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Chris Walker chris_linux@wymondham.demon.co.uk wrote:
On Wed 23 Mar, Brett Parker wrote:
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<snip /> Chris Walker <chris_linux@wymondham.demon.co.uk> wrote: > This has 4 slots in it too but I'm failing at the first hurdle. Trying > the command above gives me 'bash: modprobe: command not found'.
Ahhh! I may have neglected to say that they need to be run as root, as it's loading kernel modules...
I'm *assuming* that Mandrake has modprobe, it's part of the usual base system, so it should have.
Ah. I missed that vital step. OK. Done that and now, having the steps you gave me earlier, I now have loads of new icons on the desktop.
I'll have a crack at editing the fstab file now to see if I can get it to do all this automatically on boot up now.
I appreciate both your help and that from Chris Glover.
You'll probably want to add the modules to the /etc/modules file (or that's where I'd add them on a debian system, anyways... *goes look it up for Mandrake...*)
OK - for Mandrake it appears that the file is /etc/modules.conf, and it'll be a line something like: probeall ehci-hcd usb-storage
that you need to add, or expand the probeall line to include them. Then the modules should get automagically loaded on boot.
Thanks, - -- Brett Parker web: http://www.sommitrealweird.co.uk/ email: iDunno@sommitrealweird.co.uk
hello, anyone here happen to mud at all and if so can u reccomend a decent *nix client. im not very good so macros alias's and maps are all appreciated:) failing that has anyone had any luck getting zmud 7.05 working under wine. ive got a ways under crossover.. playing chase the error ive figure that zmud requires an install of ie, MDAC and JET all of which ive stuck in my fake windows. i now get to the inital fire up screen, click free trial (not gonna buy it until it works!) and then on intialising database it hangs and tells me ' unable to find file " '
anyone had any better luck or failing that the skill i lack in figuring out a solution
rick
>From: Brett Parker <iDunno@sommitrealweird.co.uk> >To: main@lists.alug.org.uk >Subject: Re: [ALUG] Multi-card reader >Date: Wed, 23 Mar 2005 14:57:41 +0000 > >-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- >Hash: SHA1 > >Chris Walker <chris_linux@wymondham.demon.co.uk> wrote: > > On Wed 23 Mar, Brett Parker wrote: > > > > > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > > > Hash: SHA1 > > > > > > <snip /> > > > Chris Walker <chris_linux@wymondham.demon.co.uk> wrote: > > > > This has 4 slots in it too but I'm failing at the first hurdle. Trying > > > > the command above gives me 'bash: modprobe: command not found'. > > > > > > Ahhh! I may have neglected to say that they need to be run as root, as > > > it's loading kernel modules... > > > > > > I'm *assuming* that Mandrake has modprobe, it's part of the usual base > > > system, so it should have. > > > > Ah. I missed that vital step. OK. Done that and now, having the steps you > > gave me earlier, I now have loads of new icons on the desktop. > > > > I'll have a crack at editing the fstab file now to see if I can get it to do > > all this automatically on boot up now. > > > > I appreciate both your help and that from Chris Glover. > >You'll probably want to add the modules to the /etc/modules file (or >that's where I'd add them on a debian system, anyways... *goes look it >up for Mandrake...*) > >OK - for Mandrake it appears that the file is /etc/modules.conf, and >it'll be a line something like: >probeall ehci-hcd usb-storage > >that you need to add, or expand the probeall line to include them. Then >the modules should get automagically loaded on boot. > >Thanks, >- -- >Brett Parker >web: http://www.sommitrealweird.co.uk/ >email: iDunno@sommitrealweird.co.uk >-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- >Version: GnuPG v1.4.0 (GNU/Linux) > >iD8DBQFCQYPlEh8oWxevnjQRAhZsAKDOTBJEh0gaGyHEeDz1bnMuVZZi0QCfbqRN >xLL3iWeKsawO+NOjr0rdGP4= >=qyPP >-----END PGP SIGNATURE----- > >_______________________________________________ >main@lists.alug.org.uk >http://www.alug.org.uk/ >http://lists.alug.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/main >Unsubscribe? See message headers or the web site above!
On Wed, 23 Mar 2005 22:41:14 +0000, Ricky Bruce ricky_bruce@hotmail.com wrote:
hello, anyone here happen to mud at all and if so can u reccomend a decent *nix client.
TinyFugue!
"apt-get install tf"
Share and enjoy, Tim.
