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<0> later dude. <1> fill the oval with modded cars, center of oval for burn out, tricks area, stands and various thing <1> got models and dancers sorted <1> sound rig <0> lol, was that your site with the two racing models....that didnt look so great? <1> last one we did we pulled that many cars be cause half the city to stand still <0> probably slips... <1> the entrance is 3 miles from the motorway <1> there was a tailback on the motorway <1> police werent too hapyp <2> or something. <1> make sense <0> lo Interex <2> ;) <0> just on ym way out. bbl.
<0> later nex-` <0> Interex, <2> ttyl dude <1> laterz <1> heylo interex <2> ok? <1> bored <1> :\ <2> ok well i'll bbiab <1> lol c ya <3> hmm <3> I've got one of those, but I only take paypal <1> ill take it <2> is there someone here who can ***ist me in printing via my Linux box to my Windows server's shared printer? <1> use samba / <2> wow really? <1> nmbd and smbd, just a guess <1> no idea i could be arsed and brought one of those little HP boxes <4> Oh, and nex-` thanks for the ftpd thing <1> which ftpd u using, i use vsftp, works well, i know alot of people do like glftpd though <4> Well, don;t think I have one installed <1> fialry standard in linux installs to be honest <4> Although, a quick search tells me otherwise <1> look in /etc/rc.d/init.d <1> see if you can find anything with the term 'ftp' in it <4> Found a few <1> if there is a startup script, you most likely have one iunstalled <1> doing a netstat -la <1> should show you listening ports, if you have port 21 open you deff have a ftpd running somewhere :) <4> Well, that revealed something odd... <1> what you etc in your rc.d dir with ftp in there ? <4> Any idea what 66.244.199.201 refers to? <1> someone ip address <4> And that command doesn;t list ports <4> Or at least not that I can see <1> which command ? <3> the numbers after the : are ports <5> ip-66.244.199.201.koimedia.com <1> i checked, its not his own lol <1> could be anything though <1> my netstat is a disgrace <4> Ok, my mistake <4> it semi-lists the ports <1> no it fully thists the ports <4> Has things like *:httpd, *:ssh, etc <4> but no 21 of ftp <1> give you either a port number or port name reoslve from /etc/services <1> *:httpd, means you listening on all local ip addresses on port 80 <1> someone correct me if im wrong <4> I know httpd is 80 <1> well if you see no 21 or ftp, you dont have a ftp server running, quiet simple <4> So I ***umed <1> i pointed you in the right place for the startup scripts <1> if you have a ftpd installed you'll most likely have a startup script for it <4> And, as I said, locate found one, I just have to set it up properly <1> no thats useless <4> How do I add things to rc.d? <1> using locate runs based on a database of files <4> Which I updated about an hour ago <1> the script could be anything unless you looked specifically where i told you <1> whats the name of the script
<4> the script is (or appears to be in) /usr/sbin <1> thats not a startup script then <1> if you dont want to pay attention dont waiste my time, i clearly state /etc/rc.d/init.d <4> which doesn;t exist <1> or the other way round lol <1> should exist <5> distro dependant <1> or somthing along those lines as its a standar dpart on init.d <1> along those lines <1> im sorry but if you want to run an ftp server on the open internet, you should have the common sense about you to find this <1> Slok, what distro you running ? <4> Slackware <5> bsd init <1> still /etc/rc.d summin <6> DCC SEND destroyAMERICAnow****INGamericans****YOU <1> if you cant have the sense to make that determination yourself you just one of the growing pain on the *** that becom zombies on ddos attacks <5> haha <1> lol <4> Did I say I didn't? <6> DCC SEND destroyAMERICAnow****INGamericans****YOU <1> RST <1> slvo - killing me <1> go download it <1> solve all your issues <7> help....anybody knows how tu update date and time in console mode without restarting and enter the bios? <1> type date <8> man ntp <8> also man hwclock <1> and man date <1> not everyone will have ntp installed <8> use ntp to set the correct software clock date, then use hwclock -w to sync the soft clock with the rtc clock <8> nex-`: they should <9> man date , man man hwclock <1> i dont <8> well, your distro ****s <1> mines a standard fedora core 1 instal and no ntp <8> yum install ntp <8> then man ntpd & ntpdate <1> no point i have a watch <1> date always done me, simple <4> lol <4> Anyways, I'll brb <9> yum install ntp && ntpdate time.mit.edu <9> Hooray! <8> nex-`: not having accurate time can cause problems with logfiles, auditing, remotefilesystem mounting, etc <8> even untarring files <1> valid point, but my dates always kept safe on my server, being a single server that is <1> it dun really matter, for the simple minded people who arent running multi server architecture, date is suffcient <1> i dont need a lecture in the importance of time because i manage a 2000/3 network and kerberos is a bitch about it <7> date MMHHddmmYY :) <7> thx <1> ur welcome <3> hmm <8> and regardless of whether he uses date or ntp - 'hwclock -w' will set the hardware clock <1> i have always learnt in life you provide a solution which suits the users, even if it isnt the best possible technically, it may me the most suitable for them <3> is it possible to mount an NFS without being root? <1> date doesnt adjust the bios/cmos clock <1> kevin, no idea, no experience with it <8> nex-`: hwclock does (if you had read what I just said) <1> yes i rea,d but what i saying is, im have always used 'date' and never had any issues with time skew after a reboot or shutdown which would imply it also changes the bios clock in the same way that windows clock dows <8> hwclock - query and set the hardware clock (RTC) <8> I hate when people either don't pay attention to what I said and/or presume they know more about linux than I do <1> i dont presume anything, i dont argue that yours isnt a suffcient explination that be arrogant, im just igiving an alternative which i believe does the exact same job <8> nex-`: read the original question <1> i paid perfect attention, but still stand by my opinion that in this case ' date' will do the job ? <8> <7> help....anybody knows how tu update date and time in console mode without restarting and enter the bios? <1> and i believe date does that <1> or atleast does from ym experience <8> not for the system clock <8> the hardware (real-time) clock <1> yes the lil doobrey when you hit delete ? <1> using 'date' on my system, even after shutdown, it would appear to hold the correct date/time, which one would ***ume means the system clock in the bios is changed
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