... Hash: SHA1 ... This smells like a firewall issue. Did you punch a hole in that machine's firewall for others on your LAN to access its UDP and TCP port 53?...
... Hash: SHA1 ... Being a moderator yourself, you could do it - but I'll go ahead and do it for you because you're forgetting things in your old age :) - -- ...
** Moderator note: top-posting and absence of trimming corrected. ** Please do so yourself in future. ... when I do a $> netstat -an | grep "LISTEN " I get: ...
... Hash: SHA1 ... Actually, it is your server's IP address. You should know that 127.0.0.0/8 is localhost, or "me". Anyway, this shows that your server is...
Hi, Could some one please shed me light on which could be the best linux os distro to be installed on a thinkpad T61 laptop with a Win-XP as dual boot. Are...
Introduction In this project, we will design a programming solution to the bounded-buffer problem using the producer and consumer processes shown in Figure...
... Hash: SHA1 ... That's not what this group is for. - -- G. Stewart - grs.ygroups@... Mary had a little lamb which walked into a pylon Ten thousand...
... Hash: SHA1 ... Ok, I finished the whole project, and everything works fine. I posted the solution on-line at: http://www.doyourownhomework.com - -- -...
ok... so, I recently found out that only root user can change ownership of files. Well! I vaguely remember that the owner of a file used to be able to change...
... I just tried it on FreeBSD and no go. I couldn't change a file that user scottro owns to another user. -- Scott Robbins PGP keyID EB3467D6 ( 1B48 077D...
... Ok, I know that Yahoo mail often doesn't quote correctly, but in this case, it was Robert rather than Ajay who posted that answer. The thing is, it wasn't...
... Hash: SHA1 ... Ahh--I thought you knew that when you cited it, it seems to be filled with links to enable folks to errm, do their own homework. - -- Scott...
... of time. ... Well, yes, thats true. One (the non-root one) cannot chown files. I am wondering if we ever were able to chown... Or more specifically: When...
... I'm not sure. Usually, when I would run it, it was as root or with sudo, giving permissions to me (the user.) It makes sense that it would be, in a way....
... I couldn't figure that one out...oh well. -- All the Best & 73's Dale Miller, KC2CBD Tennessee Ham Operator since 1997 Member of YahooPipesmokers and ASP...
we have a new mail server using linux and postfix , this machine is connected to Internet and iam thinking of connecting the second network card to the local...
Mohamed Ali
mohamed.aly.mohamed@...
Dec 3, 2008 2:25 am
54394
... point. ... question, ... or you ... guys im 30 im not in college anymore and i dont have homworks :) the thing is im learning linux on the internet and im...
... Yes. The owner could "give away" ownership to another user. This goes back a l-o-n-g time ago and is sort-of verified in the second sentence here: ...
... Yes, it does make sense to do it this way. But if someone would have asked me this yesterday, I would have sworn that a regular user can chown. Somehow, I...
... A user could and still can chown a file to another user on some OSs as I responded just prior to the above post. I've been using UNIX since literally day 1...
... Yes, those "some OSs" that start with a W don't really matter (at least here). If you are on an old-old-old system, and remember this, please do try it out...