... or read the whole thing in one file:
TWDT.html
(This version is mainly for printing; the hyperlinks are not
guaranteed to work.)
Editor-in-Chief: Mike Orr ("Sluggo")
TAG Editors: Heather Stern, Thomas Adam
The Answer Guy: Jim Dennis
Linux Weekend Mechanic: Thomas Adam
News Bytes Editor: Michael Conry
Technical Editor: Ben Okopnik
Contributing Editor: Rick Moen
Sysadmin Gang: T. R. Fullhart (Kayos), Faber Fedor
...making Linux just a little more fun! |
By Ben Okopnik |
Nothing lasts. Favorite toys finally fall apart; old cars, the pride and joy of your high school days (and nights!) rust out, fade away, languish for lack of available parts. Relationships, business and personal, once so bright and exciting, wither like houseplants exposed to the desert sunlight and blow away like tumbleweeds.
During the past month, the Linux Gazette, as we and our readers have known it for a number of years, has come to an end. SSC, the company who had been hosting - and, to some degree, supporting - our efforts since shortly after the inception of the Gazette has decided that it somehow belongs to them, to change, adapt - or to destroy - at their pleasure. We - the people who have volunteered our efforts to write for it, assemble it, produce it, and publish it - disagree... and the wind of the desert howls over all, blowing away what once was, leaving nothing but the pure idea that still lives, independent of hardware, software, and corporate manipulation, and existing only in the minds of those who believe in it.
The smoke of the past rises in the air, dissipates... and is gone. But the spirit of things, if they are worthwhile, endures, and follows the original forms. "The King is dead - long live the King!" Mark Andreessen's Mosaic morphs into Netscape Navigator changes into the Communicator Suite mutates through (and survives!) The AOL Corporate Hellbeast emerges as Mozilla. The Linux Gazette, slated by SSC to slip off into a muddy swamp of CMS, obscurity, and the inevitably short slide into destruction, arises like the Phoenix from its intended pyre - purified, bright, and new.
Our mission, renewed and all the stronger for going through the fire, remains what it has been all along: "making Linux a little more fun." The core format of the Gazette will remain what it has been as well, static (and thus universally accessible and mirror-able) HTML and text and available for reading or download via the Web. (BONUS: For those of you who wish to read the text version on your Palm Pilots, or other handhelds that can read the Palmdoc format, I will be introducing our new PDB version as well.) Obviously, our URL and email addresses will change - we are now located at http://linuxgazette.net instead of the old ".com". The largest changes are going to be under the hood, where DNS, mirroring, site structure, author submission/input/feedback, and The Answer Gang lists live; all of these are intended to improve the process, making it easier for all of us to continue bringing - and hopefully improving - our content for you, our readers.
Welcome to the new Linux Gazette.
Most of the basic features of LG are in place. The following features, however, are changed:
Ben is a Contributing Editor for Linux Gazette and a member of The Answer Gang.
Ben was born in Moscow, Russia in 1962. He became interested in
electricity at age six--promptly demonstrating it by sticking a fork into
a socket and starting a fire--and has been falling down technological mineshafts
ever since. He has been working with computers since the Elder Days, when
they had to be built by soldering parts onto printed circuit boards and
programs had to fit into 4k of memory. He would gladly pay good money to any
psychologist who can cure him of the resulting nightmares.
Ben's subsequent experiences include creating software in nearly a dozen
languages, network and database maintenance during the approach of a hurricane,
and writing articles for publications ranging from sailing magazines to
technological journals. Having recently completed a seven-year
Atlantic/Caribbean cruise under sail, he is currently docked in Baltimore, MD,
where he works as a technical instructor for Sun Microsystems.
Ben has been working with Linux since 1997, and credits it with his complete
loss of interest in waging nuclear warfare on parts of the Pacific Northwest.
...making Linux just a little more fun! |
|
Dear and gentle readers. Those who enjoy finding out what stumps the mighty and shy among the Answer Gang. Children of all ages, ladies and... ahem.
I've just been through the troubleshooting time of my life, trying to learn exactly where all my memory leaks are going. Heck, I've even chased down a few. But what I'd like to know - among you out there who play in somewhat deeper magic than I do - is how you find out what within a kernel is using what memory? I mean, if there aren't many processes running, they don't look like they're using a lot, and I don't have a ramdisk open, how can I tell what's using it up?
Of course I am interested in the answer to this question - and to be a little more specific I'll not that I've spotted ext3fs journals and the USB subsystem leaking so far, mainly by trial and error and science; invoking different things while taking good notes. Yes, I'll be trying some 2.6 kernels - do read a few of the 2c Tips this time around if you're inclined to join me in that - but I just don't think I've found everything.
If anyone would like to write an article on a particular problem, how it stumped you, and how you worked your way past it to learn what really happened under the hood -- I think we'd enjoy reading it. See our see our author submission guidelines for details, and then send mail to articles@linuxgazette.net.
Simply good tips on troubleshooting tricks not found in the average toolbox? Send them to tag@linuxgazette.net. Thanks! -- Heather
Okay, it's been in the Mailbag for 3 months running now, with different voices out there. Obviously there is sincere interest in a Windows Defector column. Now what we need is an author who wants to become its regular columnist, and can keep to a schedule.
Send a note to articles@linuxgazette.net describing your views for the column, including some posible themes for your first two or 3 articles.
Benefits include full access to the snacks in the TAG fridge, some good-natured ribbing, and the respect of a bunch of readers planning their next move in the OS wars.
This is in reply to "Windows Defectors" which was published in issue95 here:
http://www.linuxgazette.com/issue95/lg_mail.html#wanted.1
And I don't want Linux to look like Windows. The advantage of a GUI is that it visually enumerates the possibilities. That's a mighty powerful advantage. (Too bad GUIs don't have anything else going for them.)
[Ben] Cute as that statement may be - and I'm definitely a CLI type of guy by preference, so it strikes a chord - it's inaccurate. The largest positive effect of GUIs, IMO, is their transfer of emphasis from remembering and understanding things (command-line options, program capabilities, etc.) to recognizing them visually. Note that this is not much of a value to me - and doesn't seem to be to you - but the population at large (read "non-technical users") have joyfully fallen at the feet of the Great God GUI and sobbed in relief.
[Jason] Doesn't the above paragraph simply say "GUIs visually enumerate the possiblities"?
I was not kidding when I said "That's a mighty powerful advantage". It is a mighty powerful advantage. I was being a bit sarcastic with the "Too bad GUIs don't have anything else going for them" line, but really, they don't.
I'm still trying to get my ideas about computers sorted out. I've been heavily influence by Chris Crawford's writings. His latest book, "The art of Interactive Design" is, IMHO, very good.
You can read many of his essays on his website, http://www.erasmatazz.com
[Ben] In short, GUIs have made computers usable by the majority - without forcing them to learn anything past a fairly basic interface (with extensions available for programs that require higher complexity), and Xerox PARC and Apple deserve all the recognition and kudos they can handle. Necessarily, there's a tradeoff: really complex (and thus, most interesting) functions that don't fit the model are often discarded. Thus, the dumbing-down of the available software base - at least in the Wind0ws world; thus, the love/hate relationship between us techies (who use computers because of the really interesting stuff at the sharp edges) and GUIs.
Note that I am a big believer in writing to the Lowest Common Denominator: that's how I design interfaces for all the programs I write, at least if they're going out into the world. Where I differ sharply from the average MS-flavored GUI is in what I consider the LCD to be: theirs is set at about the level of the average 5-year-old (as my gf in Baltimore expressed it upon seeing WinXP for the first time, "Fear not, little human; Wind0ws will not harm you!");
[Kapil] I think this sentiment is demeaning to the level of intelligence and more importantly the capacity for learning present within most 5-year olds. In fact the quote you give later applies to children much more than to (most) adults---they will do smarter things if we treat them as if they are smart.
My take on this is that the MS-flavoured GUI is aimed at todays computer illiterate adult who is in addition incapable of responding to such a "smart approach" having been treated like an "idiot" for a long time. (Think management and Parkinson's law).
(All this is based on a very small case study. My daughter at the age of 5 had less resistance to using GNU/Linux that my colleagues!).
[Ben] Good grief, Kapil. Not in the least, certainly not by intention; I'm a big-time fan of kids when it comes to learning ability, and am absolutely awed by their emotional/nuance radar at that age (from the start till a couple of years after, actually.) I don't see how saying that certain material is set at the level of a 5-year-old maps to 5-year-olds being stupid, etc.; I smell an ax being ground. OK, to be fair, I may have hit a hot button - sorry if so - but that's no reason to misconscrew my statement completely out of shape.
[Ben] I demand more intelligence and awareness from my users. "You must be at least this intelligent to use my programs" - nope, I don't mind being an elitist at all. I believe, strongly, that people respond to software at the level at which they've been trained to do so: treat them like they're stupid, and they will be; treat them like they're smart - as I believe my method does - and they will amaze you with just how smart they are.
(Why, yes, I am a fan of Marshall McLuhan. Why do you ask?
The effects of technology do not occur at the level of opinions or concepts, but alter sense ratios or patterns of perception steadily and without any resistance. -- Marshall McLuhan, "Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man"
[Jason] OTOH, I really don't want to have to open a file-manager, browse to the directory I want, select "remove", check "Force" and "Recursive", and then click "OK" when I can just type "rm -rf whatever"
[Ben] <grin> Poor choice of example. Midnight Commander - it may be a text-based GUI, but still a GUI - can do shell-based stuff like that just as quickly or quicker and more intuitively (F8 deletes files or directories - no need to remember "-r" or whatever.) However, in general, I agree with you emphatically: there are tasks best done (or that can only be done) in the shell. If my "Ten Feet Tall and Bullet-proof: Java under Linux" article, I did something rather nasty to all the Wind0ws-based programmers: showed a Perl one-liner that fixed several thousand broken links in about a thousand files (a real situation that I'd dealt with shortly before, BTW.) Try that in a GUI.
[Jason] alias rm='rm -r'
No need to remember F8 or whatever.
[Thomas] Hmm, not a recommended thing to do, as I am sure Jason was well aware. Aliasing command names in that manner to do something potentialy distructive such as a recursive approach (rm -r) is never a Good Thing (tm)
[Jason] Doesn't the above paragraph simply say "GUIs visually enumerate the possiblities"?
[Ben] Err... no. It says, and I quote,
Cute as that statement may be - and I'm definitely a CLI type of guy by preference, so it strikes a chord - it's inaccurate. The largest positive effect of GUIs, IMO, is their transfer of emphasis from remembering and understanding things (command-line options, program capabilities, etc.) to recognizing them visually.
That's completely different from enumeration of possibilities - which, incidentally, are not enumerated in a GUI but presented in menus and/or icons. Unless you're using some special meaning of "enumerate", that is. You're talking solely about visual presentation; I'm talking about the influence it has on the way people use computers. Very different scope.
[Jason]
What a GUI does very nicely, is listing (Like that word better? ) the choices visually for you. You don't have to know ahead of time that there's a "Frob the bits" option for something, there's a nice checkbox right there. No need to lookup --frob in the manpage.
[Ben] Yes, and. The GUI methodology is that the user's world is shrunk down to a small number of choices at all times: "File/Edit/Insert/Tools/Help" or whatever. Click on "File" and you get "New/Open/Save/Save As/Close/Quit", etc. No need to look up the manpage, right (although you can always click "Help", for whatever good that's going to do) - but also no need to memorize the manpage to know which functions are available in that piece of software.
[Thomas] One of the reasons why I migrated from Windows was that this so called "common set" routine whereby each menu had a common set of items actually didn't really exist in the Linux GUI. The diversity that each app had to offer, appealed to me much more.
[Ben] You can always find out with just a couple of clicks, because the world is subdivided into just a few choices. Spell-checking? Sure, that would be under "Tools". Paste an image? "Insert", obviously. Even if you guess wrong, it only takes another click or two to try again.
The point is that someone with no computer skills whatsoever can learn to operate a basic GUI in just a few minutes - and will be able to muddle his way through other GUI-based progs, ones he's had no experience with, on his own because the method of operation is similar as long as the interface is consistent. (The question of whether creating access to something as complex and potentially dangerous as computers for non-technically-sophisticated users will be discussed later in the Philosophy section of this course; bring your own earplugs and set your "adult content" filter on "stun".)
[Thomas] The problem with that is that many users may well rely solely on the use of the GUI, and if the GUI doesn't have the necessary options that the underlying CLI apps do, then you loose some of the functionality inherent with the CLI application.
I suppose it should be obvious, but with the site move we also have new addresses for contact. We hope you will find them easier to use. Thanks for your continued support during our transition, and don't forget: we're <em>Making Linux Just A Little More Fun!</em>
Hints: don't send us HTML, we have scripts to do that. Use a real subject line. Tell us what you tried. Thanks.
If people have any News for the News Bytes editor:
bytes@linuxgazette.net Michael Conry is our current News Bytes editor.
Folks who want to be mirrors or confirm that they are still mirrors should contact:
mirrors@linuxgazette.net Ben Okopnik is our current Mirrors Coordinator.
To keep up on news about mirroring scripts and being a mirror, please subscribe to lg-mirrors:
http://linuxgazette.net/mailman/listinfo/lg-mirrors
...making Linux just a little more fun! |
|
Of course a number change doesn't really mean all that much more than that Linus Torvalds might be trying to push 2.6 out the door a little faster than what happened with 2.4. Also, for what it's worth, Joe Pranevich has just put out a draft version of the Wonderful World of Linux 2.6, posting this to the kernel list:
............... Hello, I've recently put together the first draft of a features document describing the changes in Linux 2.6. (I did similar documents for both Linux 2.2 and Linux 2.4.) It's based almost entirely on BitKeeper changelogs (with clarifying information pulled from the lists and the web), so there is a chance that I misunderstood something or that I missed something else entirely. Please give it a look over and if you see anything that needs a look-over, please let me know. As it stands now, I feel pretty good about how it turned out so I'm finally comfortable mailing what I have around. (There are still a couple areas that need expanding on, I think...) As of right now, you can find the latest versions of the document available online. Text version: http://www.kniggit.net/wwol26.txt Tersely formatted HTML: http://www.kniggit.net/wwol26.html Please let me know what you think. Thanks, Joe Pranevich jpranevich<at>kniggit.net ............... |
You need a new modutils variety entirely for 2.5x, and 2.6 kernels. Under Debian the package name to fetch is called module-init-tools
The upstream source can be gotten from
ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/rusty/modules As LG goes to press the current available is 0.9.15-pre2.
The nice thing is, it doesn't conflict with modutils.
The current version of 2.6 (test 9) fixes some nasty memory leaks in the VFS layer for filesystem management. If you've been experimenting along in the 2.5.x/2.6 series, an upgrade is highly recommended.
In issue 92 Mike Martin asked: Has anyone any ideas on converting PDF's to decent text. Several of the Gang answered with useful programs. -- Heather
A loyal reader, Walt R, has sent in:
The tool pdftotext works, but
all formatting disappears.
Yes, an unfortunate side-effect. You might have to edit it by hand, to re-instate formatting...
In issue 92, Daniel Carneiro do Nascimento's question was pubbed in the Mailbag's "Help Wanted" section. -- Heather
BiDi in Wine is still being actively worked on, and is nowhere near complete. You should resend your e-mail to wine-devel@winehq.com to get to the people who /really/ know Wine.
Tru IPcop. It is firewall router. EVERY connection from inside is working and You are stealth to outsiders. Not closed... stealth! http://www.ipcop.org
Try. It is the best I ever used. I have had proxy two months before... now never again
Bye!
My solution may or may not be OK for you. I have a little P75 laptop that acts as a NAT for my local area network. It runs OpenBSD with user PPP. I am unsure whether user PPP is available for Linux. Maybe you can use pppd and ipchains (or whatever its called now).
User PPP is configured in "auto" mode such that a request makes it dial out if its not connected. So if my wife requests an html page, PPP dials out, connects, and she gets her page. She uses Windows and is NATed thru the P75.
No users are on the P75. I have had two windows boxes, one FreeBSD box, and the P75 (ntpd) all sharing the same internet connection concurrently.
Hi,
Could you please help me out to know the format of binaries in Linux. thanks in advance.
regards
Sarfraz
[Thomas] From last month's "Greetings from Heather Stern":
The same goes for you students out there with a take home light quiz. We can spot those a handful of kilometers away, give or take a mile. Maybe you should cc: your professor when you ask us the question, and he can give us the passing marks in your class. The point is to learn a few research skills - so for such questions, search google. Search our KnowedgeBase - it's part of what it's here for. Search TLDP.org and freshmeat if the problem is really about Linux.
