery backup mode by outputting two 200
 volt square waves with a 280 volt spike between those 200 volt
 waves.  That so dirty electricity is, to a computer, 120 VAC.
 UPSes can output electricity that dirty because computer power
 supplies are (must be) that resilient.  Worry more about the
 power supply for furnace operation or bathroom GFCIs.  They
 may be more at risk.
 
 Again, does not matter whether a brother-in-law had his
 house rewired.  Those receptacles are safety ground - not
 earth ground.  Rewiring his house does not solve a surge
 protection problem.  These citations have nothing to do with
 household wiring and yet define the primary protector for a
 home:
 http://www.tvtower.com/fpl.html
 http://www.tvtower.com/grounding_and_bonding.html
 
 
 These pictures may be especially important to you (if I have
 your location correct) because your electric company - now
 called FirstEnergy who also created the NE blackout -  may be
 same that also created blackouts in Seaside Heights last 4
 July.  Their top management is nothing but bean counters who
 cost control by letting the essential connections (see those
 pictures) fail.  Many Ocean County residents were electrically
 shocked in their swimming pools for same reasons.  Again,
 these pictures have nothing to do with receptacle ground
 wires.  They do involve household's primary protector
 circuits.
 
 Those pictures affect the residence's primary surge
 protector.  Second protector is called 'whole house' -
 typically located in breaker box and less than 10 foot from
 central earth ground.  Available for may $1 per protected
 appliance (verse how much for ineffective plug-in
 protectors?).  Protector inside UPS is not considered because
 it does not even claim to protect from the typically
 destructive transient (again - just read their numerical
 spec).  It has no less than 10 foot connection to single point
 earth ground.
 
 An example of protection cited by an APC product:
 SURGE PROTECTION AND FILTERING
 ....
 Normal mode clamping response time        0 ns, instantaneous
 Normal mode surge voltage let through <5% of test peak voltage
 when subjected to IEEE 587 Cat. A            6kVA test
 Normal mode noise suppression          Full time EMI/RFI
 filtering
 Modem/10Base-T/100Base-Tx network cable port single line
 (2 wire, RJ11) or network (UTP, RJ45) compatible jacks
 
 Where is the common mode protection?  It is not even
 claimed.
 
 Your phone line and cable also have effective protection
 installed, free, by the utility - if each is properly
 installed 'less than 10 foot' to a single point ground.
 Again, 'whole house' protectors are so effective that your
 telco already installs effective protector inside the premise
 interface box (NID) and makes the so important, 'less than 10
 foot' connection to same earth ground.   Cable needs no
 protector since earthing connection is made (as even required
 by National Electrical Code) without protector.  What did the
 APC do?  Nothing.  Protectors are only as effective as its
 earth ground - which UPS manufacturer just forget to mention -
 even in the above numerical spec.
 
 Don't fall for the myth that a plug-in UPS provides
 excellent protection.  It cannot. Again, look at the numerical
 specification.  It does not even make that claim.
 
 So what is that surge protector inside a UPS?  Same circuit
 found in power strip surge protectors.  That's it.  Plug-in
 UPS provides same protector circuit found in power strip
 protectors.  Nothing more.  And much less when there is no
 'less than 10 foot' connection to earth ground.
 
 If your power supply is inferior, then why spend big bucks
 on a UPS?  An inferior supply may also damage other computer
 components since essential functions are missing.  Functions
 that were defacto standard 30 years ago and specifically
 demanded in Intel specs.  Functions that a UPS does not even
 provide, but are necessary for a computer.  Before even
 considering a UPS, one must first use an acceptable power
 supply.   That means either a brand name computer or the clone
 assembler must have a long list of specification from the
 power supply manufacturer.  UPS cannot compensate for these
 missing and essential power supply functions.
 
 Obviously, this is still well beyond the OP's problem.  Of
 those five basic power problems - blackouts, brownouts, noise,
 harmonics, and surges - the plug-in UPS really only claims to
 address the first two.  Yes, stepping up and down the
 transformer does put less strain on the battery and does
 provide supplementary voltage adjustments to a power supply.
 Nice.  But the OP must get basic, essential tools to first
 provide basic facts - to get numbers to learn where his
 failure is.  When he provides facts, only then can we even
 discuss power supply as reason for his problem.  Procedures to
 diagnosis his failure provided in an earlier post.
 
 
 Jean-David Beyer wrote:
 
 | 
    |   FSF filesystem ?     Posted: 15 Apr 2004 04:19 AM PDT > > I just started to try and install Gentoo and ran into a snag. Yup.
 I solved it (Sorry, I sent the 1st post from my wife's 'puter).
 
 The disk was enabled with Microsoft 'logical partition' manager, so it wasn't seen properly by
 fdisk, qtparted or any other linux tool I tried. I don't know why it was like that.
 I repartitionned it, reformated the ntfs part in Windows and did the cfdisk on the rest.
 Everything is fine. Except that I'm already out of space in /usr. Damn.
 --
 Guillaume Dargaud
 http://www.gdargaud.net/
 "On New Year's Day, I made a resolution to live every day like it was my last. It worked well,
 until I realized that I was flat broke and the owner of 253 pre-paid funeral plans."    - Kevin
 Kee.
 
 
 |