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* Dumb Questions
@ 2002-09-25 13:23 Paul Kraus
  2002-09-25 15:28 ` Ray Olszewski
                   ` (4 more replies)
  0 siblings, 5 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Paul Kraus @ 2002-09-25 13:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-newbie

[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 307 bytes --]

What does foo stand for. It is used everywhere. I understand its just a
placeholder for the file name or what ever is pertinent to the context
it is used but I would still like to know what it means.

Paul Kraus
Network Administrator
PEL Supply Company
216.267.5775 Voice
216-267-6176 Fax
www.pelsupply.com

[-- Warning: decoded text below may be mangled, UTF-8 assumed --]
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VERSION:2.1
N:Kraus;Paul
FN:Paul Kraus (pkraus@pelsupply.com)
ORG:PEL Supply Company
TITLE:Network Administrator
TEL;WORK;VOICE:(216) 267-5775
TEL;CELL;VOICE:(216) 410-5526
TEL;WORK;FAX:(216) 267-6176
ADR;WORK:;;4666 Manufacturing Road;Cleveland;Ohio;44135;United States of America
LABEL;WORK;ENCODING=QUOTED-PRINTABLE:4666 Manufacturing Road=0D=0ACleveland, Ohio 44135=0D=0AUnited States of Ame=
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ADR;HOME:;;;;;;United States
LABEL;HOME:United States
URL;WORK:http://www.pelsupply.com
EMAIL;PREF;INTERNET:pkraus@pelsupply.com
REV:20020416T182124Z
END:VCARD

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* Re: Dumb Questions
  2002-09-25 13:23 Dumb Questions Paul Kraus
@ 2002-09-25 15:28 ` Ray Olszewski
  2002-09-25 15:29 ` pa3gcu
                   ` (3 subsequent siblings)
  4 siblings, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Ray Olszewski @ 2002-09-25 15:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Paul Kraus, linux-newbie

At 09:23 AM 9/25/02 -0400, Paul Kraus wrote:
>What does foo stand for. It is used everywhere. I understand its just a
>placeholder for the file name or what ever is pertinent to the context
>it is used but I would still like to know what it means.


These days it doesn't "stand for" anything. It's just one of those 
placeholder words, like "widget" or  "gismo", just as you note.

Its history, though, has two pieces that I can think of.

First, F00 is a hex number; in the real old (punch-card) days, I recall 
system operators talking about F00F errors, for example. The step from F00F 
to FOO is small.

Second, you will often see Foo used in conjunction with Bar. Put them 
together and  ... well, I trust you can figure that one out without my help.


--
-------------------------------------------"Never tell me the odds!"--------
Ray Olszewski					-- Han Solo
Palo Alto, California, USA			  ray@comarre.com
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* Re: Dumb Questions
  2002-09-25 13:23 Dumb Questions Paul Kraus
  2002-09-25 15:28 ` Ray Olszewski
@ 2002-09-25 15:29 ` pa3gcu
  2002-09-25 15:38   ` Mr. James W. Laferriere
  2002-09-25 16:24 ` X Daniel Provin
                   ` (2 subsequent siblings)
  4 siblings, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: pa3gcu @ 2002-09-25 15:29 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Paul Kraus, linux-newbie

On Wednesday 25 September 2002 13:23, Paul Kraus wrote:
> What does foo stand for. It is used everywhere. I understand its just a
> placeholder for the file name or what ever is pertinent to the context
> it is used but I would still like to know what it means.

I did read somewhere one that it was NIX terminoligy back when Unix was very 
young, FOOBAR , it got turned into /foo/bar as an "example" nothing more 
AFAIK. 
foo@bar is also seen sometimes, cant quite remember where tho.



> Paul Kraus
> Network Administrator
> PEL Supply Company
> 216.267.5775 Voice
> 216-267-6176 Fax
> www.pelsupply.com


-- 
Regards Richard
pa3gcu@zeelandnet.nl
http://people.zeelandnet.nl/pa3gcu/

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* Re: Dumb Questions
  2002-09-25 15:29 ` pa3gcu
@ 2002-09-25 15:38   ` Mr. James W. Laferriere
  2002-09-25 16:13     ` Jim Reimer
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Mr. James W. Laferriere @ 2002-09-25 15:38 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: pa3gcu; +Cc: Paul Kraus, linux-newbie


	Hello All ,  Not to prolong this threads death ...

	FUBAR ,  Old Military (& others) Fouled Up Beyond All Recognition
		 A less polite  word was used in the original
	then too:

	foobar ,  To attempt to loose the 'Fouled' because of the less
		  polite  word was used in the original
	then too:

	foo ,  for short .