To give you a hint, there's two types: ELF and a.out
[Jim O'Regan]
- There's a nice discussion in the FreeBSD handbook
- http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/binary-formats.html
[K.-H.]
try also:
http://www.linuxjournal.com/article.php?sid=1059
as a starting point. Came up in google easily enough.
I was looking at Dashboard (http://www.nat.org/dashboard), and noticed a link to a Microsoft Research project, MyLifeBits (http://research.microsoft.com/barc/mediapresence/MyLifeBits.aspx). I had a look around the site, and noticed that a lot of the projects have open source equivalents - some of them older than MS's version - and figured I'd make a list. (Before Dashboard there was the Remembrance Agent for Emacs, which I think outdates MyLifeBits).
* IntelliShrink (http://research.microsoft.com/~simonco/intellishrink.aspx) Shrinks e-mail to SMS abrv8tns. Free version: email2sms (http://adamspiers.org/computing/email2sms)
* World-Wide Media eXchange: (http://wwmx.org) Tools for stamping image files with their location, as well as tools for converting location information from GPS handsets to GPX. GPSBabel <http://gpsbabel.sourceforge.net/> can write GPX files, you can use exiftags <http://johnst.org/sw/exiftags/> to write this to an image.
* AutoDJ (http://research.microsoft.com/~jplatt/abstracts/autoDJ.html) Automatically generates music playlists. Cymbaline (http://silmarill.org/cymbaline.htm) does this.
* Media Computing (http://research.microsoft.com/mc) which has several subprojects, including Audio Content Analysis, which Maaate (http://www.cmis.csiro.au/maaate) does; Face Detection, Tracking and Recognition, which OpenCV (http://www.intel.com/research/mrl/research/opencv) does; Digital Album, which facilitates the annotation of photos, and searching based on these annotation - Gnome Storage (http://www.gnome.org/~seth/storage) can do this, among other things; Video Content Analysis, Representation and Access - VideoQuery (http://videoquery.sourceforge.net) can do this.
* Mobile IPv6 (http://research.microsoft.com/mobileipv6) Mobile IPv6 support is available for Linux - MIPL (http://www.mipl.mediapoli.com)
* Advanced Compiler Technology (http://research.microsoft.com/act) Optimising C# compilation. Mono (http://www.go-mono.net) follows Microsoft's research in this area, and generally implements it.
* Natural Language Processing (http://research.microsoft.com/nlp) There are several projects available for NLP, for example OpenNLP (http://opennlp.sourceforge.net)
* Camera Calibration (http://research.microsoft.com/~zhang/Calib) OpenCV does this too.
* Audio fingerprinting (http://research.microsoft.com/~cburges) Free Tantrum: (http://sourceforge.net/projects/freetantrum)
* Pastry (http://research.microsoft.com/~antr/Pastry) A peer to peer system - it's open source, and written in Java, so it should run on Linux.
* IceCube (http://research.microsoft.com/camdis/icecube.htm) IceCube allows for disconnected use by mobile clients... just like CODA (http://www.coda.cs.cmu.edu) does.
* .NET Generics (http://research.microsoft.com/projects/clrgen) Mono is working on this too.
* SML.NET (http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/Research/TSG/SMLNET) SML.NET is Open Source
* The Social Computing Group (http://research.microsoft.com/scg) has a few projects which have open source equivalents --
** Sapphire: is pretty similar to Gnome Storage
** Conversation clusters: is similar to the vfolders in Ximian's Evolution
** Smart Previews: looks almost exactly like the previews in KDE 3.1
** Shared browsing: You can do this in Mozilla with DerTandemBrowser (http://dertandembrowser.mozdev.org)
The above command is supposed to tunnel all request on port 1234 to secure port 22 and allow a SFTP.
So.. on localhost I should be able to do: "ftp localhost 1234" and connect via ssh to remotehost ftp remote files. The problem is, it doesnt work. Is such a thing possible?
Thanks
Shaun.
[K.-H]
well -- I've no idea of sftp as such. according to the manpage this feature is SSH2 only. Are you sure your connection is protocoll level 2? Check with "-v".
To put localhost in there confused me for a moment, but it seems to be fine. You might want to out a real hostname to make it less confusing. Assuming your ssh is to the ftp-target "remotehost" would do fine.
I get the error: khh > ssh -L 1234:localhost:22 dachbox -s sftp usage: sftp [-vC1] [-b batchfile] [-o option] [-s subsystem|path] [-B buffer_size]
If I force level 2:
ssh -2 -L 1234:localhost:22 khhlap -s sftp
it just sits there. ftp localhost 1234 gets me a ftp interface which is unconnected. I don't have an ftpd running so I can't test further.
It would be a lot easier to answer anything if you would have sent the error message or what exactly does not work.
I'm not familiar with the ssh2 "-s" option. I've never used it. But I've successfully tunneled (using -L) http, smtp, ssl-imap and news ports through a firewall -- so basically it should work as long as ftp is in passive mode.
Reading through the answer to this question I noticed that the hyperlink for http://ltsp.org was incorrect, included a >, as well as the link for SIAG office suite was completely wrong. He said http://www.siag.org when it should have been http://siag.nu. You guys are doing a great job, but... I think somebody should take the time to make sure the links are correct at least to avoid sending people off on snipe hunts.
[Thomas] OK, that "he" to which Dave refers was actually me. However, as this goes to press, I cannot help but feel malace towards the tone of this e-mail. As Ben rightly goes on to say, don't complain or expect anything to be resolved unless you yourself can do something about it. This is a volenteer effort afterall.
OK, I admit that I did guess the URL for siag office, but I'm sure that you, the gentle reader, know how to use google.com/linux? I certainly hope so...
[Ben] Cool idea - thanks for voluntering! We'd love to have a proofreader. I have to warn you, though, that the quantity of mail, submissions, etc. that we get can be fairly overwhelming, so I hope you're offering a significant chunk of your time.
HINT: we're all volunteers here. Complaining about someone not taking the time - when that is the specific resource we contribute (especially since a number of us are consultants and normally get paid for that very resource) - is ungracious at the very least.
Helpful suggestions are always welcome. Complaints that aren't coupled with an offer to help, well, our /dev/null stays hungry no matter how many pretzels we feed it...
[Thomas] I almost got my hand bitten off the other day when I tried to feed it all the MIME-encoded e-mails we get. It seems that /dev/null hates them even more than we do I'd watch your fingers in the future, Ben. That /dev/null device doesn't take any passengers....
Hi,
I was reading comp.unix.programmer and came across a comment about setting the LD_DEBUG environmental varible to 'help' and running a dynamic executable. Okay, let's try it:
~$ export LD_DEBUG=help ~$ ls Valid options for the LD_DEBUG environment variable are: libs display library search paths reloc display relocation processing files display progress for input file symbols display symbol table processing bindings display information about symbol binding versions display version dependencies all all previous options combined statistics display relocation statistics help display this help message and exit To direct the debugging output into a file instead of standard output a filename can be specified using the LD_DEBUG_OUTPUT environment variable.
See attached ls_output.txt
Fun thing to play with. And who knows, I might actually have a use for it someday.
[Ben]
*Nice!*
Thanks, Jason - that's a really fine tidbit. It now reposes comfortably in my toolbox in the little niche by "strace" and keeps it from rolling around and rattling. I've spent the past week teaching people how to use the "grep" drill, the "awk" chopsaw, and the "sed" jackhammer, and can appreciate the finesse of a precision instrument all the more for that reason...
Could someone let me know what files I need to pull from my current system (where I get my email) to a new system? I would like to backup all the data and restore it to a new system and get the email over there; yet, have all my email folders/emails restored to the new system.?
Thanks in Advance
EJ
[Raj Shekhar] If you are using evolution , then in your home directory you will find a folder called evolution which will have all the mails + contacts + other settings. If you want to just find your emails, you will find them in
~/evolution/local/Inbox .
A piece of advice, if you back up your mail to a CD and then restore it, you will have the files which are read-only. I would suggest that you tar and gunzip your evolution folder before burning it to the CD , that way your file-permissions will be preserved.
[Thomas] Actually, that is inaccurate -- one can preserve permissions on CD quite easily, if they're copied with "cp -p". Also, why put them on CD at all? You could easily move them to another partition, which would preserve file permissions as well.
[JimD]
More obviously you can simply create an archive (tar, cpio, dump, pax) which will preserve the ownership and permissions. That's what Unix archives do, archive data with meta-data.
Then burn the .tar (or whatever) file into your CDR. Basically you'll create an ISO containing just one or a few archive files.
here is a confusing problem. I like to insert the alsa module in my woody. but the alsa-driver source has been located at */usr/src/modules/alsa-driver* & the kernel source at */usr/src/kernel-source-2.4.18*
make xconfig doesn't show the alsa option. do I need to move the alsa-driver at a particular directory (?) under the kernel-source to get the alsa option during make xconfig ??
Hi,
I am interested in Linux and open source in general.I am new to linux, I read more about it but till now havn`t tried it. I downloaded small distributions like ' small linux ' but didn`t work. Having only dial up connection to the Internet it is difficult to download those big distros over analog phone, so what I ask is can you send a free CD of a distro of linux to get my feet wet or point me out to some sources where to find this.
HTH Neil Youngman
For those in the US, Cheap Bytes seems to carry it also. And a few more distros, too, in case a particular one strikes your fancy. -- Heather
just finished installing Sendmail, but now if i run make all in /etc/mail after running /usr/bin/newaliases, i am getting the following error:
make: No rule to make target 'domaintable.db', needed
by 'all' . Stop
Info
rehat 7.2
Rather than DL'ing the pkg in parts via ftp, I think it would be much more striaght forward to DL the pkg as a tar or rpm and install from that.
Hello
I recently installed RH 9 and i have a LAN running on ISA server, tried to connect it but could't.
somebody told me configure samba so i did and now i could also see the computers on my network and even the PING to the server is OK
when i try to browse the network it gives me:
"HTTP 607 proxy Authentication required,
The ISA server requires authorization to fullfill
the request. Access to web proxy service denied (12209)"
it will be very helpful if anyone can plz suggest me a way out of this problem Excuse me being a Newbie
Weather i have to configure the ISA (a bit dificult to access for me) or is there any other way plz lemme know in either cases
Thanks
FAHAD
Having read the previous answers to this question I would like to recommend a software program taht I recieved with my Sony Recorder, ' B's Recorder Gold5 ' http://www.bhacorp.com . I found this program to be very easy, I just loaded the program, cancelled the wizard. Next I found the ISO file and dragged into the bottom layer, then from the file menu I selected record and that was it a perfict disk.
Having read mail to this address since before it was a list I would like to recommend that software recommendations to MS Windows and Mac OS (non-portable to other forms of UNIX) products be sent just to the querent and other interested parties.
This is linux-questions-only; the LINUX Gazette "Answer Gang." Naturally, we'd like to encourage a "Linux-answers-mostly" policy.
A quick search of http://www.freshmeat.net on "ISO CD burn":
http://freshmeat.net/search/?q=iso+cd+burn§ion=projects
... gives me a list of about 25 ISO CDR programs --- I'm sure there are more than that it's a popular programming and scripting exercise.
Almost all of them are simply GUI, command line or curses (text dialog) driven front ends to Joerg Schilling's cdrecord and mkisofs Some also support cdrdao, mkybrid, or related command line tools.
As for DVD-R/RW and DVD+R/RW drives, the support for them seems to be a bit sketchy. I think they're getting closer but I still haven't gotten my Ikebana DVD+R/RW drive working yet (except as a CD-R/RW). (I haven't tried it recently either).
See also the "Best of ISO Burning Under Windows" in our KnowledgeBase. -- Heather
Sorry if this is not a "pure" linux item, but I take the chance.
Am trying to convert (import) Eudora (version 3.0.5) .mbx files to the KDE Kmail. For this I have used the Eudora2Unix.py script. That seems to work. It reports eg. 529 messages found for a given "folder".
The problem: When having moved the converted .mbx to the appropriate Kmail folder, I only see the first mail. I can guess that it depends on
the fact that Kmail keeps each mail in a separate file, while my Eudora stacks them in a single file referred to as folder (thus not a real folder in normal terminology). It should not be too hard to split the messages into separate files, but then comes the file naming convention in Kmail. What I have seen, it looks like a fancy (many digits) running number.
So, have I missed something with Kmail (option to set) or are there any s/w available to fix eg. messages -> separate-files.
Hoping for some hints.
Have you tried kmailcvt?
Thanks for your answer. I have found out the problem. KMail have two folder modes, maildir and mbox. I happened to move the Eudora mbox folder into a KMail maildir folder.
Just use a repeat_type of raw, so that XFree86 sees exactly the same thing as it would see if there was no GPM. BTW, I use a mouse type of autops2, and GPM can recognize the middle button.
Hey, thanks, Hubert. That did the trick. Sometimes I wish tips like
this were a bit more clearly documented, but I digress...
www.linmodem.org.
i downloaded the driver (most lucent winmodems that aren't AMR work, )
On the page you can load a binary driver, which means you dont have to recompile (check the versions tho)
now, i need help working with this beast. i'm using redhat 8.0. it says i have to recompile the kernel (i think) and since i am a complete newbie at working this stuff (the more i go into linux, the more i learn) could you give me some cut and dry instructions on how to install this driver as either a module or as a full part of the kernel. I have the kernel sources from kernel.org's website (i don't know if the headers come with it though, so i need help with this too). i'm an ultra newbie at linux, but in windows i am an advanced user.
Quick and dirty RH recompile
First dont use kernel.org sources - RH patch to high heaven. get kernel source rpm from ftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat/linux/updates/8.0/en/os/i386/ rpm -ivh <package> to install cp /usr/src/linux-2.4/configs/<your chosen arch config> /usr/src/linux-2.4/.config cd /usr/src/linux-2.4 make menuconfig then make any changes save then make dep&&make clean&&make bzImage&&make modules&&make modules_install then when this is all done cp boot/arch/i386/bzImage /boot/vmlinuz<your name for kernel here> cp System.map /boot/System.map<same version as above> rm -rf /boot System.map ln -s /boot/System.map etc //boot/System.map mkinitrd /boot/initrd-<version of kernel>.img version number then edit /boot/grub.conf to add these details as in the current entries.
Although RH normally add so many modules you may not need to recompile.
If this does not work you may not have the dev packages you need. you need at least
gcc make bison glibc-kernheaders glibc-devel ld cpp-devel libgcc-devel
(this is from memory so you could need a few more - rpm should tell you)
thank you for the support.
http://codespeak.net/rlcompleter2
Tab completion for Python. Cool stuff, now all I can think about is how to implement this in Ruby.
I've been using the standard rlcompleter for years. What does rlcompleter2 add to the the standard module?
/me browses(*)
Ahhh, I see; it's sort of like Ian MacDonald's bash-completion package. It adds context sensitive completions and adds support for displaying the docstrings (.doc__ attributes for any function, module, or class) and apparently it displays the function signatures (argument list) as well.
I'll have to play with it.
/me downloads, plays, configures
Now my PYTHONSTARTUP for python2.2 and python2.3 are set to ~/.pythonrc.rlcompleter2
Thanks.
The startup for interactive sessions is a little slower. there is a noticeable hesitation during rlcompleter2 .setup() but it's not bad enough to worry about.
- /me is a IRCism --- traditional IRC clients have a /me command that highlights one's statement as an "action" --- a description rather than an utterence
I getting this error : Connection failed to 192.168.0.1,25 Connection refused if i try to sent mail straight from the server using pine
192.168.*.* are unroutable on the Internet (as per RFC191 . It may be that the server to which you are connecting is refusing you due to some internal (anti-spam and/or anti-relaying) configuration rules.
If i try to from windows workstations, the client are failing to get a response from the server
I checked sendmail status and it is running
I also restarted sendmail and i can only use pine twice and the third time it will throw the same error
if i run ps -aux | grep sendmail , there is this process [ sendmail < defunc and at one time there was
sendmail rejected connections running , which i do not understand
I see you've tried to provide additional information but a careful perusal reveals that you don't give enough RELEVANT information to actually answer your question.
Try to formulate a better question after you read the following LDP (Linux Documentation Project) HOWTOs and Guide chapters:
... note: I've tried to arrange these roughly in the best order for you to read them. Basically the first one should explain the concepts and terminology a little better, then next one might just help you solve the problem, and the others may help if you're still fighting with it beyond that. In other words, I don't expect you to read all of those, just read enough to solve the problem (or at least to be able to better explain it).
Hi!
