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Comments:
<0> ah ok I'll try compiling wmkeys <1> excelblue: here's a more tricky question, can you set up a way to not allow a user to open any _LISTENING_ ports? <2> is there any distro i can use to recover any deleted data from a wiped hd <3> can any1 help me get my usb wlan card going? im trying to follow http://www.linuxquestions.org/linux/answers/Networking/Netgear_MA111_USB_Wireless_Howto but im having problems with the kernel sources being needed, ive installed them and pointed the config to them but it says they arnt full or sometihng... <3> ? <2> is there any distro i can use to recover any deleted data from a wiped hd <1> bahhhh <4> df00z: ? <1> Ok, I'm running SSHd <1> I have a user without a shell <1> I want to be able to use that user to forward ports <1> problem is... <1> if you, say <4> JdGordon: installed kernel headers? <1> on your local machine, ssh -L4141:localhost:4141 ssh -D4141:localhost:4141 <1> telnet 127.0.0.1 4141
<1> you'll make SSh do a loop <1> and it'll be a nasty arse DOS attack <1> how can I prevent that <1> Can I explicitly make it so I can have the user not be able to open remote ports with -R? <1> Any ideas? <5> any Linux program to convert WMA to MP3 ? <6> mplayer <5> EvilGuru, I'll try that. Thanks. <7> under X, unrecognized deadkey+key combinations return a beep and no characters ... is there a way to let X return 'natural' deadkey (deadkey+space) + second key in this case? <8> do you know how to turn on the logging features in linux that tell you what ports are trying to be contacted? <9> wildmage: www.netfilter.org <9> There is no "feature" but there is stuff you can use. <9> If you were looking for something to "just click on", you're sjit out of luck. <8> I remember I used to do it like 6 years ago in Slackware <9> No, you didn't. <8> but I can't remember <8> sure I did <9> You were on drugs. <8> there was some kernel feature <9> I've been using Slackware since Slackware 3. <10> hey guys <8> of course when I got port scanned it crashed my hard drive from all the logging <8> probably some extension of syslog <9> You installed some third-party thing that wasn't part of the kernel or slackware. <10> is there anyway to view ppls webcams in linux? for instance if someone has yahoo messanger? <9> A10n: There is Gnomemeeting, which was recently renamed Ekiga. <10> i went to yahoo's site and downloaded their client, but no webcam support there <11> A10n: gaim <9> It's compatible with Netmeeting, but that's as far as it gets. <10> Codename_V, gaim? really? how <9> I don't think Gaim does VV yet <10> Codename_V, some kind of plugin? <10> okay i'll download Gnoomeeting/Ekiga <10> thanks <11> Dagmar: not even gaimvv? <9> Codename_V: If you want to expose yourself to beta-quality code across the internet, that's all you <11> anyhow, I thought some of that stuff got integrated into gaim proper these days. I could be wrong though... <9> I don't think gaimvv is at a very solid state yet <8> Dagmar, you were right, I was probably using tcpdump <9> wildmage: It's way easier to just put up a sensible firewall deny-first policy and just ignore portscans from lamers. <9> You have no idea how much utter crap is spewed across the internet nowadays compared to then. <8> nah, I' <8> I'm trying to debug a connectivity problem <9> Between the script kiddies and the viruses, I see several hundred stray packets a day <11> gaimvv says it's dead and being merged to gaim. but then I guess I'm wrong in that that's been done and all. but I guess at some point in the foreseeable future <8> that is interesting, the noise level has definitely increased <9> Oh yeah <9> You don't have to worry about trying to find out what netblock an open segment uses anymore. <9> You just have to sniff for the garbage traffic and figure out what the common netblock is <12> morning... <9> 402 stray packets yesterday alone. <9> 710 the day before that, 354 on March 1st <5> EvilGuru, how do I conver that WMA to MP3 using mplayer ? <6> there is a guide somewhere, I will google it <6> http://blogs.linux.ie/xeer/2005/08/16/how-to-convert-from-wma-to-mp3/ <5> EvilGuru, I'm getting this error.... "-waveheader is deprecated. Use -ao pcm:waveheader instead." <13> that's pretty sweet when warning messages tell you exactly what to do to make them go away <14> Good morning room...using "locate". By typing "updatedb" it reindexes everything on all the drives. Problem is, it also tries to index whatever is in the cdrom as well. How do I exclude this? (suse 10.0/Kde 3.4) Thank you. <13> douH! <13> johnny69: have a look at /etc/updatedb.conf <13> in mine there is PRUNEPATHS and PRUNEFS
