Search:
Type: Posts; User: Daedrus
Search:
Search took 0.06 seconds.
-
Momentary lapse of reason. I remember I had to change fstab as well.
-
I installed Slackware 11.0 without a hitch on a system using SATA. I chose to you the SATA kernel from the slackware CD and it boots without a problem. I compiled my own kernel after booting using...
-
Notes was bought by IBM from some company years ago. From what I know, they did not get the rights so that they would be able to port the client to Linux. This new client is based on the Eclipse...
-
No one else has started, so I guess I will.
Just moved back to fluxbox after a long time on KDE. It is nice to be back.
February working
-
When RedHat used the rest of the space for / it includes the /home directory. There isn't a separate partition specifically for /home with this setup. So, unless you have some sort of disk quotas...
-
You might want to put a "read list" line in and add the guest account to that. I am reading through the Samba documentation and that is the only thing that pops out so far. If I find more I will...
-
As others have said, there is nothing wrong with this, but I have seen in several security guides that limiting these entries to as few as possible is a good thing. I usually use only 2. One for...
-
Although no physical damage is done, some viruses have been known to overwrite system BIOS or information on hard drive controllers that basically render the hardware unusable unless reprogrammed....
-
I only see two modules loaded for nic cards: 3c59x (3COM card) and eepro100 (Intel EtherExpress 100 card). You are probably correct in assuming that the eepro100 is the correct module since the...
-
First things first, find out what cards you have. Running lsmod when booting to 2.4.31 will give you a list of loaded modules.
-
It would, but if you edit those lines to fit your requirements, basically uncomment what you did have, it might work.
-
Slackware would do what you want, so would many other options. Slackware installs, especially without X, are quick and simple. A few configuration changes and you are up and running. The only...
-
Messy
Clean
Fresh install of Slackware 10.2 w/kde
-
okay, in looking through my conf file and comparing it to yours, it looks like you will want to uncomment a section first to see if you can at least SEE the port from an external source. Look in the...
-
:) okay
nmap -p 631 gateway
now, if it says the port is filtered, then it is most likely blocked by something outside cups. if it shows as closed, then cups most likely is not open to the...
-
Okay, it looks like RedHat firewall is configuring iptables. Since you can't see port 631 it is being blocked of filtered by something. Is the RH Firewall down (guess that it is RedHat Firewall by...
-
There isn't any special IDE controller required. The cage handles the power up and down of the drive. I am pretty sure the some don't support hot swapping, but by now, most probably do support it.
-
Okay, it is going to take me a little bit to got through those, but while I do this, shutdown iptables and make sure so other firewall is loaded (what distro do you have btw?). Some distros have...
-
You can find several types of IDE hotswap cages. When you unlock the cage, it powers down the drive so that you can remove it. We have it working here on a windows machine to transfer ghost images....
-
Yes, but if you can't nmap the port from outside the host, you can't get to it for printing. What are you using for a firewall and can you post the conf files for it and cups?
-
Can you find port 631 on the host system from your desktop using nmap?
-
Check from the system you want to print from and see if you can access http://gateway:631
This at least would be a place to start.
-
oops, sorry. No disrespect meant. Just took it from your sig. I assumed too much. I know you aren't a newbie :D
-
I think Ubuntu has /sbin in the path already considering how it is setup to use sudo instead of su to root.
-
You shouldn't have to su to run the ifconfig command, but you do have to have it in your path. Usually, for a normal user, the /sbin directory is not in the path. To test this, just run...
|
|