I'm in need of your help. I'm trying to flash some programs into
Simputer and tried using pfc. The configuration for serial communication is 115200/9600 baud and I get the following response on pfc's debug window.
Debug Messages are Displayed Here..
At first it wasn't clear how this is Linux-y...
> Using port /dev/ttyS0
> Please wait... Initializing....
> This will take about a minute..
> []
> []
> [This is a PicoPeta Simputer...you are assimilated]
:D
> Simputer booted
> Preparing...
> Sending [init 2]
At this time the progress bar stops and the application hangs forever. Similarly, when I tried using minicom(9600 8N1),I get response from simputer till the 'Simputer login' prompt and when I entered the login name, the getty process in Simputer doesn't respond with authetication validation or anyother message it is suppose to send. I saw the
Is it expecting a PPP connection? or does it have the wrong parity and databits setting?
rc.sysinit file which spawned a getty with 9600 baud... As in someother place where I was looking for the solution mentioned that we got to set the serial port for 115200 baud, I tried to change in the file even after providing write permission but couldn't write on to the file. So,
You almost certainly have to be root to write into /etc/inittab, and I cannot imagine any good reason that a regular user account should have writable access to it.
rc.stsinit itself might not be the right place to put this.
I killed the old getty process and spawned one with the new baud rate. Set the ispeed and ospeed to same... But,it doesn't work. One thing clean about the scenario is that from simputer the messages reach the PC which the other way it is not. It would be of great help if I can get it working. Thanks in Advance.
regards,
Mythili
The most popular program to run on Linux boxes to answer on their serial port, is called 'mgetty'. It has a man page which is amazingly enough, usually kind of useful, and the typical /etc/inittab has an example line about how to activate it, commented out. getty is good, but mgetty has some special features for dealing with serial lines.
115200 is a common max speed for old style serial ports. 9600 is the bits frequency if using common voice (300 baud or so) with a fairly popular old line discipline to get bits on different parts of the carrier wave. Compression tricks are most of what gives faster modems their claimed speed.
Hope that helps.
hi every one, i have two systems one is windows2000 advanced server and another is linux7.3 iam unable to access it through telnet as superuser.
Access which one of those two?
Maybe you are trying to login as "root" directly at the telnet login. This is not allowed. You can login as an user and then change to root by using the "su" command.
Dear Mr. Dennis,
Actually, the days when TAG was a one-man-band have long since diminished. You have actually reached a whole "gang" of us who try and answer questions based on what querents write in.
I know very little about Linux. I've ran it a few years ago on a 386. However at the time there weren't too many applications for it. I want a
reliable CAD station but, I have only Windows programs. Does Linux run Windows applications reliably?
Umm, I think reliably is the operative word. If it is stability you're after then I would recommend running that application in its native environment -- windows. However to answer your question, WINE is what you're after:
http://winehq.com
That does a pretty good job at running Windows apps. There is also the option of using VMWare if the computer you're connecting to is remote.
If you look through our back issues and also check the KB out:
http://www.linuxgazette.com/tag/kb.html
I remember there being a thread on CAD software for Linux.
True. In fact we have so many CAD and CASE programs that Freshmeat has to seperate sections for various types. And then there's modelling.. I understand that you can get very nice, if imprecise, 3D effects with these apps. -- Heather
Apologies, folks - I had published several large LJWNN Tech Tips in issue 93, but I must have been in too much of a hurry. A few of them were damaged there, thanks to a formatting mistake on my part. Sorry! Here are the repaired Tips, please enjoy them.
We will probably not republish Linux Journal Weekly News Notes tips in future issues of Linux Gazette. -- Heather
If your main home network is a wireless network, you don't want to wake up in the morning and find some joker has printed many pages of stuff to your networked printer. Put the printer on a wired, private network segment, and print to it with ssh.
To do this, install this script as lpr on your wirelessly connected laptop:
See attached lpr-ssh.bash.txt
(Thanks to the GAR project: http://www.lnx-bbc.org/README.html for the tip.)
If you have a lengthy command-line task, such as building complicated software, and need to catch an error that whizzes by in the middle, use script. It will run a shell and log all input and output to a file called "typescript" that you can then search or submit with a bug report.
The vacation program lets you send an automatic message when you'll be away from your e-mail. You can see who received your message with
vacation -l | cut -d ' ' -f 1 - > people_who_got_vacation_message
When you boot Linux, the kernel turns off Num Lock by default. This isn't a problem if, for you, the numeric keypad is the no-man's-land between the cursor keys and the mouse. But if you're an accountant, or setting up a system for an accountant, you probably don't want to turn it on every single time.
Here's the easy way, if you're using KDE. Go to K --> Preferences --> Peripherals --> Keyboard and select the Advanced tab. Select the radio button of your choice under NumLock on KDE startup and click OK.
If you only run KDE and want Num Lock on when you start a KDE session, you're done. Otherwise, read on.
To set Num Lock on in a virtual console, use:
setleds +num
If you choose to put this in a .bashrc file to set Num Lock when you log in, make it:
setleds +num &> /dev/null
...to suppress the error message you'll get if you try it in an xterm or over an SSH connection.
Finally, here's the way to hit this problem with a big hammer--make the numeric keypad always work as a numeric keypad in X, no matter what Num Lock says. This will make them never work as cursor keys, but you're fine with that because you have cursor keys, right? Create a file called .Xmodmap in your home directory, and insert these lines:
(from a Usenet post by Yvan Loranger: http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&selm=3BFD087F.2000300%40iquebec.com&rnum=3+)
See attached numpad.Xmodmap.txt
The last line takes the now-useless Num Lock key and makes it an extra Escape key. If your favorite accounting software uses one of the F keys frequently, you might prefer that.
The number to the left of the equals sign is an X "keycode", the key on the keyboard you pressed, and the number or name to the right is an X "keysym", the character or function X thinks it is. You don't have to look these up in some X manual. To find out the keycode and keysym for any key, run xev in an xterm, move the mouse to the small white xev window and watch the keycodes and keysyms scroll by in the xterm.
If you'd like to do SSH port forwarding with a passphrase, but require a passphrase to run commands, make a separate key for port forwarding only.
Dramatis personae
dmarti: example user name
bilbo: your desktop system
frodo: host running sshd
linuxjournal.com: some web site
Port forwarding also is called tunneling, so I'll call the key "tunnel". cd to your .ssh directory and create the key:
dmarti@bilbo:~/.ssh$ ssh-keygen -t dsa -f tunnel Generating public/private dsa key pair. Enter passphrase (empty for no passphrase): Enter same passphrase again: Your identification has been saved in tunnel. Your public key has been saved in tunnel.pub. The key fingerprint is: 77:b4:02:d9:32:c2:cc:18:58:c3:23:0a:13:46:a7:fa dmarti@capsicum
Now edit tunnel.pub and add the following options to the beginning of the line:
command="/bin/false",no-X11-forwarding,no-agent-forwarding,no-pty
That means this key is no longer any good for anything but port forwarding, because the only command it will run is /bin/false, and it won't forward X or agent commands.
sshd understands the options only when reading the key from authorized_keys, but if you put the options into the original .pub file, they'll stay with the key wherever it goes.
Now copy tunnel.pub to the end of your .ssh/authorized_keys at all the hosts to which you want to tunnel, and try it:
dmarti@bilbo:~$ ssh -i ~/.ssh/tunnel frodo Connection to zork.net closed.
No errors, nothing runs; that's what you want. If you get errors, you may have mangled the authorized_keys file on the server end; if you get a shell you need to check and fix the options.
Another possibility is that if you're running with ssh-agent and have the SSH_AUTH_SOCK environment variable set, you could be using a key provided by ssh-agent instead of the one on the command line. Put env -u in front of the command line to be sure not to use the agent.
Tunnel time! Let's use the long-suffering linuxjournal.com web server as a guinea pig and make a tunnel:
dmarti@bilbo:~$ ssh -i ~/.ssh/tunnel -N -L 8000:linuxjournal.com:80 frodo
To review that command line:
- -i ~/.ssh/tunnel to use our tunnel-only ssh key
- -N to not run a command (this is necessary, otherwise SSH will run only /bin/false and exit)
- -L 8000:linuxjournal.com:80 to forward local port 8000 to port 80 on linuxjournal.com.
- And finally, the hostname to which we're making the connection--it doesn't have to be the same as the host to which we're tunneling.
...making Linux just a little more fun! |
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Greetings, everyone, and welcome once more to the world of The Answer Gang.
I suppose you would think it obvious what the Peeve Of The Month is. I'm actaully deeply saddened that this move became necessary, and in fact I resisted the need at every turn. I resisted the CMS idea too - I think it's a solution to a problem we don't actually have, and "yet another slashdot" is not a unique magazine on the scene. But I had hopes that a talented webmaster could bring a template engine out of its doldrums and make something amazing and new in a basically already filled niche of the web. In fact, they still might. But if it can't retain a regular release schedule, it wouldn't be a Gazette:
Gazette \Ga*zette"\, n. [F. gazette, It. gazzetta, perh. from gazetta a Venetian coin (see {Gazet}), said to have been the price of the first newspaper published at Venice; or perh. dim. of gazza magpie, a name perh. applied to the first newspaper; cf. OHG. agalstra magpie, G. elster.] A newspaper; a printed sheet published periodically; esp., the official journal published by the British government, and containing legal and state notices.
With a basis in official matters (okay, who's perfect) but most especially in a periodic nature, the only way for the Gazette to retain its true nature is to remain... a periodical.
But enough of that. 'Tis the time of All Hallow's Eve, and everyone is dressing up. Me, I'm dressing up my computer. There are some people doing some really crazy and fun things with new computers. The silliest that I've seen so far I have to say is the glowing sphere. That guy's great. His set top box makes it look like that thing is now a TARDIS or that the aliens who control "The Outer Limits" really have left their control module visible in your living room. There a bunch of toasters out there - really! I'm not kidding! Go visit Mini-ITX.com if you don't believe me. Cubes even. But the glowing sphere is a winner.
At a basically 7" square motherboard (170 mm, but who's counting) and about an inch, inch and a half clearance above it, you have anything from a 500 Mhz to 1 Ghz Cyrix or Eden chipset and most of the useful peripherals already on board. If you're willing to call it 2.5" clearance, get a riser card to let you put a PC card in sideways.
I don't know how it is out there with the rest of you but I can run down to my local computer store here in the Silicon Valley and have my pick of cases that have clear sections, glowing parts, mounting brackets for ultraviolet lighting, and ... well I wasn't ready for this at the time, so make sure you're sitting ... water cooled motherboards. With somewhat yellow water that glows under blacklight.
Spoooooky. But not half as spooky as the idea that killing a part of the cooling system isn't just a dead fan and maybe one of the hard disks will run a risk of much early MTBF - mean time between failures, the silicon lifeform's equivalent to risk of stroke and heart attack. Water splattered all over the inside of a 2.3 or 3 Ghz gaming monster sounds even spookier.
Okay. So maybe I just should stick with a normal case with sort of bubbly effects on the front. One popular model of this is called the "alien glow". Sounds like a GIMP filter. If I feel really inventive maybe I can paint a mural on the side of one of the cases whose sides pop off easily so techies can get at the parts.
And then, there's making my desktop a little more fun! In this I
have an unfair advantgae. The window manager I happen to favor is
Enlightenment (16 of course. Will 17 never release? Probably.) and
there is an uncountable community of goth kids out there who
Sound, light, Thunder, am I missing anything? Of course. I'll have to consider getting a remote mouse, or setting my computer up for LIRC - infrared remote control - so I can toggle the spooky effects without touching them. Maybe I should set my /etc/hosts file to recognize 127.0.0.1 as localghost. while I'm in here.
Well kids, it's time to wait at the door with the chocolates. For any of you who haven't run off to the parties, I suggest that a dessicated pumpkin will not make a good case. Try a big Millenium Falcon or Enterprise model instead. And... pleasant dreeeeeaams ... mwa hahahahah ha ha!
...making Linux just a little more fun! |
By Michael Conry |
Contents: |
Submitters, send your News Bytes items in PLAIN TEXT format. Other formats may be rejected without reading. You have been warned! A one- or two-paragraph summary plus URL gets you a better announcement than an entire press release. Submit items to bytes@linuxgazette.net
Werner Heuser, the owner of the Mobilix project (Now located at tuxmobil.org) still has not given up on securing the right to use the Mobilix name. He has been involved with Les Éditions Albert René the publishers of the Asterix comic books in a long running legal wrangle over the right to use the name. The book publishers claim that the name violates their trademark of the name Obelix (a character from the books, and Asterix's sidekick). Having lost his final appeal in the German courts, it looked like Heuser would have to admit defeat. However, it now appears that the Obelix trademark itself may be vulnerable to challenge, and Heuser is exploring this possibility with his lawyers. Given the nature of this dispute, it is likely that it will be quite some time before we know how this new counter-attack will pan out.
We in the GNU/Linux community are all surely aware of the GPL, a licence under which many of the developers behind the software tools we use daily have decided to release their work. Though opinions can vary on its merits, even in the worst BSD vs GPL flamewars some shred of sanity usually persists. In this light, it is very interesting to see how very very far from sanity a competent professional journalist, such as Daniel Lyons of Forbes, can go when dealing with the issue.
Daniel discussed the GPL in the context of a licencing dispute that is currently being worked out between the FSF and Cisco regarding GPLed networking code that has been incorporated illegally into some of Cisco's products. In fact, the situation is a little more complicated in that Linksys did the incorporation, but the company was subsequently bought by Cisco who now have to deal with the problem.
What is interesting, in a mostly bland article, is the lengths Daniel goes to in portraying the FSF's licence enforcement actions as some sort of bully boy tactics. The FSF are referred to as "Linux's Hit Men", who have "in secret ... been making threats", this "hired enforcer" wants you to "burn down your house, or at the very least share it with cloners". Granted, I am selectively quoting from his article, but the message comes through loud and clear even when you read it in its entirety -- he might as well have dropped the word "terrorist" in there. What he does not mention, is that the actions of any software creator could be portrayed in this way when they attempt to enforce the terms of their licences. Indeed, the entire article could be construed as an argument against software licences in general.
It is nice to contrast Lyons' empty and misleading rhetoric with the measured and nonconfrontational response of Bradley Kuhn of the FSF. Equally encouraging, is to read the comments posted on the Forbes website by readers. They were overwhelmingly at odds with the content of the article (probably due to the coverage the article got in the Linux press) but more importantly, the tone of the responses was both thoughtful and polite.
Following up on last month's news regarding a European victory on the software-patents front, NewsForge has published a very worthwhile article by Richard Stallman giving his thoughts on the news and on the current situation. It is encouraging to see that even the great RMS was a bit confused at first whether the news was good or bad (on balance it was good news).
As Stallman points out, the success in getting the legislation amended at Parliament is only a partial victory. It still needs to be approved at the Council of Ministers on November 10th. If such an approval is secured, it will be a very significant win.
Readers who are resident in the European Union, and who support the restriction of software patentability might like to take this opportunity to contact their elected representatives and make their opinions felt. This time it is probably best to focus on national parliamentary representatives, rather than the European Parliament members, since The Council of Ministers represents the member states' governments. That said, there is no harm in putting the message out as widely as possible!
They say the greatest trick the devil ever pulled off was to convince the world that he did not exist. Well, I'm beginning to come to the conclusion that the greatest success SCO has pulled off is to convince the world that they are worth wasting time on. Frankly, if they're not actually suing you (as opposed to huffing and puffing about it), and you don't feel like suing them, there really isn't much point in giving them your attention. Graham Lee, in a Slashdot comment, put it nicely:
Makes perfect sense to me.Where SCO press is concerned, Do Not Feed The Troll. SCO are undoubtedly revelling in the fact that every time their marketing droids put pen to paper, their output is mirrored on /., newsforge, linux.com and any number of similar sites. I expect they use this coverage to show their investors how seriously the community takes SCO's business, and how the Linux-using and Open Source Software communities are incredibly worried about the fact that 'they stole SCO IP and used it in their anti-competitive software'. In short, SCO profit from the coverage, and Darl McBride's worth increases with every SCO post on /..
...
In summary, as I said at the top, SCO are trolls. Please do not feed them in the future.
The E-zine LinuxFocus: has for November/December the following articles:
Some links found via LinuxToday
Some links from O'Reilly:
The Chinese Ministry of Education is launching a major Grid computing initiative making heavy use of GNU/Linux running on IBM hardware
Some links from NewsForge:
Putting together a Linux based router using Zebra
Mobile internet connectivity by satellite for travelling around Australia.