I have just upgraded my ADSL service which means I now have a fixed IP address. Presumably this means I can serve my own web pages without paying someone for web hosting. I have got apache working and I can serve web pages to localhost no problem. What I am struggling with is making them appear on the web via my wireless router. At the moment if I point a browser at my fixed IP I get my router login page.
Help.
Ian
Ian T-Bell aka RuffRecords aka RedTommo
On 8/25/05, Ian bell ianbell@ukfsn.org wrote:
I have just upgraded my ADSL service which means I now have a fixed IP address. Presumably this means I can serve my own web pages without paying someone for web hosting. I have got apache working and I can serve web pages to localhost no problem. What I am struggling with is making them appear on the web via my wireless router. At the moment if I point a browser at my fixed IP I get my router login page.
You need to reconfigure your router to forward port 80 to your Apache PC. It is also a HUGE security risk to be able to see the router's config page from outside the network, but luckily looking at http://84.45.208.102/ shows your Apache server. Therefore your router is probably already doing the right thing with port 80.
Are you going to host any intesting web pages?
Tim.
Tim Green wrote:
On 8/25/05, Ian bell ianbell@ukfsn.org wrote:
[...] What I am struggling with is making them appear on the web via my wireless router. At the moment if I point a browser at my fixed IP I get my router login page.
You need to reconfigure your router to forward port 80 to your Apache PC. It is also a HUGE security risk to be able to see the router's config page from outside the network, but luckily looking at http://84.45.208.102/ shows your Apache server. Therefore your router is probably already doing the right thing with port 80.
This may be a symptom of how Ian was testing.
If (from inside the LAN) you put your external IP address into your web browser, you'll simply end up at your router (and since you've come from the inside you'll have access to the router's front end).
To test what the outside world can see you'll need to check from the outside.
Incidentally, anyone planning this on a standard ADSL line needs to know what that first letter stands for: A=Asynchronous. Your connection is designed for low volume uploads (eg page requests) and high volume downloads (eg page data). By running a webserver you're reversing that, and your relatively puny 256kbps upload rate will get hammered (its 256kbps on ADSL regardless of your headline download rate).
Mark Rogers, More Solutions Ltd
Mark Rogers wrote:
Tim Green wrote:
On 8/25/05, Ian bell ianbell@ukfsn.org wrote:
[...] What I am struggling with is making them appear on the web via my wireless router. At the moment if I point a browser at my fixed IP I get my router login page.
You need to reconfigure your router to forward port 80 to your Apache PC. It is also a HUGE security risk to be able to see the router's config page from outside the network, but luckily looking at http://84.45.208.102/ shows your Apache server. Therefore your router is probably already doing the right thing with port 80.
This may be a symptom of how Ian was testing.
If (from inside the LAN) you put your external IP address into your web browser, you'll simply end up at your router (and since you've come from the inside you'll have access to the router's front end).
To test what the outside world can see you'll need to check from the outside.
That seems to be it. I had used the router virtual server to route port 80 to the PC running apache but could only see the server via localhost. From Tim's report it would seem to be visible from outside.
Incidentally, anyone planning this on a standard ADSL line needs to know what that first letter stands for: A=Asynchronous. Your connection is designed for low volume uploads (eg page requests) and high volume downloads (eg page data). By running a webserver you're reversing that, and your relatively puny 256kbps upload rate will get hammered (its 256kbps on ADSL regardless of your headline download rate).
Indeed. My first internet connection was 300/75 (baud!!)
Ian
On 26-Aug-05 Ian bell wrote:
Indeed. My first internet connection was 300/75 (baud!!)
Ian
Mine too! And I still have the acoustic modem (Andersen-Jacobsen), though I no longer seem to have a telephone handset (with rotary dial) which would fit the two rubber cups.
Incidentally, I found that if I switched the modem on, with the (CP/M) computer receptive to it, I could hit the carrier-tone pitch by whistling. Then, by making fluctuations in pitch, I could cause all sorts of random garbage to flash up on screen (mostly, I think, the effects of "control codes"). I once played a Beethoven symphony to it, with spectacular results ...
Cheers, Ted.
-------------------------------------------------------------------- E-Mail: (Ted Harding) Ted.Harding@nessie.mcc.ac.uk Fax-to-email: +44 (0)870 094 0861 Date: 26-Aug-05 Time: 19:06:45 ------------------------------ XFMail ------------------------------