On Wed, 25 Sep 2002, pa3gcu wrote:

> On Wednesday 25 September 2002 13:23, Paul Kraus wrote:
> > What does foo stand for. It is used everywhere. I understand its just a
> > placeholder for the file name or what ever is pertinent to the context
> > it is used but I would still like to know what it means.
>
> I did read somewhere one that it was NIX terminoligy back when Unix was very
> young, FOOBAR , it got turned into /foo/bar as an "example" nothing more
> AFAIK.
> foo@bar is also seen sometimes, cant quite remember where tho.
>
>
>
> > Paul Kraus
> > Network Administrator
> > PEL Supply Company
> > 216.267.5775 Voice
> > 216-267-6176 Fax
> > www.pelsupply.com
>
>
> --
> Regards Richard
> pa3gcu@zeelandnet.nl
> http://people.zeelandnet.nl/pa3gcu/
>
> -
> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-newbie" in
> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
> More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
> Please read the FAQ at http://www.linux-learn.org/faqs
>

       +------------------------------------------------------------------+
       | James   W.   Laferriere | System    Techniques | Give me VMS     |
       | Network        Engineer |     P.O. Box 854     |  Give me Linux  |
       | babydr@baby-dragons.com | Coudersport PA 16915 |   only  on  AXP |
       +------------------------------------------------------------------+

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* Re: Dumb Questions
  2002-09-25 15:38   ` Mr. James W. Laferriere
@ 2002-09-25 16:13     ` Jim Reimer
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Jim Reimer @ 2002-09-25 16:13 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-newbie

everything you ever wanted to know about foo but were afraid
to ask is at http://tuxedo.org/jargon/html/entry/foo.html

-jdr-

On Wednesday 25 September 2002 10:38 am, Mr. James W. Laferriere wrote:
> Hello All ,  Not to prolong this threads death ...
>
> 	FUBAR ,  Old Military (& others) Fouled Up Beyond All Recognition
> 		 A less polite  word was used in the original
> 	then too:
>
> 	foobar ,  To attempt to loose the 'Fouled' because of the less
> 		  polite  word was used in the original
> 	then too:
>
> 	foo ,  for short .
>
> On Wed, 25 Sep 2002, pa3gcu wrote:
> > On Wednesday 25 September 2002 13:23, Paul Kraus wrote:
> > > What does foo stand for. It is used everywhere. I understand its just a
> > > placeholder for the file name or what ever is pertinent to the context
> > > it is used but I would still like to know what it means.
> >
> > I did read somewhere one that it was NIX terminoligy back when Unix was
> > very young, FOOBAR , it got turned into /foo/bar as an "example" nothing
> > more AFAIK.
> > foo@bar is also seen sometimes, cant quite remember where tho.
> >
> > > Paul Kraus
> > > Network Administrator
> > > PEL Supply Company
> > > 216.267.5775 Voice
> > > 216-267-6176 Fax
> > > www.pelsupply.com
> >
> > --
> > Regards Richard
> > pa3gcu@zeelandnet.nl
> > http://people.zeelandnet.nl/pa3gcu/
> >
> > -
> > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-newbie"
> > in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
> > More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
> > Please read the FAQ at http://www.linux-learn.org/faqs
>
>        +------------------------------------------------------------------+
>
>        | James   W.   Laferriere | System    Techniques | Give me VMS     |
>        | Network        Engineer |     P.O. Box 854     |  Give me Linux  |
>        | babydr@baby-dragons.com | Coudersport PA 16915 |   only  on  AXP |
>
>        +------------------------------------------------------------------+
>
> -
> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-newbie" in
> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
> More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* X
  2002-09-25 13:23 Dumb Questions Paul Kraus
  2002-09-25 15:28 ` Ray Olszewski
  2002-09-25 15:29 ` pa3gcu
@ 2002-09-25 16:24 ` Daniel Provin
       [not found] ` <Pine.LNX.4.44L.0209251323230.16419-100000@labmetro.ufsc.br >
  2002-09-25 20:19 ` Dumb Questions Chuck Gelm
  4 siblings, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Daniel Provin @ 2002-09-25 16:24 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-newbie

Hi there

Is there any program that usualy change the XF86Config file?
cause everytime I change my XF86Config and start X it go back to the
original

thanks
Daniel

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* Re: X
       [not found] ` <Pine.LNX.4.44L.0209251323230.16419-100000@labmetro.ufsc.br >
@ 2002-09-25 16:59   ` Ray Olszewski
  2002-09-25 19:07     ` X pa3gcu
  2002-09-26 18:55     ` X Daniel Provin
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Ray Olszewski @ 2002-09-25 16:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Daniel Provin; +Cc: linux-newbie

At 01:24 PM 9/25/02 -0300, you wrote:
>Hi there
>
>Is there any program that usualy change the XF86Config file?
>cause everytime I change my XF86Config and start X it go back to the
>original


Depends a bit on the distro, but I can't think of any common app that would 
rewrite XF86Config *every* time you start X.

Perhaps you'd benefit from telling us the details?

1. What distro and version?

2. How do you start X? (startx, xdm, something else)?

3. What version of X? (At least on some distros, X 4.x.x uses a config file 
called XF86Config-4, not the older XF86Config used with X 3.x.x. Might you 
be editing the wrong file?)