Listings courtesy Linux Journal. See LJ's Events page for the latest goings-on.
LinuxWorld Conference & Expo HK2003 |
November 4-5, 2003 Honk Kong http://www.linuxworld-hk.com/ |
HiverCon 2003 |
November 6-7, 2003 Dublin, Ireland http://www.hivercon.com/ |
COMDEX Fall |
November 17-21, 2003 Las Vegas, NV http://www.comdex.com/fall2003/ |
Southern California Linux Expo (SCALE) |
November 22, 2003 Los Angeles, CA http://socallinuxexpo.com/ |
Annual Computer Security Applications Conference (ACSAC) |
December 8-12, 2003 Las Vegas, NV http://www.acsac.org/ |
Linux Clusters Institute Workshops |
December 8-12, 2003 Albuquerque, NM http://www.linuxclustersinstitute.org |
Storage Expo 2003, co-located with Infosecurity 2003 |
December 9-11, 2003 New York, NY http://www.infosecurityevent.com/ |
Consumer Electronics Show |
January 8-11, 2004 Las Vegas, NV http://www.cesweb.org/ |
Linux.Conf.AU |
January 12-17, 2004 Australia http://conf.linux.org.au/ |
LinuxWorld Conference & Expo |
January 20-23, 2004 New York, NY http://linuxworldexpo.com/ |
O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference |
February 9-12, 2004 San Diego, CA http://conferences.oreillynet.com/etcon/ |
SXSW |
March 12-21, 2004 Austin, TX http://sxsw.com/ |
SD West |
March 15-19, 2004 Santa Clara, CA http://www.sdexpo.com |
Open Source Business Conference |
March 17-18, 2004 Park City, UT http://www.osbc2004.com |
CeBit Hannover |
March 18-24, 2004 Hannover, Germany http://www.cebit.de |
COMDEX Canada |
March 24-26, 2004 Toronto, Ontario http://www.comdex.com |
2004 USENIX/ACM Symposium on Networked Systems Design and
Implementation (NSDI) |
March 29-31, 2004 San Francisco, CA http://www.usenix.org/events/nsdi04/ |
RealWorld Linux |
April 13-15, 2004 Toronto, Ontario http://www.realworldlinux.com |
CeBit America |
May 25-27, 2004 New York, NY http://www.cebit-america.com/ |
Strictly Business Solutions Expo |
June 9-10, 2004 Minneapolis, MN http://www.strictlyebusiness.net/sb/mpls/index.po |
USENIX Annual Technical Conference |
June 27 - July 2, 2004 Boston, MA http://www.usenix.com/events/usenix04/ |
O'Reilly Open Source Convention |
July 26-30, 2004 Portland, OR http://conferences.oreillynet.com/ |
LinuxWorld Conference & Expo |
August 3-5, 2004 San Francisco, CA http://www.linuxworldexpo.com/ |
USENIX Security Symposium |
August 9-13, 2004 San Diego, CA http://www.usenix.com/events/sec04/ |
USENIX Systems Administration Conference (LISA) |
November 14-19, 2004 Atlanta, GA http://www.usenix.com/events/ |
The Register has reported that NTL, a cable company and ISP providing dial-up internet access in the UK, has introduced new dialer software that only runs on Windows and Mac. The new dialer software is the only way to make a connection with the NTL service and thus GNU/Linux (and other OS) based systems have been locked out.
Though not specifically a Linux project, the Public Library of Science is an initiative that will be of interest to many in the Free Software community. In part formed as a reaction against the strangle-hold exerted by the large commercial publishers on scientific publication, the stated aim of PLoS is to
[make]... the world's scientific and medical literature a freely available public resourceCertainly an aspiration that many GNU/Linux users would share.
Though greeted with some initial scepticism by the larger publishing community, the first issue of PLoS Biology has been well received. This strong beginning looks like it will continue as the article "Learning to Control a Brain-Machine Interface for Reaching and Grasping by Primates"[3.3Mb pdf, synopsis] from the second issue of the journal has received extensive coverage in both the scientific and general press.
An important revenue stream for the journal is supplied by authors, who pay a $1500 fee to submit articles. This fee is intended to cover peer review costs. Though the presence of such a fee can be a barrier to publication, it is not uncommon for traditional peer-reviewed journals to also charge such a submission fee (in addition to charging readers for access to the published work).
OSNews have published a review of of ArchLinux
LinuxForce has noted that 2003 has been a good year for Debian GNU/Linux. They have put together a list of the most significant news stories about Debian so far this year. [ Courtesy DWN]
The LFS Development Team has announced the release of LFS-5.0-PRE3, the third pre-release of the upcoming LFS-5.0 book which is available at http://www.linuxfromscratch.org
The BLFS Development Team has proudly announced the release of BLFS-5.0-PRE1, the first pre-release of the upcoming BLFS-5.0 book. You can read it online or you can download the book from to read it locally
There was an interesting recent report on Linux Planet regarding the GAR build system used by the LNX-BBC Project.
MandrakeSoft have announced the availability of a new version of its flagship operating system--Mandrake Linux 9.2 Unfortunately, the release has been the subject of one particularly unpleasant bug which can result in the permanent damage of LG CDROM drives. Various discussions on Slashdot and in newsgroups have followed this news. A preliminary list of affected/unaffected drives was posted in the alt.os.linux.mandrake newsgroup by Peter Breuer, though obviously no warranty can be supplied with the information. The most authoritative source of information on this bug is the Mandrake errata page.
The bug could have wider impact, since it appears to be associated with packet writing code added to the 2.4.22-rc2q5 kernel rather than being something that is uniquely confined to Mandrake.
PHLAK is a modular security-focussed GNU/Linux distribution, geared to be used as a live CD. PHLAK was created as a tool security professionals could use to perform security analysis, penetration testing, forensics, and security auditing. The distro is based on Morphix.
OSNews has published a review of Sorcerer Linux, a from source GNU/Linux distribution.
NewsForge has published a review of Yellow Dog Linux 3.0.1. Yellow Dog is a GNU/Linux distribution intended for users of Apple Mac hardware.
Bogofilter, a statistical mail filter, has reached version 0.15.7.
The release of version 0.9.3 of the free, open-source flight simulator FlightGear has been announced. A list of updates introduced in this new version is available online.
The release of version 22.5.8 of LILO has been announced.
OpenOffice.org has released version 1.1 of the popular open source office suite. It is available for download now.
LinuxDevices has reported on the recent release of Opera 7.21
Mick is LG's News Bytes Editor.
Born some time ago in Ireland, Michael is currently working on
a PhD thesis in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, University
College Dublin. The topic of this work is the use of Lamb waves in
nondestructive testing. GNU/Linux has been very useful in this work, and
Michael has a strong interest in applying free software solutions to
other problems in engineering. When his thesis is completed, Michael
plans to take a long walk.
...making Linux just a little more fun! |
By Thomas Adam |
[ ** Although I am the author of this article, I really must acknowledge Ben, Jim and Heather for their assistance in solving this problem. Thanks, guys :) ** -- Thomas Adam ]
I recently brought a new laptop. A nice new Toshiba T1330 model. OK, so it's not the best model on the market, I'm sure. But it was all I could afford given my student budget; and anyone that is a student knows how little is provided.
So, having got the thing back home and removing something called "XP" which used some kind of weird filesystem I'd never seen before, I installed Debian Sarge. Something that a *very* kind fellow named Frank Rodolf (of TAG) had sent me down...
It installed marvellously and it was much easier and faster than perhaps SuSE was (my main distro before I switched to Debian). In under an hour, I had everything installed (including X) and was ready to launch into doing Linux Things (tm). Or so I thought... until I fired up FVWM.
My window manager launched just fine -- no errors. I was able to open programs as I normally would (via 'update-menus') except that with some programs (GTK inparticular), I was seeing the fonts being displayed incorrectly. It was as if the edges of the fonts had been 'eaten' somehow.
I thought that was odd, and so I decided to see what might be causing it. Initially I thought it might have been a buggy video module that I had selected. Just to be sure (I was using VESA -- so there ought not to have been a problem per se) I changed it to a temporary one:
[n6tadam@laptop n6tadam]$ sudo dpkg-reconfigure xserver-xfree86
Restarted the X server, logged in..hmmm, still the same. One other thing I was beginning to notice as well was that; particularly with GTK+ applications that the font rendering was rather too large, very large. "What was going on?" I wondered.... As I had noticed two things rather odd with GTK apps (gvim was a classic example), I decided to check that my $HOME/.gtk* files were 'ok'.
Since I know absolutely nothing about how GTK+ apps use these configuration files, my safest bet was to see if these files were contributing to my large font problem was to simply rename them. Thus:
[n6tadam@laptop n6tadam]$ mv ~/.gtk-rc ~/gtk-rc.THIS_IS_HIDDEN && gvim &
Guess what....same problem :( I moved the file back again and started to think what else it could possibly be. I'd ruled out that it couldn't be a GTK+ specific problem as I had tweaked the damn file to death with still the same results each time. So, the problem therefore probably had to lie at a lower level than the configuration one...
At this point, I was getting desparate. What was I going to do? I couldn't really do any work whatsoever...at least, not the kind of work I needed to (Lyx stuff) -- none of the fonts worked...So I did what any sane person would do. I e-mailed The Answer Gang. As usual, I got replies, all of which were very helpful. It feels odd for me e-mailing TAG -- usually I am the one answering questions; not asking them :)
One of the replies I got back though got me thinking. What is the job of X? Well, very loosely put it is a layer that provides protocols for the Window Manager to use so that various things can be set (position of window etc.). Is it therefore up to X to provide the fonts? No -- that is at the programming level....
... not quite. Some distributions (RH, Mandrake) run a program called "xfs": "X Font Server". It provides a means of sharing fonts across a network to which many hosts connect to the server. Great, but is that of any use to me? No..so why not get rid of it? Indeed, am I even using one?
[n6tadam@laptop n6tadam]$ /etc/init.d/xfs status xfs is running.
Bah -- so I *do* have one. Could that be part of my problem? One of the methods that I have learnt in solving problem is to try and break it down. Diagnosis of computer problems therefore should be no different, excpet that I employ a technique I like to call: abstract de-layering. That is, remove all the non-essential layers so that you are left with the minimum number of possible conflicting processes.
You may well be thinking though that if I were to kill the xfs that my X server wouldn't work anymore? Well that is what I thought until I remembered that actually there is a 'fallback' method -- the X server configuration file itself...
So...how did I solve this in the end? Firstly I had to find a way of killing xfs permenantly -- I just didn't need it. All it was doing was adding another layer of complexity that I don't need. In debian there's a really useful script: "update-rc.d". Thus:
[n6tadam@laptop n6tadam]$ sudo update-rc.d -f /etc/init.d/xfs remove
Bye-bye, xfs. Of course there are other ways of doing this. You could do something like edit the file so that you include the following after the she-bang line:
----------------------
#!/bin/bash NO_XFS = 1 [ $NO_XFS = "1" ] && { #tell syslogd we don't want this anymore... logger "Not starting XFS: you said not to...." exit 0 } || { #rest of script as written follows.... }
----------------------
But the question still remains, how are the fonts displayed if there is no font server running? By looking at X's configuration file (/etc/X11/XF86Config-4) I found the following section:
----------------------
Section "Files" FontPath "unix/:7100" # local font server # if the local font server has problems, we can fall back on these FontPath "/usr/lib/X11/fonts/misc" FontPath "/usr/lib/X11/fonts/cyrillic" FontPath "/usr/lib/X11/fonts/100dpi" FontPath "/usr/lib/X11/fonts/75dpi" FontPath "/usr/lib/X11/fonts/Type1" FontPath "/usr/lib/X11/fonts/Speedo" FontPath "/usr/lib/X11/fonts/100dpi" FontPath "/usr/lib/X11/fonts/75dpi" EndSection
----------------------
Excellent! As there was no font server running then we were using the font paths listed above. One important thing to note though is that the ORDER that the fonts are listed, is the order that the fonts are searched for.. The keyword here though is "dpi" -- dots per square inch.
All I did was to change the values round in the listing so that 75 came before 100, hence the list now looked like the following:
----------------------
Section "Files" ###FontPath "unix/:7100" # local font server # if the local font server has problems, we can fall back on these FontPath "/usr/lib/X11/fonts/misc" FontPath "/usr/lib/X11/fonts/cyrillic" FontPath "/usr/lib/X11/fonts/75dpi" FontPath "/usr/lib/X11/fonts/100dpi" FontPath "/usr/lib/X11/fonts/Type1" FontPath "/usr/lib/X11/fonts/Speedo" FontPath "/usr/lib/X11/fonts/100dpi" FontPath "/usr/lib/X11/fonts/75dpi" EndSection
----------------------
Now when I restarted X, it was normal. Problem solved. One interesting thing to note though is that commenting out the "unix/:7100" line above actually makes X start a little faster. I am still a little puzzled as to why xfs/X didn't talk to eachother -- what it is that caused my weird font problems in the first place.
The lesson to really be learnt here though is solving a problem such as this can be done by removing all the layers such that what you are left with is a non-conflicting layer that you can use to solve your problems cleanly.
I write the recently-revived series "The Linux Weekend Mechanic", which was
started by John Fisk (the founder of Linux Gazette) in 1996 and continued
until 1998. I'm also a member of The Answer Gang.
I was born in Hammersmith (London UK) in 1983. When I was 13, I moved to
the sleepy, thatched roofed, village of East Chaldon in the county of Dorset.
I am very near the coast (at Lulworth Cove) which is where I used to work.
I first got interested in Linux in 1996 having seen a review of it in a
magazine (Slackware 2.0). I was fed up with the instability that the then-new
operating system Win95 had and so I decided to give it a go.
Slackware 2.0 was great. I have been a massive Linux enthusiast ever
since. I ended up with running SuSE on both my desktop and laptop computers.
While at school (The Purbeck
School, Wareham in Dorset), I was actively involved in setting up two
Linux proxy servers (each running Squid and SquidGuard). I also set up
numerous BASH scripts which allowed web-based filtering to be done via
e-mail, so that when an e-mail was received, the contents of it were added to
the filter file. (Good old BASH -- I love it)
I am now 18 and studying at University (Southampton Institute, UK), on a
course called HND Buisness Information Technology (BIT). So far, it's great.
Other hobbies include reading. I especially enjoy reading plays (Henrik
Ibsen, Chekov, George Bernard Shaw), and I also enjoy literature (Edgar Allan
Poe, Charles Dickens, Jane Austin to name but a few).
I enjoy walking, and often go on holiday to the Lake District, to a place
called Keswick. There are numerous "mountains", of which "Great Gable" is my
most favourite.
I am also a keen musician. I play the piano in my spare time.
I listen to a variety of music. I enjoy listening to
Rock (My favourite band is "Pavement" (lead singer:
Stephen Malkmus). I also have a passion for 1960's
psychedelic music (I hope to purchase a copy of
"Nuggets" reeeeaaall soon).
...making Linux just a little more fun! |
By Javier Malonda |
The Ecol comic strip is written for escomposlinux.org (ECOL), the web site tha t supports, es.comp.os.linux, the Spanish USENET newsgroup for Linux. The strips are drawn in Spanish and then translated to English by the author.
These images are scaled down to minimize horizontal scrolling. To see a panel in all its clarity, click on it.
All Ecol cartoons are at tira.escomposlinux.org (Spanish), comic.escomposlinux.org (English) and http://tira.puntbarra.com/ (Catalan). The Catalan version is translated by the people who run the site; only a few episodes are currently available.
These cartoons are copyright Javier Malonda. They may be copied, link ed or distributed by any means. However, you may not distribute modifications. If you link to a cartoon, please notify Javier, who would appreciate hearing from you.
...making Linux just a little more fun! |
By David Lechnyr |
Sendmail has two little-used options that are great for security and access control. This is commonly referred to as AUTH/STARTTLS. With AUTH support, you can require that all SMTP traffic must log in first with a valid username and password; those that do can also be allowed to relay (great for laptops with random/mobile IP-addresses). With STARTTLS support, all SMTP traffic can be SSL-encrypted. To access these features, you'll need to download and install OpenSSL, Cyrus SASL, and Sendmail.
Download OpenSSL from http://www.openssl.org/source/ and run:
$ ./config --prefix=/usr --openssldir=/etc/ssl shared
$ make
$ make test
# make install
# strip /usr/bin/openssl /usr/lib/libcrypto.a /usr/lib/libssl.a
# cp -fa /etc/ssl/man /usr && rm -rf /etc/ssl/man
# ldconfig -v
Download Cyrus SASL 1.5.28 from ftp://ftp.andrew.cmu.edu/pub/cyrus-mail/. At present, Cyrus SASL 2.1.15 appears to have problems with Sendmail 8.12.10, however reports are mixed.
