|
|
...making Linux just a little more fun! TalkbackTalkbackTalkback:124/smith.html (10)Talkback:124/smith.html (11) Talkback:124/smith.html (12) Talkback:126/howell.html (3) Talkback:128/adam.html Talkback:128/ramanathan.html Talkback:129/okopnik1.html Talkback:130/tag.html Talkback:130/neville.html Talkback:124/smith.html (10)[ In reference to Build a Six-headed, Six-user Linux System in LG#124 ] Amber Sanford (amber at modernspaces.com)
Non-linux machines: any recommendations for this set-up though running on Windows XP? [Ben] - You bet: switch to Linux. :)
Talkback:124/smith.html (11)[ In reference to Build a Six-headed, Six-user Linux System in LG#124 ] José Antonio (jap1968 at yahoo.es)
Hi there, I would like to invite you to have a look to another tutorial to create a multihead computer (two seats). In this case, the base distribution has been Ubuntu. The hardware used is a dual head nVidia AGP card. You can find the article here: http://netpatia.blogspot.com/2006/09/multiseat-computer-with-ubuntu.html Regards, José Antonio [Ben] - That's a good article, José - thank you. I'm going to CC the author of the piece you're responding to; perhaps you two can discuss ways in which you can help each other, or share the knowledge you've gained in the process of doing these projects. Talkback:124/smith.html (12)[ In reference to Build a Six-headed, Six-user Linux System in LG#124 ] tkalenko_ma (tkalenko_ma at sibadi.org)
Hello Comrad, I have read your article about 6-user system. How possible configuring similar system on two doubleheaded PCI-E cards (SLI motherboards) + one doubleheaded PCI card? Best regards, Maxim, Russian Federation [Ben] - (Comment for Mike Orr: Oh boy! This is your big chance to practice some of your "Russian humor" on me! Go ahead, I'm ready. :) > I have read your article about 6-user system. > How possible configuring similar system on two doubleheaded PCI-E cards > (SLI motherboards) + one doubleheaded PCI card? [BobS] - I'm sorry that I can not give you any useful advice in setting up your dual head PCI-E card. Ben is right, the article he references may help. Talkback:126/howell.html (3)[ In reference to From Assembler to COBOL with the Aid of Open Source in LG#126 ] S.K.Goel (skgoel at omlogistics.co.in)
Dear Sir, At present, I am using Microfocus cobol on RHEL-AS-4. I am interested to use open-cobol. Please advise me. [Neil] - My advice is to install it and get stuck in.
Talkback:128/adam.html[ In reference to How Fonts Interact with the X Server and X Clients in LG#128 ] Thomas Adam (thomas.adam22 at gmail.com)
It's always nice when I get indirect feedback. A friend of mine sent me this: http://lwn.net/Articles/189901/ Posted Jul 3, 2006 17:41 UTC (Mon) by subscriber otaylor Probably not news to most LWN readers, but the font article should be ignored: it is describing technologies that are no longer in common use. Goodbye and good riddance to the XLFD (X Logical Font Description). Contemporary applications, toolkits, and desktops use the fontconfig library instead. What I will say to that is it's true in part -- but it's only very recent applications which aren't using the XLFD (that's the long-form font names). Many applications still using XLFD (think xterm, rxvt, etc). I certainly don't agree that the article should be ignored. Talkback:128/ramanathan.html[ In reference to Subversion: Installation, Configuration — Tips and Tricks in LG#128 ] Nathaniel Ye (Nye at airliteplastics.com)
I found the subversion article by Muthaiah is outstanding. It covered topics that the Subversion book did not. I had a scenario (regarding library mismatch) described in the "Post-installation tips" section and have been strugling. Any help will be greatly appreciated. This is my output:
[root at localhost test]# ldd /usr/lib/httpd/modules/mod_dav_svn.so | grep apr
libaprutil-0.so.0 => /usr/lib/libaprutil-0.so.0 (0x00cb2000)
libapr-0.so.0 => /usr/lib/libapr-0.so.0 (0x00man 6a5000)
[root at localhost test]# ldd /usr/sbin/httpd | grep apr
libaprutil-0.so.0 => /usr/lib/libaprutil-0.so.0 (0x002ba000)
libapr-0.so.0 => /usr/lib/libapr-0.so.0 (0x005ca000)
For some reason, these apr libraries point to the older versions (while I have newer version compiled and installed during the Apache 2 installation on Red Hat Linux 4 - by default RH does not have apxs and I could not uninstall the non-conventionally installed Apache. I had to reinstall Linux leaving Apache out) [root at localhost lib]# ls -al libapr* lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 17 Jul 17 10:22 libapr-0.so.0 -> libapr-0.so.0.9.4 -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 139868 May 17 2005 libapr-0.so.0.9.4 lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 21 Jul 17 10:23 libaprutil-0.so.0 -> libaprutil-0.so.0.9.4 -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 83260 Jun 16 2005 libaprutil-0.so.0.9.4 Changing the soft links to point to newer versions would cause Apache not to start. Any suggestions on how to upgrade these apr libraries and force both Apache and Subversion to use them? [Ramanathan] - You should not change the soft links to newer versions.