<14> ninjaz2: Thanks...looking now. <13> my system uses slocate -u -c to do that, btw <13> the -c tells it to read that config file <5> EvilGuru, okay, I tweak the shell script... converting in progress <6> xwin: good good <15> Well, copying data off to a USB HDD is faster than dumping to tape, but it's surely just as boring... Is firewire notably any better or worse for transfer rates and CPU usage than USB? <14> ninjaz2: No "updatedb.conf" file could be found. (unless perhaps one normally doesn't exist by default and you have to create one??) <6> diamon: firewire (400mbits) is actually faster than USB (480mbits) as there is less of an overhead <5> EvilGuru, it werks... lol. this is cool... <5> EvilGuru, You got to change your handle to some other Guru.... Thanks bye <15> EvilGuru: Hmm. Ok. I'd wondered. Only one of my systems currently has firewire, but all my external enclosures support both USB2 and firewire, so I use FW on that one system, and it always seemed smoother, I was trying to figure if it was my imagination. <15> Since I'm starting an upgrade cycle for repairs anyway, I'll just get a few other systems a 1394 card then. My MythTV system has firewire for future cable box tests, but so far I only use it to plop a drive on for quick transfers. <15> And quick they were. :) But like I said, I wasn't sure if I was fooling myself. <6> while usb it potentially faster by 10 megabytes a sec <6> the overhead means that it is nearly always slower <15> Oh, and as an aside, if anyone here writes or works on MythTV, or for anyone who's considered it, I LOVE my MythTV box. :) <6> you like MythTV too!! <15> Evil: Yeah, I was never clear on the actual overhead, but 1394 always seemed more like SCSI, and USB more like serial... <6> firewire 800 is sweet <1> Is it possible to have different SSHD settings per user <6> get a firewire 800 card, and a fast raid 0 disk and it will be fast <1> I want to make it so a user _ONLY_ has access to port forwarding features of sshd <6> but I also got myself an external s-ata card, as many enclosures now support s-ata connections <15> Oh yeah, my mom's got me building her a box of her own to replace a proper TiVo. :) She likes the programming flexibility, commercial auto-skip, and most importantly, the quality I get, even when paused. PVR-150 card and a 6Mbit stream at max rez, it's only 2Gb/hr of data... <15> Evil: I was toying with that, but the signal strength and tolerances of SATA makes me not really consider it a proper 'external' protocol. Like I don't consider IDE a scanner protocol, though there were a very few IDE scanners... <15> With good reason, I suppose. <6> s-ata cables can be a lot longer than ie <6> *ide <15> Evil: I thought 3'/1m was it for them? <6> 1 meter is fine with s-ata <15> Yeah, true. I just like being able to run longer runs of USB with careful cabling, or 1394 too now that I've read a bit of the spec. <6> firewire chaining is also great <15> Haven't tried it. Can you directly connect 1394-to-1394 as a bridge sort of thing? <15> You know, card-to-card? <6> computer -> cable -> device -> cable -> other-device <6> and you can chain up to six together <16> I've got a odd question, I've got a pile of ip's at another location.... and I would like to use something like a shell tunnel to tunnel these to my other location... so I could have a external internet ip... for a machine on another network <6> (six devices that is) <16> Is that possible? <9> Yes. <15> I know you can also do comp-device-comp, I found out that my CompUSA enclosure only allows 1 simultaneous firewire user, but others allow up to 5. I haven't tested my new MadDog enclosure. <16> Dagmar: where would I find information about doing this? <15> Maxx: Oof, that would be some oooogly routing. I *think* that'd be possible, as like a VPN sort of thing... Not sure how you'd do a tunnel to let those 'behind' IP's be visible like normal though. <9> Maxx4life: Google. <9> What you're asking about is called a VPN tunnel. <16> Dagmar: More specifically what would I search for.. I've tried a few searches but they didnt workout too well <15> You might be better just doing an iptables rule to forward accesses to those IP's to go to internal IP's, like 64.22.19.177 goes to 10.2.12.14, etc. Just M:1 translation... <15> A VPN would (or could) be encrypted though, which may be useful if data will be crossing the internet. If it's going over the full internet, you couldn't route private IP's anyway. <16> diamon: my main problem is there on another server.... <16> How do I get them from point a to b... <15> Maxx: What's on another server? <16> the ip's <16> I want to "port" the ip' <16> s to say <15> Maxx: Ok, you've officially lost me... But no matter how I read what you want, IP forwarding or a VPN still look like what you need. <16> ok.. I have 10 ip's on machine A... Machine B has only 1 ip. I would like to "transparently" port ip's from machine A to B - so in theroy.. machine B would have a public ip <9> VPN <16> via a tunnel or something... <16> any recommendations for a VPN? there both running Fedora Core <15> Yeah, a VPN sounds like what you're looking for. Just keep in mind that any traffic that system B gets would mean double that at A. <9> I was going to let his boss tell him that. <9> ;) <16> yeah, bandwidth isn't a issue <15> Dagmar: I was tempted, but I erred on the side of mercy; I just got my tax return and my AMD x2 4200+, so I'm feelin' kinda warm-and-fuzzy right now. :) <16> Did you have any recommendations on some VPN software? <9> FreeSWAN, OpenVPN <9> No, we will not walk you through setting it up. <16> nope.... Google's used for that ;) <16> tried poptop and... another one a long time ago but didn't like them <15> Hell no, I charge people $150USD/hr for that kind of crap, it's NOT for the faint-of-heart. No handholding until the proper down payments are made. :) <9> Heh <15> Freeswan is one of the most commonly-used. <16> diamon: I agree totally <15> I mean, a VPN isn't some kind of evil software, but if you bugger one character in a key you may spend hours cursing what looks like a routing problem, but isn't... Be sure to check logs, double check them, and double-check the docs too.
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