$ tar xzf cyrus-sasl-1.5.28.tar.gz
$ cd cyrus-sasl-1.5.28
$ ./configure --prefix=/usr --enable-login$ make
# make install
# echo "/usr/lib/sasl" >> /etc/ld.so.conf
# ldconfig -v
Next, create the AUTH configuration file that Sendmail will look for. It should reside in
/usr/lib/sasl/Sendmail.conf
(note the uppercase "S" in the filename):
pwcheck_method: shadow
Download Sendmail 8.12.10 from http://www.sendmail.org and unpack the archive:
$ tar xzf sendmail.8.12.10.tar.gz
$ cd sendmail-8.12.10/devtools/Site
Create the file devtools/Site/site.config.m4
with the following contents:
APPENDDEF(`conf_sendmail_ENVDEF', `-DSASL -DSTARTTLS')
APPENDDEF(`conf_sendmail_LIBS', `-lsasl -lssl -lcrypto')
Then, from the main directory of the archive, run the standard build command with the '-c' switch, which essentially tells Sendmail to re-read any configuration changes we've made:
$ cd ../..
$ sh Build -c
$ cd cf/cf
Before we can continue, we need to create our Sendmail configuration file in cf/cf/sendmail.mc
--
everyone's is different; adjust it to fit your specific circumstance. The required items for AUTH are in red; those for
STARTTLS are in blue:
VERSIONID(`Sample Sendmail AUTH/STARTTLS configuration file')dnl
OSTYPE(linux)dnl
DOMAIN(generic)dnl
define(`confAUTH_OPTIONS', `A')dnl
define(`confAUTH_MECHANISMS', `PLAIN')dnl
TRUST_AUTH_MECH(`PLAIN')dnl
define(`confCACERT_PATH', `/etc/ssl/certs')dnl
define(`confCACERT', `/etc/ssl/certs/certificate-authority.crt')dnl
define(`confSERVER_CERT', `/etc/ssl/certs/server.crt')dnl
define(`confSERVER_KEY', `/etc/ssl/certs/server.key')dnl
define(`confPRIVACY_FLAGS', `goaway')dnl
MAILER(local)dnl
MAILER(smtp)dnl
We can't use cram-md5 or digest-md5 as it's tricky (if not impossible) to get them to work. Which is why we also use STARTTLS to make sure that our plain-text password is encrypted during the AUTH transaction.
Once done, you can generate the final configuration files and then install the Sendmail binary:
$ sh Build sendmail.cf
# mkdir -p /etc/mail
# sh Build install-cf
# cd ../..
# sh Build install
If you haven't yet purchased your certificates, from personal experience I can recommend Thawte. If you'd like to have additional information in detail regarding certificates and keys, or if you'd rather generate your own, please see http://hr.uoregon.edu/davidrl/lamp.html#CERTIFICATES and http://www.modssl.org/docs/2.8/ssl_faq.html#ToC24.
The bottom line is that you'll need three files:
/etc/ssl/certs/server.crt
-- This is your server's SSL certificate (chmod 400)/etc/ssl/certs/server.key
-- This is your server's SSL private key (chmod 400)/etc/ssl/certs/certificate-authority.crt
-- This is the root certificate from your issuing certificate
authority; for example, Thawte's is available here.Go ahead and start up your Sendmail daemon:
# /usr/sbin/sendmail -L sm-mta -bd -q30m
# /usr/sbin/sendmail -L sm-msp-queue -Ac -q30m
Nothing's ever good without a test. On your mail server, run the following commands, which are in bold:
$ telnet localhost 25
Trying 127.0.0.1...
Connected to localhost.
Escape character is '^]'.
220 mail.fluffygerbils.net ESMTP Sendmail 8.12.10/8.12.10; Tue, 23 Sep 2003 12:16:07 -0700
ehlo localhost
250-mail.fluffygerbils.net Hello localhost [127.0.0.1], pleased to meet you
250-ENHANCEDSTATUSCODES
250-PIPELINING
250-8BITMIME
250-SIZE
250-DSN
250-ETRN
250-AUTH PLAIN
250-STARTTLS
250-DELIVERBY
250 HELP
It's the presence of the AUTH PLAIN and STARTTLS statements that should make you feel that your time was well spent ;-)
Now, let's compare a non-AUTH/STARTTLS transaction to our new transaction:
Regular SMTP Transaction
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AUTH/SASL SMTP Transaction
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Apple Mail (MacOS X):
Microsoft Outlook XP:
David is a Network Manager at the Human Resources department of the
University of Oregon. He holds a Master's Degree in Social Work along with his
MCSE+I, CNE, and CCNA certifications. He has been working with Linux for the
past six years, with an emphasis on systems security, network troubleshooting,
and PHP/MySQL integration.
...making Linux just a little more fun! |
By Rick Moen |
-- Several LG Editors contributed to this article.
July 1995 (#1): Linux Gazette ("LG") is created by founding editor John M. Fisk — back in the Slackware 2.0 days — as part of his Linux HomeBoy Web pages in Nashville, Tennessee, while studying as a General Surgery resident and Research Fellow at Vanderbilt University Medical Center — as a magazine to "pass along some of the ideas that I've tried, liked, and have worked for me".
Local Internet provider Tennessee CommerceNet graciously offers to host it at http://www.tenn.com/fiskhtml/gazette_toc.html.
Over a large part of the Gazette's history, John also authors the magazine's Weekend Mechanic column.
August 1995 (#2): John introduces our signature line, "Making Linux just a little more fun".
September 1995 (#3): Linux Gazette's tradition of simple, lightweight graphics and markup is introduced. The "Two Cent Tip" and MailBag (later, "Mailbag") columns also make their debuts, as does an early version of the Linux Gazette FAQ.
October 1995 (#4): With help from Matt Welsh and Greg Hankins, John's growing magazine becomes officially adopted as a publication of the Linux Documentation Project. At the same time, LG clarifies that copyright will remain with individual contributors, but that issue contents will be redistributable under a BSDish licence. The first official mirror is volunteered by Donnie Barnes, Marc Ewing, and Erik Troan at Red Hat Linux, Inc. (later renamed Red Hat, Inc.).
November 1995 (#5): Additional mirrors are introduced by Phil Hughes of SSC, Inc. and by Alan Cox in the UK. More are invited. ftp-able copies appear for the first time. Michael J. Hammel's popular monthly column "Graphics Muse" debuts.
January 1996 (#6): The tradition of including Linux Gazette issues on CD-ROMs was launched by Pacific HighTech, Inc. (later renamed TurboLinux, Inc.), on its monthly "Linux Archive Monthly CD-ROM".
March 1996 (#7): John invites broader participation (more editors), having been somewhat overwhelmed.
August 1996 (#8): SSC, Inc., publisher of Linux Journal, volunteers to become the primary hosting site, replacing Tennessee CommerceNet, and allowing it to remain a non-commercial magazine.
September 1996 (#9): Linux Gazette switches to an open license, roughly BSDish, fairly similar to the later OPL. Marjorie L. Richardson becomes editor (very ably assisted by Amy Kukuk, and sometimes others).
October 1996 (#10): John M. Fisk's Weekend Mechanic column first appears (later revived by Thomas Adam).
January 1997 (#13): Jim Dennis submits a feedback letter to the editor, in which he offers to answer questions sent to the LG editor of a more technical nature. Marjorie forwards such questions from readers, and then publishes Jim's replies as the "Answer Guy" column, much to Jim's surprise. The column becomes one of the Gazette's most popular features.
February 1997 (#14): The first translated edition (Italian) is launched by Francesco De Carlo and other volunteers at LUGBari.
March 1997 (#15): Linux Gazette picks up a commercial sponsor, InfoMagic (a now-vanished mail-order CD house).
October 1997 (#22): Viktorie Navratilova serves as editor.
December 1997 (#23): Riley P. Richardson fields the editorship, assisted by Marjorie Richardson and Amy Kukuk. Marjorie takes it back in March 1998.
May 1998 (#28): Many more mirror sites have been joining the network. Heather Stern reworks the growing "Answer Guy" column's design to improve its graphics and make the column more Web-functional — and becomes the column's maintainer. Jim Dennis begins offering Greetings as editorial blurbs, in addition to his answers.
June 1999 (#42): Webmaster Mike Orr takes over as editor, assisted by Marjorie Richardson, Heather Stern, and Jim Dennis.
October 1999 (#46): The final "Graphics Muse" column appears, as Michael J. Hammel consolidates his diverse writings onto his own Web site.
February 2000 (#50): Shane Collinge's cartoon HelpDex first appeared, unsolicited. Mike noticed it and LG's first cartoon series was born.
March 2000 (#51): SSC starts "talkback" Web facilities hyperlinked from each Gazette article. Unfortunately, recently (October 2003), all those forums and their contents have been erased during site reorganisation, and are lost. (This breakage illustrates one of the problems with dynamic content, which violates the Gazette staff's policy of each issue having static content in order to be mirror-friendly.)
Summer 2000 (#54-56): The Answer Guy invites some friends among the Linux Gazette crew, and a few others whose answers have been useful, to join him in handling the flood of questions. Heather Stern steps up to handle the editorial blurb and train some scripts to help keep the answers conversational. In July, a handful of people all answer, and by August "The Answer Gang" is properly established. Thomas Adam later pitches in to help out, getting cross-trained in the large Perl script she uses to manage the TAG mailboxes.
September 2000 (#57): Linux Gazette formally changes to the Open Publication License (OPL).
November 2000 (#59): In response to increasing requests from tradeshow staff, a masthead is established, listing Mike Orr as editor, Heather Stern as Technical Editor, and Michael "Alex" Williams, Don Marti, and Ben Okopnik as Contributing Editors, and Jim Dennis as Senior Contributing Editor. Over succeeding issues, Michael Williams leaves, and Dan Wilder joins. Linux Gazette is mirrored in over 40 countries at this point.
May 2001 (#66): Thomas Adam revives the Weekend Mechanic column, last submitted by Gazette founder John M. Fisk in 1998.
October 2001 (#71): Linux Journal sprouts a PHPNuke-based Web site; the idea starts kicking around the back halls at SSC that maybe LG would be a good candidate for turning into a site based on some sort of Web forum, too.
Winter 2001: SSC publisher Phil Hughes moves residences from Seattle to Costa Rica. Some months later, the entire SSC Web operation (hosting for ssc.com, linuxjournal.com, and linuxgazette.com) moves to Costa Rica with him.
September 2002 (#82): Javier Malonda's bilingual (Spanish / English) comic strip Ecol joins the Gazette. The magazine gets a fairly nice new logo.
November 2002 (#84): Mike Orr revamps Linux Gazette's technical structure, to eliminate symbolic links (problematic for MS-Windows systems), to give the single-page ASCII and HTML versions consistent URLs, and to re-do the magazine-production scripts in YAML, with fixed elements generated from Cheetah templates. Ben Okopnik introduces the Perl One-Liner of the Month column — if Sam Spade were a Perl hacker...
Autumn 2002 - Winter 2003: Marketing within SSC would like to jazz up LG. Their idea of how to do this is to create Web forums. A prototype PHPNuke-based site is created, but it doesn't work out; it's scrapped without release to the public. The Gazette staff wants veto power over any more planned changes. "Of course. You guys *are* Linux Gazette. Without you it wouldn't be anything."
March 2003 (#88): Mike Orr, editor of LG, leaves his employ at SSC. The rest of the Gazette staff are informed, and he spends a few more months editing LG as a volunteer effort. Some are concerned that SSC may not want to host us further; mild inquiries are made, and it doesn't seem to be the case. Any question of such a jump is ended by a call from Phil Hughes, clarifying SSC's commitment to keep Linux Gazette a continuing magazine, and that article submissions would continue as before, unchanged.
May 2003: Scott (SSC's webmaster) wrote Mike Orr and said Phil wanted him to take over the job of publishing the articles, to learn the spirit of the magazine while planning a better CMS engine. Unfortunately, he didn't get a chance to publish an issue; he was laid off by SSC.
June 2003 (#91): Mike jumps in on short notice to release June's issue.
WorldWatch, claiming to be a daily digest of useful articles about Linux, appears as a subdomain of linuxgazette.com. This was probably the result of yet another effort towards preparing a CMS-based magazine, but doesn't particularly resemble the true Gazette focus, so, other than to mention it in News Bytes, the staff ignore it.
July 07, 2003: Mike announces to the staff on the admin mail list that Jeff, SSC's webmaster, will become our new editor. He's welcomed. Jeff disclaims the editor title, and says plans include a CMS-driven site with "self-editing" features. Reaction in general is doubtful, and staff first make plans to leave if that's the best way to keep publishing a periodic magazine. Submission rate and quality noticeably declines; some authors start holding material back.
August 2003 (#93): Jeff Tinsler announces on the issue's Back Page Mike Orr's departure, saying there will no longer be an editor. However, editorial matters are still discussed on the admin list, and the masthead remains.
September 2003 (#94): The issue releases in ordinary style, minus a few articles due to missed deadlines.
October 2003 (#95): Heather Stern sends off her portion of the issue (TAG, Tips, and Mailbag) for public release. Several days later, a sharp-eyed observer notices the "Gazette Matters" topic, describing SSC's plans and the staff's concerns, is mysteriously missing from the Mailbag article. Queries to SSC about the deletion go unanswered. Most mirrors carry the damaged edition (and later it turns out that other articles are being silently deleted from prior issues, likewise reflected out to the mirrors).
As it is still unknown which CMS software is planned to be used for the release, the staff confer, with the eventual consensus that:
They therefore prepare to move to new hosting, courtesy of software engineer T.R. Fullhart, with Mike Orr to return as overall editor.
End of October 2003: The promised CMS-driven site appears, replacing all previously existing Gazette contents at http://www.linuxgazette.com/ .
The staff notice old articles being loaded into the CMS stripped of author attribution and/or authors' copyright notices, and help SSC identify and correct these problems. At our press time for this November 2003 issue, most such copyright violations have been cleared up and only a couple remain.
The staff assemble a full set of back issues from the LG packages in Debian, which have not been corrupted by deletions or alterations, and rebuild the mirror network.
October 28, 2003: Writing on behalf of LG's staff, Rick Moen formally requests that SSC correct its damaged back issues and cede the domain name linuxgazette.com to the active Linux Gazette staff, if they are not interested in mirroring the new site.
November 2003 (#96): You are here. This is the first issue published at Linux Gazette's new home: http://linuxgazette.net/.
Rick is a member of The Answer Gang.
Rick has run freely-redistributable Unixen since 1992, having been roped
in by first 386BSD, then Linux. Having found that either one
sucked less, he blew
away his last non-Unix box (OS/2 Warp) in 1996. He specialises in clue
acquisition and delivery (documentation & training), system
administration, security, WAN/LAN design and administration, and
support. He helped plan the LINC Expo (which evolved into the first
LinuxWorld Conference and Expo, in San Jose), Windows Refund Day, and
several other rabble-rousing Linux community events in the San Francisco
Bay Area. He's written and edited for IDG/LinuxWorld, SSC, and the
USENIX Association; and spoken at LinuxWorld Conference and Expo and
numerous user groups.
His first computer was his dad's slide rule, followed by visitor access
to a card-walloping IBM mainframe at Stanford (1969). A glutton for
punishment, he then moved on (during high school, 1970s) to early HP
timeshared systems, People's Computer Company's PDP8s, and various
of those they'll-never-fly-Orville microcomputers at the storied
Homebrew Computer Club -- then more Big Blue computing horrors at
college alleviated by bits of primeval BSD during UC Berkeley summer
sessions, and so on. He's thus better qualified than most, to know just
how much better off we are now.
When not playing Silicon Valley dot-com roulette, he enjoys
long-distance bicycling, helping run science fiction conventions, and
concentrating on becoming an uncarved block.
...making Linux just a little more fun! |
By Ben Okopnik |
It was a blonde. A blonde to make a bishop kick a hole in a stained glass window.[ Author's note: These events... well, something similar... or maybe not, anyway something or other actually happened. Names, genders, actions, phrasing, situations, environment, weather, and possibly even the planet of occurrence have all been changed in order to punish the innocent and protect the guilty. Even the tea was Guangdong Gunpowder instead of Earl Grey, and wasn't served nearly hot enough. ]
-- Raymond Chandler
Frink staggered into Woomert's office, somewhat pop-eyed.