Talkback:129/okopnik1.html[ In reference to Low-Fat Linux - Now with Less Cruft! in LG#129 ] Mark Baldridge (mbaldrid at us.ibm.com)
With a host of UNIX O/S there are often a lot of admin logs that get kept, and grow until you do something about them. Any of these in Linux? [Ben] - Sure - in '/var/log', just like many other *nixen. Those aren't much of a problem, though: most programs that create logs also create an entry in '/etc/cron.{d,daily,monthly,weekly}' which rotates those logs at that specified interval.
[Faber] - Or, on Red Hat derived boxen, the application puts an entry in /etc/logrotate.d and let's the logrotate daemon do the heavy lifting.
[Ben] - Why, Faber... you've never struck me as a religious type before. Wanna argue about Emacs vs. Vim next? :)
[Faber] - Why bother? Everyone knows that pico rules!
[Kapil] - Actually "nano" is better than "pico" (smaller is better).
[Rick] - Wimp. $ ls -l /etc/alternatives/editor lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 12 2006-03-10 14:28 /etc/alternatives/editor -> /bin/cat [Ben] - Wuss.
[Faber] - I thought this was appropriate (wait for the nag screen to go away) [Ben] - [laugh] Great minds think alike, of course. Two great cartoons... [Kapil] - Quoting Faber Fedor (faber at linuxnj.com):> BTW, I've had the joy recently to work on a Debian box. A non-standard > one at that. Boy, you guys do things weirdly! [Rick] - Maybe some Debian-oriented BOfH is pulling a prank on you? $ ls -l etc/logrotate.d total 13 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 366 2005-01-19 19:32 apache -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 240 2006-01-16 02:15 apache2 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 79 2004-09-28 11:44 aptitude -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 384 2004-12-03 14:25 base-config -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 111 2005-09-26 00:04 dpkg -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 170 2005-01-05 02:07 exim4-base -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1272 2005-01-14 01:23 mailman -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1072 2005-09-29 15:19 mysql-server -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 1020 2005-01-18 14:44 mysql-server.dpkg-old -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 128 2004-11-08 14:18 super -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 134 2004-07-11 21:08 vsftpd $ [Faber] - I'm leaning towards "incompetent"; there are kernels, initrds and log files in /, there's a directory called /images that holds CSS files, etc. [Ben] - It may have started life as a Debian system, but that's not the right description for it any more. I think that somewhat stronger terms are much more applicable. :) Debian follows the FHS these days (http://qa.debian.org/fhs.html), and has for a while now. Talkback:130/tag.html[ In reference to The Monthly Troubleshooter: Installing a Printer in LG#130 ] Steve Brown (steve.stevebrown at gmail.com)
Hi Gang! Another fantastic issue, maintaining this level of excellence must be difficult, but please keep it up. I was just reading the section regarding printers (fantastic idea - disturbing the pool) and the description of the user dragging the My Documents folder to the printer. Made me think of a guy I work with. I have worked with him for four years, we have to use Windows (Blechh) and use Citrix as a rule. I have patiently tried to teach this guy to use cut and paste. For four years. Four LONG years. The other day I sat with him for an hour copying and pasting, from lots of apps into lots of other apps, just so he got the hang of it. He could actually do it in the finish. Friday I caught him. Only one app open (IE) writing stuff down a sheet of paper, he closed IE and opened Word and typed it in. He believes - very strongly, and contrary to the demonstrated evidence - that you can only have one app at a time open at once. I no longer work in the same office as him, and I am sure that has led to an increase in my expected lifespan. My hair has greyed and thinned because of this man, and I should feel resentment, but I just feel pity. I hear you cry "Why do you still help him?" well it's a bit like that tricky puzzle in a text adventure, the one you just can't get past? It just pulls you in, one day it will stick and he will understand. I am not the only one to try, many have failed before me, but I am the most persistent. I spend my days yearning for my linux box. I should get another job. Be well all, Steve. [Ben] - Hi, Steve -
