Monday, May 24, 2004
notes on postfix configuration - mail for host.domain.net loops back to myself - I am seeing this on a Trustix mail server right now.
Trustix is a "pay-for" product (although there is an open version as well, I beleive), but it looks pretty good; lean, fast and secure. The whole system is supposed to be managed through a GUI app from windoze or another linux box, so the server can pretty much run headless (I'm guessing this and the automatic-update facility are probably missing from the free version).
Trouble is, the one I'm working on is not routing mail at the moment :(
Trustix is a "pay-for" product (although there is an open version as well, I beleive), but it looks pretty good; lean, fast and secure. The whole system is supposed to be managed through a GUI app from windoze or another linux box, so the server can pretty much run headless (I'm guessing this and the automatic-update facility are probably missing from the free version).
Trouble is, the one I'm working on is not routing mail at the moment :(
Saturday, May 15, 2004
The macosxhints Forums - Samba error - Finder pauses (smb_maperr32) - I am having this problem, and it looks like a bug in OS X :(
I have a pretty vanilla install of Debian 3.0 with standard smb setup using encrypted passwords, works fine from windoze clients and even works fine from OS X command line (even if the share is mounted from Finder), but Finder will not copy files. You can even create folders though Finder... ???!
Arse.
I have a pretty vanilla install of Debian 3.0 with standard smb setup using encrypted passwords, works fine from windoze clients and even works fine from OS X command line (even if the share is mounted from Finder), but Finder will not copy files. You can even create folders though Finder... ???!
Arse.
Monday, May 10, 2004
Arbornet, Inc. - free shells! (it's FreeBSD actually, but that's still Open Source enough for me).
Thursday, May 06, 2004
realprogrammers: How It Works: DNS: Overview -- by hackers, for hackers. This is well useful - I wasn't familiar with the "host" command before, but it saved my ass today. Thankfully, I was working on a Linux mail server :)