- "Did you see... she's sitting out there, Woomert! She's, well, uh... tall, and..." His hands were waving wildly but still describing arcs with enough curvature that Woomert raised an eyebrow and glanced toward the door to the living room.- "Well, Frink - that's quite a description. First, take a deep breath... that's it, again... one more time... good. Now, what's it all about?"
Frink cleared his throat.- "Right. Well, for one thing, she's really upset; her Web server died, her hard drive crashed, her SCSI controller bit the dust - before you say anything, though, the hardware's been fixed already. The problem is that they still can't get the server up - it keeps dying on startup - and she says that someone's been stealing her domain names! That's all I got, though: she's, uh, a little distracting, especially when she's angry... you'll see what I mean when you talk to her."
Woomert steepled his hands and looked at Frink for a long moment.- "When you talk to her and I observe, you mean. I meant it when I said that I wanted you to be my partner, Frink; you'll need to learn all the aspects of being an Internet Detective, and this sounds like the perfect opportunity."
- "But... but..." Frink looked thoroughly lost. "Me? You want me to talk to her? But what if I mess it all up?"Woomert stood up and walked across the room, and stood by the door, obviously waiting for Frink to go through first.
- "If you mess it up, it'll be a horrible tragedy and will destroy both our reputations forever... riiight! Frink, what I'm asking you to do is your best; if any problems come up, I'll be there to help. Buck up, lad; I have faith in you."Frink looked at him for a few seconds, then took a deep breath, squared his shoulders and nodded. In all the time that the two had known each other, Woomert had never known the younger man to look so serious, or so intent on doing the right thing. He stepped into the living room just after Frink, and quietly closed the door.
- "Miss Bombshell, I'd like to introduce my senior partner, Woomert Foonly. Woomert, Miss Auburn Bombshell."Woomert's first thought was that Frink had not exaggerated. The woman in front of him, dressed in a red leather ultra-miniskirt and a white silk blouse that was at least one size too small, was quite distracting - stunning, actually. Woomert's eyes briefly swept over her generous curves and came to rest on her eyes, blue as sapphires of the first water... and, just like those sapphires, full of fire. She had been paying only cursory attention to Frink, and now turned the full force of her personality on Woomert.
- "Well, well - it's the famous Woomert Foonly! I've heard a lot about you. Well, now that you're here, we should be able to get something accomplished. You see..."- "Just a moment, Ms. Bombshell." Woomert stood easily, hands in his pockets and leaning against the wall. "You seem to be laboring under a misconception; I am indeed the senior partner here, but I've recently" - there was no need to specify just how recently - "begun acting in a largely advisory capacity, while my partner, Frink Oooblick, does most of the work." He smiled slightly. "Rank hath its privileges, time goes on. Fear not: Frink is quite capable, and can call on me if the need should arise - although I don't expect that to happen."
- "But... I came here particularly for your services!" The blonde looked even more angry than before, which did not seem possible; Frink expected to see lightning strike at any moment. "I demand..."- "Ms. Bombshell." There was obvious frost in Woomert's voice. "If you wish to deal with us, then you need to know this: I and my partner behave in a civil manner toward our clients, and we require the same in return. I have stated what is on offer; it is up to you to accept or find help elsewhere. Being offensive will simply limit your options to the latter."
- "There's nowhere else to look - I've tried everywhere!"- "Then I suggest you abide by the rules I've stated." Woomert crossed to the pantry and began filling the kettle with spring water. "I'll be making tea. Shall I make you a cup, or have you decided to leave?"
For a few moments there was an uncomfortable silence in the room. Then, the tall blonde threw herself into the large armchair with a sigh.- "Two teaspoons of brown sugar, if you've got it. Or I can live with the white stuff if I have to. You're a tough customer, you know that?"
- "Demerara sugar all right? It's a bit fancier than plain brown, but it'll go well with this Earl Grey." At her nod, Woomert added the sugar and carried the cup to her. "As to being tough, I just don't take well to bullying or manipulation. No matter", his eyes swept over her again, "how sweet the bait." Just as she was about to say something, Woomert made eye contact with her again and smiled slightly. "Go ahead - deny it if you will."Auburn snorted and settled back into the armchair, cradling her cup. "OK, so this isn't exactly business attire. I just thought you boys would be a little more... manageable this way." She glanced at Frink, who was still standing by the table in the center of the room. "Come on over and sit down next to me - Frink, is it? I won't bite." Her eyes glittered with amusement. "Not with Mr. Tough here watching, anyway. Or without you asking me first."
Frink walked over and sat down on the far end of the couch. Auburn glanced at him appraisingly for a moment, then spoke. Her voice held no trace of levity, and she was all business.
- "All right, then. Here's the situation: I've had a bunch of hardware failures in a row, which effectively shut down my business. I've got those repaired - in fact, the techs I've hired just got done - but even with the hardware back in place, the software still isn't working, specifically the Apache server. Now, I'm hosting over 500 porn sites on my machines, and they're all losing money by the hour - which means that I am too! What the..." Frink's tea seemed to have gone down the wrong pipe; he choked and coughed, but quickly recovered, waving off all offers of help, and made hand motions that invited Auburn to go on.- "Well, as I was saying - I host a bunch of these things, and now Apache won't come up any more! My techs have tried and tried, but they got nowhere: it seems to be beyond them. They don't know which sites are down without bringing up the server, and they can't bring up the server without... well, you can see the problem. One thing they've mentioned is that there's certainly more than one dead site, at least a dozen - but not much more than that. All I want for now is to get the working ones up, and I'll get the broken ones fixed later - in fact, I know I'll have to restore some of them from tape, since the hardware took a chunk of data with it when it died." Auburn shifted in the chair until she was looking directly at Frink. "What do you think, Big Guy? Can you handle it? The SSH server is still running, so we can still log in."
Frink had finally managed to breathe normally, although his color - due to the coughing, no doubt - was still high.- "Well, Miss Bombshell..."
- "Heck, call me Auburn." She grinned and slid onto the couch next to Frink. "You're kinda cute, y'know. All right, all right," she raised her hands defensively in answer to Woomert's stern look, "I'll behave. But he is!"- "Right. Well... Auburn... let's just log in and see what's going on." Frink walked over to his machine and logged in. After a bit of quick exploration of relevant files, he tried to start the webserver which failed as advertised, and looked through the log file - indeed, there was a list of error messages, but all of them pointed to the first site that was failing. If he were to fix that one, the server still would not come up - the errors would now simply report the next broken site, an iterative process that could take a long, long time. He then looked through the server configuration file, ``/etc/apache/httpd.conf''.
- "Ah. It seems that several of these are misconfigured - this is besides the site structure missing or being broken - but it would take a long time to figure out which is which, and a longer time to fix them all. Auburn, I think our best bet is to do what you suggested - bring up the sites that are OK. However, dealing with each individual entry in ``httpd.conf'' can be pretty painful - so here's what we're going to do..."As he was about to start typing, Frink felt a tap on his shoulder. Looking around he saw Woomert extending... oh, good grief! Those were Woomert's favorite typing gloves! Frink took a deep breath, nodded at Woomert and pulled them on, very conscious of the implied honor.
"First, let's pull these domains out of the file and create references to them; it'll be a lot easier than trying to deal with groups of stanzas. Apache lets us do that with the ``Include'' directive, so..."perl -00wne'/^<V/||next;open F,">",++$a or die"$a: $!\n";print F' httpd.conf
perl -i -wlpe'if(/^<V/){print"Include $_"for 1..509;exit}' httpd.conf
- "Excellent, Frink!" Woomert was smiling. "What's your next move?"
Frink sat back in his chair, looking flushed with success and a bit jaunty.- "Well, now that I've isolated the vhosts, I get to do a little trouble-shooting - that is, I need to figure out which of these hosts are stopping Apache from coming up. Fortunately, from what Auburn told us, there aren't that many - so it makes sense for me to run a binary split, a.k.a. ``divide and conquer''. First, let's make sure that Apache itself is OK, i.e., that it will come up when all the vhosts are disabled:
perl -i -wpe's/^(?=Include)/# /' httpd.conf
- "Won't that take a long time?"
- "Not at all." Frink's blush was barely noticeable by this time. "The power of the binary technique comes from the progressive splitting, that is, being able to quickly zero in on the problem. For example, if there was only one broken vhost here, it would take no more than nine tests to find it - since 2 to the 9th power is 512, and we have just under that number of hosts. Here, watch..." Frink uncommented the first half of the ``Include'' directives, then tried the server, which failed to start.- "All right - now we know there's a bad vhost somewhere in this bunch. So, we'll comment out half of the vhosts we've just enabled, and... the server comes up, which tells us that the bad vhost is in the group that we've just commented out. Re-enable half of that, and..."
Auburn clapped her hands. "I get it, I get it! Oooh, Frink, you clever, clever fellow!"Frink grinned and blushed again, typing all the while. After a few minutes, he had located fourteen broken vhosts, which he commented out. With a sigh of satisfaction, he started the Apache server for the last time.
- "There. Auburn, it looks like you're back in business. Presumably, your techs can fix whatever is wrong with those broken ones; that's just a question of going through them individually and figuring it out."- "Oh, I'm sure of it - now that you've fixed the main problem. Say, what about somebody stealing my domain names? I tried a few of them while they were down, and came up with some kind of an advertising page! What's going on there?"
- "Oh, I just checked that out; it was only VeriSign practicing trust violation, an odd thing to do given that the only product they sell is reputation-based trust - but stupid greed never looks beyond the short term. They recently decided to do something that was quite unethical, snag any registered but non-resolving names in ``.com'' and redirect them to their own pages." He frowned. "They're under a lot of pressure from the Internet community, so hopefully they'll drop this practice soon. For you, though, there's not much to worry about; once a host is up and answering requests, no redirection will occur."Auburn squealed happily, reached around the chair, hugged Frink, and planted a kiss on his cheek, then jumped up and grabbed her purse.
- "That was terrific, Frink! I'll be sending you boys a check as soon as I get back." She winked. "I've got to hurry, now; I've got a photo shoot coming up for a new site, with me as the star attraction!" She looked at Frink, smiling. "Give me a call sometime, and you just might convince me to give you a private show; I think smart men are sexy. See ya." She skipped over to the door, blew them a kiss, and was gone."Well, partner, I'm proud of you." Woomert relaxed in the armchair and sipped his tea. "You did well, much the approach I would have used - with minor variations, perhaps."
Frink sat on the arm of the couch and flipped over it to the other side, ending up sitting comfortably. He looked somewhat pensive.
- "What would you have done differently, Woomert?"- "Oh, nothing significant; a matter of style. Five hundred-some vhosts isn't a terribly large number - I think I would have run a loop that added vhost ``includes'' one at a time to ``httpd.conf'', restarted the server, and commented the last entry if it failed. This way, the identification would be completely automatic, and it wouldn't matter if the number of bad vhosts was high relative to the total - a scenario where a binary search would become more time-intensive than a linear one. However, your approach works better where the total is large and the number of bad spots relatively small, which was the case here.
I'll tell you what. I know that you came up with this solution all on your own, and it's a good one... but why don't you go ahead and explain it to me? Not only am I interested in how you code - that's obviously critical in what we do - but in how you think of the problems and the approaches to them. Pretend that I don't know anything about it, and feel free to go in-depth on anything you feel to be relevant."Frink straightened up, smiling.
- "Woomert, sometimes I think that you're reading my mind. I was just thinking how I'd miss these ``code dissection'' sessions, where I had a chance to ask you about any ambiguities or fine points; this takes care of that, and anything I'm not sure of doesn't have to be handled in front of the clients.All right, then, here we go. We'll start with my first one-liner:
perl -00wne'/^<V/||next;open F,">",++$a or die"$a: $!\n";print F' httpd.conf
<VirtualHost ip.address.of.host.somedomain.com>
ServerAdmin webmaster@host.somedomain.com
DocumentRoot /www/docs/host.somedomain.com
ServerName host.somedomain.com
ErrorLog logs/host.somedomain.com-error.log
CustomLog logs/host.somedomain.com-access.log common
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost ip.address.of.host.somedomain.com>
ServerAdmin webmaster@host.somedomain.com
DocumentRoot /www/docs/host.somedomain.com
ServerName host.somedomain.com
ErrorLog logs/host.somedomain.com-error.log
CustomLog logs/host.somedomain.com-access.log common
</VirtualHost>
...
- "Well, I wanted to skip everything in there until I did get to the "vhosts" section. Having glanced through Auburn's ``httpd.conf'', I knew that nothing in there began with ``<V'' until you got to ``vhosts'' - so I just told Perl to skip everything until then; ``/^<V/||next'' says ``unless the current line begins with a "<V", jump to the next line.'' Once it got to the right section, it would actually become a double-check: all the paragraphs we wanted were supposed to begin with a ``<V''.
Going from that point forward, I started creating files by using Perl's three-argument version of ``open''. You see, I wanted to increment the number which would be the name of the file, but I also needed to specify the ">" prefix - and I knew that I couldn't just say ">$a++", since the increment operator wouldn't work when quoted. However, the three-argument version of ``open'' has been around since Perl 5.6, and it came in very handy: ``open F,">",++$a'' worked fine. Of course, I tested the return value - just as you've taught me to do with any significant system command - with ``or die'', and specified that it should print the system error ($!) as well. Last of all, having created the ``F'' filehandle, I printed to it - and, as always, when ``print'' does not receive an argument (except for a filehandle), it prints ``$_'' by default. Given the ``-n'' and the ``-00'', this would contain the current paragraph, that is, the entire ``VirtualHost'' stanza. How's that for an explanation, Woomert?"Woomert laughed happily. "I'm proud of you, Frink. You've come a long way, just as I'd said before. Go ahead and run over the rest of what you've done; I have a wonderful lunch almost ready for us, but we've still got a few minutes."
Frink leaned back on the couch."Well, the rest is even easier - although admittedly a bit more dangerous.
perl -i -wlpe'if(/^<V/){print"Include $_"for 1..509;exit}' httpd.conf
- "Well, the last one is pretty simple - although it uses a feature of the regular expression set that beginners might not know about: one of the so-called "extended" patterns, a ``positive look-ahead assertion''.
perl -i -wpe's/^(?=Include)/# /' httpd.conf
Now, for lunch, we've got a bit of Dutch-Indonesian cuisine: I'm setting out a rijstaffel - ``rice table'' to the uninitiated, the idea being something like a Swedish smorgasbord, a pick-and-choose sort of thing. There are eight different kinds of satay (tasty skewers of various meats), ajam panggang (a sort of barbecued chicken) with nasi goreng (fried rice), gado-gado salad, and of course lots of peanut sauce, ketjap manis, and chili paste if you want a bit more spice, always a doubtful proposition with, erm, properly-seasoned Indonesian food. There's also Thai iced coffee to follow - not Dutch or Indonesian, but I find it does well for putting out the fire!"
"Oh, and speaking of fire... you seem to have made a friend today." Woomert grinned as Frink blushed and started to stutter his way through some complicated explanation that began with "Why, I would never...", and held up a warning finger. "Shush. You will end up doing whatever you decide is right for you, hopefully after careful consideration of the issues involved - and I will offer you my advice if you wish it, but not right now. For the moment, we have this excellent food waiting for us - and the only advice I will give you is to watch your elbows. Some of those sauces will eat through the table and possibly the marble floor in no time at all..."
Ben is a Contributing Editor for Linux Gazette and a member of The Answer Gang.
Ben was born in Moscow, Russia in 1962. He became interested in
electricity at age six--promptly demonstrating it by sticking a fork into
a socket and starting a fire--and has been falling down technological mineshafts
ever since. He has been working with computers since the Elder Days, when
they had to be built by soldering parts onto printed circuit boards and
programs had to fit into 4k of memory. He would gladly pay good money to any
psychologist who can cure him of the resulting nightmares.
Ben's subsequent experiences include creating software in nearly a dozen
languages, network and database maintenance during the approach of a hurricane,
and writing articles for publications ranging from sailing magazines to
technological journals. Having recently completed a seven-year
Atlantic/Caribbean cruise under sail, he is currently docked in Baltimore, MD,
where he works as a technical instructor for Sun Microsystems.
Ben has been working with Linux since 1997, and credits it with his complete
loss of interest in waging nuclear warfare on parts of the Pacific Northwest.
...making Linux just a little more fun! |
By Mike Orr ("Sluggo") |
"Woomert, Woomert!" Frink Ooblick ran into the room and shut the door behind him. He was clearly out of breath.
"What is it, Frink?" said Woomert Foonly. "You look like you've seen a ghost."