Talkback:130/neville.html[ In reference to DNS techniques in LG#130 ] Blizbor (tb670725 at ima.pl)
There are at least one principal mistake done - in bind you can control caching nameserver. Telling the trueth - problem is in complexity of used tools rather than one is incapable for something. I strongly suggest reedition of this article in context: "how it could be done using bind, and how uisng djb" leaving choice of solution to users. To the author - in the bind manual is a chapter about "view" keyword, I appreciate your work in writing this article - well done about djb, but you missing trueth about bind. In actual form article is unacceptable and should be removed. I wish you Linux Gazette never again put such poor quality material on your pages. Fix this asap - only those doing nothing arent doing mistakes. (This is my personal opinion.) [Thomas] - On 07/09/06, Blizbor <tb670725 at ima.pl> wrote: > I wish you Linux Gazette never again put such poor quality material on > your pages. [Ben] - [ Forwarded to author. ]
[Rick] - Quoting Blizbor (tb670725 at ima.pl): > There are at least one principal mistake done - in bind you can > control caching nameserver. Telling the trueth - problem is in > complexity of used tools rather than one is incapable for something. [Ed] - Rick Moen <rick at linuxmafia.com> wrote: > Quoting Blizbor (tb670725 at ima.pl): > > > There are at least one principal mistake done - in bind you can > > control caching nameserver. Telling the trueth - problem is in > > complexity of used tools rather than one is incapable for something. [Rick] - Quoting ed (ed at s5h.net): > I knew there would be some flack if I did not! I've had this same old > discussion all over the place. The article is in no way about "my NS is > better than your NS", what I wrote is my experience of running a large > ISP's NS, it's what works well for us and our customers. The > introduction was to explain why I wrote it, if nothing else, the various > components helps the reader to understand a little about lookups in the > process. [Blizbor] - Rick Moen wrote: > Quoting Blizbor (tb670725 at ima.pl): > > >> There are at least one principal mistake done - in bind you can >> control caching nameserver. Telling the trueth - problem is in >> complexity of used tools rather than one is incapable for something. >> > > Greetings, Blizbor. I can perhaps comment as the editor who did the > technical edit of Ed Neville's article (whom I am cc'ing). You might > recognise my name from the several footnotes I added. > > On the matter of controlling BIND9's caching nameserver functionality, > please note that Mr Neville correctly and commendably qualified his > statement by saying that open access to caching is a problem of BIND9's > _default installation_. That is absolutely correct as stated, and a > very valuable point that should be heeded by all BIND9 users. Greetings, I'm a bit not precise in saying what I mean. Sometimes what I want to say are a bit unkind. The point of my mail is: nobody on the world is using _default configuration_. Actually I think that default configuration of any network demons should be crippled to the extent they are do start and do extremely limited functionality on the loopback interface. I found referring to default configuration as primary source of principal mistake of the article. It can be done and should be said "it can be, but we will keep focus on how to do that using djbdns because ...". Wait ? I read that article and why exactly it's worth to use DJB ... I still don't know. I must tell it again (emphasize) - from technical and editorial (samples, config quotes, etc) article is good, however mistake on the beginning makes it sounds different. GIGO... [Rick] - Quoting Blizbor (tb670725 at ima.pl): > I'm a bit not precise in saying what I mean. Sometimes what I want to > say are a bit unkind.
|