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I'm trying to use my iBook running debian as a boot server to install NetBSD onto an SGI Indy. Doing this requires the debian server to run bootpd and tftpd. I've installed both and updated inetd.conf accordingly. Bootp is running fine, but tftpd wont start. I've looked through my logs and I haven't been able to find the source of the problem. What could be preventing tftpd from starting?
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# ¿ Mar 25, 2007 15:20 |
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# ¿ May 2, 2024 22:42 |
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What is the best email server to use for ~5-10 users on a CentOS vm instance? Bonus points for one that can be configured in under 30 minutes after 3-4 beers
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# ¿ Jul 25, 2015 00:46 |
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Thanks, the post fix mouse is cool I'll try to use it. I just switched from a apisnetworks developer account to a linode-cheapest-node account, and welp I can run my java apps now, but i sure am having to do a lot more linux janitoring!
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# ¿ Jul 25, 2015 02:05 |
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I don't mind janitoring, I'm just really out of practice. I can send mail to <username>@<host>.<tld>, but mail from that account shows up as <username>@<host>.members.linode.com. I just now set the reverse DNS to point to <host>.<tld>. I am holding on to my butt and praying' like hell that this will fix it
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# ¿ Jul 25, 2015 05:04 |
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There Will Be Penalty posted:In /etc/postfix/main.cf you need to set mydomain (or myorigin in certain circumstances). Thanks!! That helped. I'm now my domain is showing up as "From: <user>@<host>.members.linode.com via <host>.<tld>". The 'via' wasn't there before. So i'm sniffing around setting up the SPF. The rabbit hole continues!
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# ¿ Jul 25, 2015 05:54 |
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With the thread's help, I was able to get the email to show up from the correct domain name. I did a number of things, I forgot what some of the things were, other things I blindly did without knowing exactly what they meant. In short, I shouldn't be administering a linux, but this is a hobby thing and the 5-10 users are all me, so it is good enough. I'll look into tying my domain into gmail, it'd be nice to not have to worry about it breaking or getting put on an RBL me-using-linux.gif
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# ¿ Jul 25, 2015 20:54 |
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The "buy" vs. "make" decision is difficult. For personal projects I tend to go for "make" because its cheaper, and I wind up learning something new. On the other hand, I spend more time doing stuff to support the activity I'm interested in rather than the activity itself. I go to change a light bulb but wind up fixing the car. Anyways, I appreciate the help and the advice.
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# ¿ Jul 26, 2015 00:46 |
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What's the right way to route :80 traffic to :8080? I'm flooded with ways to do this, and unable to determine what the 'right' way is on CentOS w/ systemd. Seems like the way is to do it with iptables, right?
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# ¿ Aug 13, 2015 15:33 |
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GregNorc posted:Anyone know of an open source graphing calc for Linux? (With a GUI.) I really doubt there is a linux app that meets the simplicity and feature-forfeature functionality of a TI-83. Teachers know TI calcs well and are able to help students learn how to use them. Is training a consideration? If you're hard up for giving a classroom full of kids a graphing thing with no budget for calcs, you could build a front end for python+matplotlib (or something else idk) that takes equations and returns results and displays plots. There are things like DrRacket which has a plotting package. If you wrote up a tutorial that simplifies things, I imagine a middle schooler could come to grips with it. http://docs.racket-lang.org/plot/intro.html
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# ¿ Aug 22, 2015 18:21 |
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Maybe you could run the dev kit with wine, it can emulate a TI-83 https://education.ti.com/en/us/software/details/en/7EDBCE1FA37F4906B774BE9C71FEB076/swti83-84plussdk
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# ¿ Aug 22, 2015 18:24 |
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I'm having trouble with java+serial+linux. I see the serial adapter as /dev/ttyUSB0, which belongs to the 'dialout' group. I added my user account to the 'dialout' group, and can talk to the serial port through programs like picocom. However, talking to the port through java has a problem. I get this error, quote:�.�[ testRead() Lock file failed which is expected given the permissions of /var/lock/ are this, quote:0 drwxr-xr-x. 7 root root 160 Jan 12 09:56 lock I know better than to just start changing perms and ownership of directories like this one, but I see two options: change the group of /var/lock to 'lock', then add the user to the lock group, -or- use another java library.
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# ¿ Jan 12, 2016 18:06 |
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Docjowles posted:Is the location that the Java app uses for its lockfile configurable? You could create /var/lock/whatever/ owned by the user/group that this application runs under and use that. It is indeed, through a #define in the C source. That may be an acceptable solution. Thanks! https://github.com/NeuronRobotics/nrjavaserial/blob/86b44454cebc7ba29c2032e904cfbe4eb098b841/src/main/c/include/SerialImp.h#L370-L372
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# ¿ Jan 12, 2016 18:40 |
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I have been recommending Vagrant (https://www.vagrantup.com) to people wanting to use linux for a specific one-off purpose, or learning. Its crazy easy to use, but someone new to Linux or unfamiliar with VMs would never know how to find it.
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# ¿ Feb 11, 2016 03:46 |
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# ¿ May 2, 2024 22:42 |
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Jerry Bindle posted:I'm trying to use my iBook running debian as a boot server to install NetBSD onto an SGI Indy. Doing this requires the debian server to run bootpd and tftpd. I've installed both and updated inetd.conf accordingly. Bootp is running fine, but tftpd wont start. I've looked through my logs and I haven't been able to find the source of the problem. I can't believe I was ever wasting my time like this. jfc.
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# ¿ Jan 23, 2021 23:57 |