"There's a guy outside named Sluggo. He says he's gonna kick my Perl ass."
"Ass?" Woomert was puzzled. "But you don't own a donkey."
"He means arse," explained Frink.
"Oh, in that case he must be talking about a camel. A camel's behind. What do you know about this Sluggo?"
"He's the one that moved into the apartment on the corner. He's big and bald and has a menacing black bomber jacket. There's a tattoo on his arm of a snake. And there's a patch on his jacket of a camel with a slash through it."
"A Python bigot, huh?"
"Looks like it. He says he can beat our wimpy-ass Perl one-liners."
"Well, we've got him beat already there." Woomert laughed. Everybody knows there are no Python one-liners except 'print "Hello, spam world!"'"
"He wants to enter your POLOTM contest. And---" Frink stopped.
"And what, Frink?"
Frink replied quietly, "He... he said you're a dirty communist spy."
"Hey, I bathe every day! Well, well, let's put him in the contest." Woomert mused. "Tell him I'll give him a Perl example and he'll have to come up with a Python example that's just as elegant. But we'll have to find a judge. He certainly won't accept me as an unbiased judge." He thought and thought, and then banged his fist on the table. "I know! Elbert Arkleberry. He's widely known as being language neutral. I bet he'll do it. But you, Frink..." He put his hand on Frink's shoulder. "You'll have to explain and defend the Perl example yourself."
"Yikes!" said Frink and jumped. "You want me to defend Perl code against that animal? He'll tear my head off."
"I think it will be a good learning experience for you. Remember how worried you were about dealing with that hot babe client, and then it turned out to be no big deal. Why don't you go outside right now and tell this Sluggo to meet us tomorrow at ten behind the Quick-E-Mart."
"Well, OK, Woomert, if you think so. But... can I borrow your dark sunglasses? I think they'll give me courage."
"Sure, Frinko." He rummaged around and found the glasses, which he hadn't worn in three months. "Here you go."
Frink put the glasses on and left the room a bit more boldly than when he had entered.
The winter sun was clear but cold on the small circle that had gathered behind the Quick-E-Mart. Frink was sitting on the curb (or kerb as Woomert spelled it) with his laptop open on his knees. Sluggo was sitting on the curb a few blocks away. He didn't have a laptop, but Judge Arkleberry had brought an old 486/75 for him to use. The judge himself, an ex football player, sat between the two sides to prevent any arguments from boiling over. Woomert stood in front of them with a stack of printouts.
Sluggo looked over at Frink and squinted his eyes nastily. Frink swallowed and tried to return the gaze. Woomert watched the two and chuckled. "All right, let's begin," he said, and the staring contest was over. They both looked at Woomert. He showed them a printout. "Here's the first one," he said. On the printout was written:
PERL PROGRAM: perl -wpe's/at/op/g' INPUT INPUT FILE: A cat sat on a mat with a hat. OUTPUT: A cop sop on a mop with a hop.
Woomert said, "Frink, explain it."
"The -w flag prints warnings about constructs that look like common mistakes in Perl. The -p flag means run each input line through the expression and print the result. Actually, what it prints is the value of the default variable $_, but for a one-expression program like this it's essentially the same thing. -e means you're giving the program on the command line. s is a regular-expression substitution. g (global) means replace all occurrances on the line, not just the first."
"Thank you, Frink. Sluggo?"
Sluggo typed for a couple minutes on his laptop, and then came up with this:
% python -c \ > "import sys; print sys.stdin.read().replace('at', 'op')," <INPUT A cop sop on a mop with a hop.
[We split the line because some browsers and printers don't display wide <PRE> lines well. Sluggo actually typed one line without the backslash.]
"Zounds!" said Woomert. "I thought Python's separate import statement made any non-trivial one-liner impossible. I forgot you can have two commands on one line with a semicolon. All right, explain your program, Sluggo."
"sys is the module that has several miscellaneous system services. In this case we're using sys.stdin, which is the standard input filehandle. We don't need sys.stdout because print prints there by default. .read is a method that returns the entire file content as a string. Since it's now a string, we can use the string method .replace on it, which substitutes every 'at' with 'op'. The comma at the end prevents print from adding a newline, so the result is closest to the original. Python doesn't have an equivalent of Perl's -w flag, but it doesn't need it. The syntax is more straightforward and strict, so most of the constructs -w would complain about are errors in Python."
Sluggo didn't mention that Python does have warnings and a -W flag, because most Pythoneers don't use it. The built-in warnings are few in number and are related to much less drastic situations. -W exists in case your program raises your own custom warnings, or if you really want to get nagged about depreciated features.
The judge looked at the program, and said after a moment, "Sneaking that import statement onto the same line is OK; we couldn't very well have a contest without that, since Python puts basic services into libraries. .read is OK, even though it slurps the entire file at once rather than line by line. In this trivial case it doesn't make a difference either way. It just means you won't want to use it on a file that's several megabytes big. But I'll have to reject .replace. That's a literal string substitution and doesn't give the flexibility of a regular expression. You can have a second try if you wish."
Sluggo frowned and started an editor. In a couple minutes he showed another program.
% cat program.py import re, sys; print re.sub(sys.argv[1], sys.argv[2], sys.stdin.read()), % python program.py at op <INPUT A cop sop on a mop with a hop.
"OK, explain that one," said Woomert.
Sluggo explained, "It's the same as the previous example but with a regular expression. re.sub is a function that does the equivalent of Perl's s///g. It automatically replaces all occurrances so you don't need a g flag. sys.argv is an list-- I mean, an array-- of the command line arguments. sys.argv[0] is the program name itself, so we skip that. sys.stdin.read() turns the input file into a string, the same as above."
"But the command-line syntax isn't the same," Frink objected. "Even if we allow the program to be in a file rather than inline."
"Python doesn't need the s///g syntax. It's easier on the user if they don't have to get the slashes right, especially if you're embedding slashes in one of the parts. I know you can do s!!!g in Perl, but my way is even more convenient."
The judge spoke. "I like the way the Python program has a simpler command-line syntax. But the program is much more verbose than the Perl one. I call it a tie."
"The judge has spoken," declared Woomert. He held up another printout.
perl -i wpe's/at/op/g' *
"I'll have Frink demonstrate it."
Frink showed on his laptop how the program edits several files in place. "That's what the -i option does. Other than that it's the same."
"OK, Sluggo, it's your turn," said Woomert.
Sluggo turned a deep red and didn't move. Woomert said, "Sluggo, is something wrong?"
Sluggo sat silent a long moment. Finally he confessed, "That's the one case where I still use Perl."
Frink was shocked. "Does that mean you forfeit the contest?"
"I guess so." Sluggo looked at Frink for a second, then looked away.
Judge Arkleberry cleared his throat. "We'd still like to see how you'd do it in Python."
Sluggo remembered that there was a fileinput module, but he couldn't remember the syntax. So he spent a few minutes looking through the Python Library Reference on the judge's laptop, and then wrote:
% cat program.py import fileinput, re, sys for lin in fileinput.input(sys.argv[3:], inplace=1): print re.sub(sys.argv[1], sys.argv[2], lin), % cat INPUT A cat sat on a mat with a hat. % cat INPUT2 tit tat % python program.py at op INPUT INPUT2 % cat INPUT A cop sop on a mop with a hop. % cat INPUT2 tit top
Sluggo added, "I've tried and tried to think of a way to do that Perl example consisely in Python, but I haven't. Perl sucks rocks, but that one case makes it worth it. There is one thing I'm frustrated about it, though. Sometimes you want it to interactively ask you which matches to change, like vim does but with multiple files. Vim lets you search and replace in multiple files, but you gotta do ':w :n, arrow up a few times, enter' at the end of every file, and that gets tiresome. I've thought about writing a program to do that but haven't gotten around to it. Maybe in next month's PyOLOTM, although it certainly won't be a one-liner, so I'll have to think up a new title for the column."
The judge looked around. "Did Mr. Bint ever show up?"
Sluggo whispered to Frink, "Who's Mr. Bint?"
Frink whispered back, "He's this guy who thinks C is the only language worth learning, and wishes we didn't publish so many Perl and Python articles because it distracts people from learning the One Really Useful Language in depth. Nobody has seen him since April. He's a homeless guy in England, and he types his entire article at the public library."
"That's pretty f*ing amazing!" Sluggo said. "The library here gives you only 45 minutes a day on the Internet, and all you get is a lousy web browser, Word and Excel. It would take forever to write an article that way. And how would you test the program?"
Sluggo closed the judge's notebook and stood up to leave, but Woomert cleared his throat. "Uh, Sluggo, there is one remaining thing we've got to settle right now." He put on his dark sunglasses.
Sluggo's jaw tensed and he eyed Woomert closely, ready in case he made a sudden move. "What's that, Wal-Mart?" he asked warily.
"I do bathe once a day," said Woomert, ignoring the pun on his name.
"OK, you're a clean communist spy."
"One whom Thomas Adam, the Linux Weekend Mechanic, has suggested should stand for the office of British Prime Minister," said Woomert, with a flourish and a tip of his hat.
"He means 'run for the office of'," explained Frink to Sluggo.
Sluggo held out his hand to Frink and said, "The best tool for the job." Frink shook his hand and echoed, "The best tool for the job." Sluggo slapped him on the back and said, "You're all right, even if do have an idiot name." Frink replied indignantly, "Hey, it's not as bad as 'Woomert Foonly'."
A few hours later, Woomert was at his office when the door opened again, and Frink and Sluggo emerged chatting noisily.
"It looks like you made a new friend, Frink," observed Woomert.
"Sluggo and I are gonna go beat up some Visual Basic weenies," said Frink excitedly, putting on the old steel-toe boots Sluggo had given him (two sizes too big) and stuffing a lead paperweight in his pocket.
"Yeah, I know where they hang out, under the bridge on the edge of town," explained Sluggo.
"But what about all that best-tool-for-the-job stuff this morning? Have you forgotten it already?"
"Oh, we were only talking about real languages," said Frink, dashing out the door with Sluggo.
"Have fun!" Woomert called after them with some trepidation.
"We will!" shouted Frink in the distance.
Mike is the Editor-in-Chief of Linux Gazette. You can read what he has
to say on the Back Page of many issues. He has been a Linux enthusiast
since 1991 and a Debian user since 1995. He was SSC's web technical
coordinator 1999-2003, which means he got to write a lot of Python scripts.
Now he's involved in three free software
projects for Python (Cheetah,
Webware and
YAML), writes unittests and programs for a
Webware e-commerce site, and edits LG from his home.
Non-computer interests include wrestling, ska and oi! and ambient music, and
the international language Esperanto. He's been known to listen to Dvorak,
Schubert, Mendelssohn and Khachaturian too.
...making Linux just a little more fun! |
By Jon "Sir Flakey" Harsem |
These images are scaled down to minimize horizontal scrolling. To see a panel in all its clarity, click on it.
All Qubism cartoons are here at the CORE web site.
Jon is the creator of the Qubism cartoon strip and current
Editor-in-Chief of the
CORE News Site.
Somewhere along the early stages of
his life he picked up a pencil and started drawing on the wallpaper. Now
his cartoons appear 5 days a week on-line, go figure. He confesses to
owning a Mac but swears it is for "personal use".
...making Linux just a little more fun! |
By Rob Tougher |
I spend a lot of my free time learning new (and old) technologies. Partly because I want to keep getting better as a software developer, but mostly because I'm a geek and I think it's fun. I think that most software developers spend at least some of their time improving their trade.
I decided for my latest project to look at Apache Axis. Apache Axis is an open source implementation of the Simple Object Access Protocol, or SOAP. Basically, SOAP provides a standardized protocol for passing data between machines (Exchanging data in a distributed environment is not a new concept - I've used COM, CORBA, and raw BSD sockets to send data from one machine to another. Actually, my very first Linux Gazette article was about socket programming in C++).
The goal of this project was to create a simple web service, and create consumers of that web service in Java and Python. This article details my steps in reaching that goal.
My first step was to set up my development environment. I decided to use two machines as part of this project - my Debian server and my Powerbook. I figured I would use my Powerbook to compile Java class files using Eclipse, and deploy those class files to an instance of Tomcat and Axis running on the Debian server. I already had Eclipse and the latest Java SDK installed on the Powerbook, so that was all set. I had no idea what the state of my Debian machine was, so I had to do some detective work before proceeding.
First was Java. I ssh'd into my Debian box and checked my environment. For a Java installation the JAVA_HOME environment variable needs to be set, so I figured that would be the first place to check. I called "set", looked through the output, and failed to find the property. I then viewed my .bashrc file, and noticed that JAVA_HOME was being set. Odd. So .bashrc wasn't being called. Maybe sshd doesn't call your bash files? I typed "bash" at the prompt, pressed return, typed "set", and the JAVA_HOME property showed up. So I guess ssh doesn't run the bash stuff. I ran "java --version", and it returned "1.4.1_01". Good. I then went to Java's site, and realized that version 1.4.2 of the Java SDK was released! So I did have to install Java. I downloaded the bin file to my Powerbook, scp'd it to my Debian box, chmod'd it, ran it, and then updated the environment variable declarations in my .bashrc file. One last check, "java -version", returned 1.4.2. Java installation was complete.
Next was Tomcat. Tomcat is a J2EE servlet container that is hosted at the Apache Jakarta site. Tomcat installation was simple as well. I downloaded Tomcat 4.1.27 from the main web site, scp'd it to the Debian box, and unpacked it in my ~/apps directory. Then, per the online docs, I simply ran bin/startup.sh, and browsed to port 8080 of my Debian box using Mozilla. Success! I had previous servlet container experience, so I was not worried about this.
Next was Eclipse. Eclipse is an open source IDE that IBM has developed. I decided that I would run Eclipse on my Powerbook to compile any Java files I needed, and transfer them over to the Debian box. I could easily have run Eclipse on the Debian box(and I have used Eclipse on my Linux machine at work), but my Debian box runs headless so I would have to use Eclipse through my Powerbook's X Server. Not the speediest setup. So I just clicked my Eclipse icon on my desktop, and voila, Eclipse was running on my Powerbook (I'm actually writing this article right now using JEdit on my Powerbook).
Next was Axis. I downloaded Axis from the main site, copied it over to my Debian box, extracted it, and copied the "axis" directory from the distribution into my Tomcat webapps directory. After restarting Tomcat, I browsed to http://debianbox:8080/axis, and received the Axis home page. Success!
Last, but not least, I needed a way to call SOAP services using Python. I had never used SOAP with Python, so I wasn't aware of any projects that implemented it. My first step was to do a quick check on my Debian machine by calling "apt-cache search soap". It returned the "python-soappy" package. So I installed it, and found the new file in /usr/lib/python2.1/site-packages.
So that was it. Installation proceeded very smoothly.
My next step in this project was to create a simple web service. A first program would be incomplete without "Hello World" somewhere in there, so I decided to use the following Java source code:
public class HelloWorldService { public String HelloWorld(String data) { return "Hello World! You sent the string '" + data + "'."; } }
Next I had to deploy this source code to Axis. I spent some time reading through the Axis docs, and realized that there are basically two ways of deploying web services - an easy instant way that has some restrictions, and a longer custom way that is more flexible:
The custom way seemed simple, but I decided for the purposes of this article that I would go the instant route. I leave it up to the reader to experiment with WSDD's.
Back to my example. I had the above Java source code that I wanted to deploy to Axis. So I changed my file's extension to *.jws, and moved it into the Axis directory. Then I checked to see that the service was installed by browsing to the service's address:
I received an HTML page saying that there was a service installed at that location. Success! I went a step further by trying to call my HelloWorld method:
I received the XML from the method call. The call completed successfully!
Creating the web service turned out to be very simple. My next task was to create a Java client that could call the service.
The following is the source code for my Java client:
import java.net.MalformedURLException; import java.net.URL; import java.rmi.RemoteException; import javax.xml.namespace.QName; import javax.xml.rpc.ServiceException; import org.apache.axis.client.Call; import org.apache.axis.client.Service; public class HelloWorldClient { public static void main(String[] args) throws ServiceException, MalformedURLException, RemoteException { Service service = new Service(); Call call = (Call)service.createCall(); call.setTargetEndpointAddress(new URL("http://debianbox:8080/axis/HelloWorldService.jws")); call.setOperationName(new QName("http://soapinterop.org/", "HelloWorld")); String returnValue = (String)call.invoke(new Object[]{"My name is Rob."}); System.out.println(returnValue); } }
I found this code as part of the Axis documentation. Who says that the copy-paste antipattern is bad? :)
In order to compile the Java client I had to set up an Eclipse project. I created a project named "AxisTest", and imported the axis.jar, jaxrpc.jar, commons-logging.jar, commons-discovery.jar, and saaj.jar archives from the Axis distribution. After compiling the source file, I ran it and received data from the service. The Java client was a success.
Because SOAP is language independent, I thought that I should be able to create a Python client to call my web service. I did a quick Google search and found the main web site for Python Web Services. I viewed the README for SOAPPY, and found an example similar to the following:
#!/usr/bin/env python import sys import SOAP remote = SOAP.SOAPProxy( "http://debianbox:8080/axis/HelloWorldService.jws", "", "") result = remote.HelloWorld("My name is Rob.") print result
I ran this on my Debian box and received the correct message from the Axis service.
I'm happy with the result of my experiments with Apache Axis. I reached all of the goals that I set for myself in the beginning, and I came to the conclusion that Axis is an excellent way to exchange data between machines in a distributed environment.
Rob is a software developer in the New York City area.
...making Linux just a little more fun! |
By Alan Ward |
This article is almost entirely Mike's fault. When we mailed each other about the new magazine, he very correctly made me notice I had not ever told other Linux users about Andorra, or explained the .ad in my email. So here it is: all about how Andorra, other Catalan-speaking users and Linux.
The Principality of Andorra is what you could call a micro-country, a European specialty. Compare our 65000 inhabitants - or maybe all of 80000 in winter during the ski season - to that of the middlish town nearest to you. Our 468 square km are arguably larger than Liechtenstein, but not by much.
The capital, also called Andorra, deep in its recessed valley
We are in the eastern Pyrenees, just atop the border between France and Spain. Draw a line due north of Barcelona, and there you will find us ... or maybe not on a small map 8-| . Though European, we are not part of the EU, at least for the time being.
The official language is Catalan; we are actually the only country with Catalan as its only official language. Historic Catalan-speaking regions cover parts of what are now southern France (the Roussillon), Spain (Catalonia, Valencia, Balears and parts of Arragon) and even the island of Sardinia. Some of these, and more specially Catalonia, have been active in gaining a renewed official recognition of the language. Thus the fact that the Andorran Prime Minister spoke in Catalan before the United Nations last September has been well received by these neighbors of ours.
Before Tux
Computing came to Andorra with small and mid-range mainframes in the 1970's, for government services and social security in the first place. In those days, we were using big iron exclusively: IBM S/38 and later-on AS/400. When I started out fifteen years ago, there were still people programming in RPG on OS/400. Ouch!
Personal computing went the way of most places, with a dominant of MS-DOS and later Windows 3.1, and a smaller undercurrent of Apple products ... that have since often been discontinued.
In fact, the only difference with other countries was for many years the lack of places such as a university which are traditional Unix users. That would have helped make more computer users and administrators Linux literate.
Tux infiltrates the system
My first contacts with Unix system were in university in Toulouse, France. There were several versions on different architectures including System V and a Unix by Bull and even X terminals running on 68k systems.
After leaving university, going back to MS-DOS and OS/2 was a bit of a trauma, at least until Linux came along in the form of a Slackware distribution I bought in 1995.
Later on, several distributions such as Redhat 5.0 and Mandrake 6.1 were made available by the French and Spanish magazines available here, and led to the first experimental servers being set up. Several companies tried it out, mostly for specialized servers and firewalls, though maintaining their main services on standard IBM and MS systems.
Modern distributions and their ease of setup and administration have pushed up the amount of servers, though MS still stays the preferred OS for businesses. They often have here, as in many places, the most conservative point of view on adopting new systems. And it must be said that defective products and bad support from commercial sources have made businesses somewhat suspicious of computing, to the point of not replacing existing - old but working - systems very often.
The Government and administrative services in general are also a sector to which Linux is coming all too slowly. Many admins are playing with Linux, but have not quite yet decided themselves to advocate clearly for it at their jobs. Perhaps the budget cuts that can be foreseen for next year can help about that!
Recent developments
As in many places, ADSL came to Andorra strongly tainted by Windows. Our telephone company (notice the singular) is renting a flat-rate 256 Mbit + USB modem kit for 45 EUR (about $50 US) since about a year ago. In this, they follow what has been happening in France and Spain ... though those prices have been going down. Healthy competition between state-owned and newer private telephone companies, no doubt.
The Andorran modem was initially an Alcatel model, and is now a re-badged Connexant (I think ?), both with serious driver problems under Linux. On the other side, neither are drivers stable with any of the earlier versions of Windows, so many people are upgrading to Win XP just to use ADSL - which often means upgrading their hardware also. Say guys, small countries have the same problems are larger ones, right?
A 17-year-old student of mine called Robert is, besides other qualities too numerous to mention, a Linux fan. He called up the phone company, and was told flat out that you couldn't connect using ADSL with a Linux box. He then proceeded to install Mandrake 9.1 ... and connected.
On the other hand, making ADSL accessible has also been important in granting access to newer Linux distributions to students and other young folk. They would probably not pay for a boxed distribution, and single-CD distributions have long since quit coming with magazines.
Most secondary schools are now using Linux in one form or the other. This is true, to my knowledge, for my Escola Andorrana, for the French Lycee and the catholic Sant Armengol. Though in each case you can find a systems administrator sticking out his neck and risking Linux without much administrative support. Lucky the OS is stable!
The university has also been trying out several versions of Linux. Their point of view is that since Linux is becoming more and more a part of the computer science panorama, they must add it to their students' cursus in addition to the main stream of Microsoft products (Windows, Office, ASP programming).
We - that is, I and other members of the education community in Andorra - are now moving to set up a LUG here. Nothing actually done yet, but interested readers can drop me a line and I'll keep them informed.
Around Andorra
Such a small country as ours cannot be seen in correct perspective without also looking at our neighbors.
Traditionally, the Pyrenees - and especially our eastern section - were a single continuum as far as culture goes. This was true for the first stone-age inhabitants and also with the later Basques before they went off west to what is now the Basque Country.
A 4000BC dolmen near Andorra, in Solsona(Catalonia)
Contacts with southern France, both Provençal and Catalan-speaking, were numerous during the middle ages and up to the last century. However, they have gone continuously downhill since the 1950's, to the point where each year fewer and fewer Andorran students go to Toulouse or Montpelier to university. This can be explained in part by the fact that we (in Andorra) have had heavy immigration, mostly from Catalonia, and that these immigrant populations maintain strong family ties.
From a Tux point of view, this is not much of a problem since Catalonia has since the beginning been much more involved in the Linux phenomenon than France. As the French admit themselves, their pioneering Minitel computer terminal system was an adverse factor toward their integrating the Internet community - and we all now how much that has been important for Linux.
Catalonia has long had problems in getting Microsoft to translate software into Catalan, which is the original and now a co-official language in Catalonia. Ibiza (or Eivissa in Catalan spelling) party-goers please note that Catalan is also the original language in the Balear islands - not Spanish or German! :-)
The local government (the Generalitat de Catalunya) has often had to pay MS for the right to translate, for example for Windows 95 or Office 97. Even getting a Catalan spell-checker has been difficult up to Office 2000.
Naturally, this has not been the case for GPL'd software. KDE has been going the right way for many years now, with the help of volunteers all over Catalonia and Valencia and no official support. Same for Gnome, though on a lower key.
A catalan company called EduSoft has been active in translating both GPL'd and Windows software. They keep up-to-date on OpenOffice.
The catalan version of KDE 3.1 (and Gimp)
Mandrake and SuSE have been the distributions with best support for Catalan. This is logical enough, since they are both european - and one of the strongest suits of Europe is precisely languages. One of the demos that really take the s*** out of Windows systems admins is installing a full Linux server in under 15 minutes, with the setup program in Catalan straight from the first screen. For many of them, it is the first time they see software with the menus in Catalan. When they see me select the Andorran time locale, they go wild :-)
All in all, adding Catalan support to Linux was not too hard. The major problem for regional languages around the world is often their alphabet. Catalan is a latin language similar to Italian, Spanish or Provençal, and as such can be written with the basic alphabet plus accents (àèìòù éíú) and the c-cédille (ç). This can be done with a straight iso-8859-1 (Western Europe) encoding. Linux, as its Unix ancestor, is much better equiped to add locales than many other OSs.
Future trends
My guess is that Linux use will probably come to a balance with Windows here in Andorra. It is already strong in servers, and coming into the desktop market.
However, as I see it the main penetration will be with other GPL'd end-user software such as the OpenOffice suite, when the Government finally gets down to cracking down on pirate software. Unfortunately, the Andorran market is too small for MicroSoft to take as a serious piracy threat ... as yet. :-)
Taking care of Nature, with help from our woolly friends
A further direction that interests me personally is using Linux in environment-control systems (optimizing central-heating, controlling heat loss, monoring water quality) with low-power battery-powered devices. The Pyrenees have long been living mainly off tourism, and awareness of Ecology and Nature has been increasing over recent years.
Alan teaches CS in Andorra at high-school and university levels. His hobbies
include science photography (both digital and traditional), trekking, rock and
processor collecting.
...making Linux just a little more fun! |
By Mike Orr ("Sluggo") and Thomas Adam |
Sluggo wrote:
Well, Rick will make that issue however big he makes it, and if
I think it's excessive I'll cut it down again. He gets brownie points
for actually citing specific instances. That makes it less likely that I'll
delete the whole topic. :)
Mick Conry wrote:
I knew there was a reason we needed an editor ;-)
(and not the vi/emacs kind, they're better at starting arguments than
settling them).
m
Ben Okopnik wrote:
<grin> You have a dark side to your sense of humor, Jason; I find that
I'm twisted enough to appreciate that, too.
Jason Creighton wrote:
"dark side"? What on earth are you talking about? :)
Ben wrote:
<Spocking an eyebrow> Nothing, nothing. Just clearing my throat. As you
were, carry on.
Jason wrote:
First time I've seen "Spock" used as a verb. It seems illogical....
Ben wrote:
<mutter> Fish never are aware of water... :)
Heather Stern wrote:
I've left the thread so far intact so the rest of the lgang can see it.
Welcome aboard. Faber should ACK when he's added you, until that the
gang should group reply to include you.
Faber Fedor wrote:
<Bill the Cat/> ACK!
Ben wrote:
"Sluggo"?
Sluggo wrote:
I got tired of Iron, comrade. It was s'posed to be a pun on Iron Orr.
A friend in college made it up. (No, not the girl who always said
"Mike Or What?") Then somebody turned it around to Iron Mike (Tyson), which I
did *not* intend.
[Nancy cartoon #1] [Nancy cartoon #2] [Nancy cartoon #3]
But I still have a year left on iron.cx before it expires.
Ben wrote:
So now you're a slug'o'iron. Or a hell of a fire in a train firebox. Or
a pulmonate mollusc, genera Linux^H^H^Hmax. Or a very slow ship. Or a
typographer's spacer. Or a fake coin.
<Howl> "Oh, he's grand - he's really very refined, only he ain't got any manners, that's all!"
Jim Dennis wrote:
I actually had to look up mechants. The gist of it is obvious
from context but the real meaning is: "wicked" or "bad."
Sluggo wrote:
It's not so much "easy" as that French and English have so many words in
common. Plus the Unix terms (root, /bin) are borrowed from English. I
found that reading a simple introductory grammar book (the paperback
Penguin one is good) to fill in "je", "ça", "le", "de", "est", "cette",
"pour" goes a very long way. It may not help you speak French or write
an answer, but it helps you understand short paragraphs of French you
may encounter. I've never studied French formally, but it gave me
enough to manage in Belgium. (Where is the train station? Which bus
goes to Verviers?)
Or to read the ATM messages. That was a trip. My friend and I decided to go to Liège for the weekend from Germany. I was American and he was Russian, and neither of us spoke French. I went to the ATM and withdrew the smallest amount: 100 franks. I had no idea how much 100 franks was but the large number was ominous. Still, I reasoned the smallest amount the ATM gives must be around $20. Eventually I realized it was $33.
A Querent wrote:
i have a 1996 4runner at times when i park i can smell
hot oil there are no leaks nowhere. the motor is
excellent clean. where could this be coming from. it
doesn't happen all the time. thanks
Thomas wrote:
Please, please do not waste my time with pointless
questions!!! This is not Linux specific (or LWM
specific).
Ben wrote:
Oh, c'mon, Thomas. You know what the answer is - the querent is running
Wind*ws. It's only Linux that creates no muss, no fuss, and no greasy
aftertaste.
Thomas wrote:
<I roll my eyes> Silly me!! That must be it.
Ben wrote:
Any 4runner of the latest version of the kernel should be upgraded -
particularly if it goes as far back as 1996, even if the motor, I mean
kernel is "excellent clean" (e.g., "make clean" was run before
compilation.) The hot oil smell is the poor machine trying to get some
work done and bogging down in warmfuzzy "Wind*ws Will Not Harm You,
Little Human!" themes, automatic MSN installations, and "Wind*ws has
detected that your wire-haired terrier has peed in the corner. Please
wait while we download the appropriate 147.3Gb driver" messages.
Thomas wrote:
LOL....not to mention the classic BSOD "screensaver".
Ben wrote:
What most people never realize is that it _is_ a screensaver. I mean,
who's going to believe that an operating system can actually *crash?*
Who do they think they're kidding, anyway?
The only problem with the BSOD screensaver is that you have to enter the
Micr*s*ft EULA in Linear B (don't forget the breathing marks) as the
password...
Thomas wrote:
I say screensaver -- it might as well now be
synonymous with it :-)
Ben wrote:
<shrug> It was *obvious*, and I'm shocked - shocked, I tell you - that
you tried to dodge answering such a simple, and above all _relevant_
question.
Thomas wrote:
Oh, but, Ben -- when we team up like this.............
Ben wrote:
Tune in next week for our next thrilling episode of The Answer Gang,
when Thomas and I explain the benefits of sharpening a chainsaw while
it's running (the same precautions as for using Wind*ws apply [1], so
it's absolutely safe! Oh, here - this tourniquet will help. Don't get
any on my nice chainsaw.)
[1] Let someone else do it. Oh, wait - friends don't let friends sharpen
running chainsaws...
Mike is the Editor-in-Chief of Linux Gazette. You can read what he has
to say on the Back Page of many issues. He has been a Linux enthusiast
since 1991 and a Debian user since 1995. He was SSC's web technical
coordinator 1999-2003, which means he got to write a lot of Python scripts.
Now he's involved in three free software
projects for Python (Cheetah,
Webware and
YAML), writes unittests and programs for a
Webware e-commerce site, and edits LG from his home.
Non-computer interests include wrestling, ska and oi! and ambient music, and
the international language Esperanto. He's been known to listen to Dvorak,
Schubert, Mendelssohn and Khachaturian too.
I write the recently-revived series "The Linux Weekend Mechanic", which was
started by John Fisk (the founder of Linux Gazette) in 1996 and continued
until 1998. I'm also a member of The Answer Gang.
I was born in Hammersmith (London UK) in 1983. When I was 13, I moved to
the sleepy, thatched roofed, village of East Chaldon in the county of Dorset.
I am very near the coast (at Lulworth Cove) which is where I used to work.
I first got interested in Linux in 1996 having seen a review of it in a
magazine (Slackware 2.0). I was fed up with the instability that the then-new
operating system Win95 had and so I decided to give it a go.
Slackware 2.0 was great. I have been a massive Linux enthusiast ever
since. I ended up with running SuSE on both my desktop and laptop computers.
While at school (The Purbeck
School, Wareham in Dorset), I was actively involved in setting up two
Linux proxy servers (each running Squid and SquidGuard). I also set up
numerous BASH scripts which allowed web-based filtering to be done via
e-mail, so that when an e-mail was received, the contents of it were added to
the filter file. (Good old BASH -- I love it)
I am now 18 and studying at University (Southampton Institute, UK), on a
course called HND Buisness Information Technology (BIT). So far, it's great.
Other hobbies include reading. I especially enjoy reading plays (Henrik
Ibsen, Chekov, George Bernard Shaw), and I also enjoy literature (Edgar Allan
Poe, Charles Dickens, Jane Austin to name but a few).
I enjoy walking, and often go on holiday to the Lake District, to a place
called Keswick. There are numerous "mountains", of which "Great Gable" is my
most favourite.
I am also a keen musician. I play the piano in my spare time.
I listen to a variety of music. I enjoy listening to
Rock (My favourite band is "Pavement" (lead singer:
Stephen Malkmus). I also have a passion for 1960's
psychedelic music (I hope to purchase a copy of
"Nuggets" reeeeaaall soon).