4. What changes are you making (or trying to make)? Might you be making a 
change that does not work? And how are you making the changes -- editing 
XF86Config in vi, using xf86config, something else?

5. Exactly what do you mean by "it go back to the original"? Examples of 
what you *might* mean are:

         A. the changes in XF86Config do not show up in the way X starts.
         B. after starting X, you open XF86Config again, and the changes 
you made are lost.
         C. The same as B, plus the XF86Config file has an old timestamp, 
not a recent one.

In cases B and C, if you edit the XF86Config file, save it, close your 
editor, restart your editor, and open XF86Config again (without starting X 
in the meantime), do you see the changes you made?


--
-------------------------------------------"Never tell me the odds!"--------
Ray Olszewski					-- Han Solo
Palo Alto, California, USA			  ray@comarre.com
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* Re: X
  2002-09-25 16:59   ` X Ray Olszewski
@ 2002-09-25 19:07     ` pa3gcu
  2002-09-26 14:46       ` Pop Up Banner Adds Frank Roberts - SOTL
  2002-09-26 18:55     ` X Daniel Provin
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: pa3gcu @ 2002-09-25 19:07 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Daniel Provin; +Cc: linux-newbie

On Wednesday 25 September 2002 16:59, Ray Olszewski wrote:
> At 01:24 PM 9/25/02 -0300, you wrote:
> >Hi there
> >
> >Is there any program that usualy change the XF86Config file?
> >cause everytime I change my XF86Config and start X it go back to the
> >original
>
> Depends a bit on the distro, but I can't think of any common app that would
> rewrite XF86Config *every* time you start X.
>
> Perhaps you'd benefit from telling us the details?
>
> 1. What distro and version?
>
> 2. How do you start X? (startx, xdm, something else)?
>
> 3. What version of X? (At least on some distros, X 4.x.x uses a config file
> called XF86Config-4, not the older XF86Config used with X 3.x.x. Might you
> be editing the wrong file?)

If i may point out that XFre86-4.x.x "does" use XF86Config, it will use it as 
default "if" no XF86Config-4 is found.
I use XFree86-4.2.0 on one machine here and i "dont" have a -4 file.
It is documented and it was decided to make XFree86-4.x.x look for both files 
to make it backwards compatable.

Another handy hint is that XFree86-4.x.x now writes a complete log of every 
boot into /var/log called XFree86.0.log (if .0 is found then it will be .1) 
and so on.
You can see what config file is used in that log file + so much more than the 
old way of capturing its output at starttime.
(But i dont think i needed to tell Ray that) i just wanted to make a point of 
the "-4" thing.

The rest of the excelant stuff snipped.

-- 
Regards Richard
pa3gcu@zeelandnet.nl
http://people.zeelandnet.nl/pa3gcu/

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* Re: Dumb Questions
  2002-09-25 13:23 Dumb Questions Paul Kraus
                   ` (3 preceding siblings ...)
       [not found] ` <Pine.LNX.4.44L.0209251323230.16419-100000@labmetro.ufsc.br >
@ 2002-09-25 20:19 ` Chuck Gelm
  2002-09-25 21:22   ` Wladimir Foo
  4 siblings, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Chuck Gelm @ 2002-09-25 20:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Paul Kraus; +Cc: linux-newbie

Hi, Paul:

 There are no dumb questions...
There are, however, dumb answers.
It is up to you to separate the grain from the chaff.
IMHO, 'foo' is a polite synonym for 'fu' which is
part of 'fubar'.  ergo, 'foo', as used commonly as a
placeholder, has no meaning.

HTH, Chuck


Paul Kraus wrote:
> 
> What does foo stand for. It is used everywhere. I understand its just a
> placeholder for the file name or what ever is pertinent to the context
> it is used but I would still like to know what it means.
> 
> Paul Kraus
> Network Administrator
> PEL Supply Company
> 216.267.5775 Voice
> 216-267-6176 Fax
> www.pelsupply.com
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-newbie" in
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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* Re: Dumb Questions
  2002-09-25 20:19 ` Dumb Questions Chuck Gelm
@ 2002-09-25 21:22   ` Wladimir Foo
  2002-09-26 10:05     ` 'nobody' is using my system !!! Chuck Gelm
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Wladimir Foo @ 2002-09-25 21:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Chuck Gelm, Paul Kraus; +Cc: linux-newbie

> Hi, Paul:
>
>  There are no dumb questions...
> There are, however, dumb answers.
> It is up to you to separate the grain from the chaff.
> IMHO, 'foo' is a polite synonym for 'fu' which is
> part of 'fubar'.  ergo, 'foo', as used commonly as a
> placeholder, has no meaning.

And here follows the dumb anwer from me: Foo is also my last name ;)
Chuck's right - there are no dumb questions - If no one ever asked a lot of us 
would not have a clue what was going on etc.

> HTH, Chuck
>
> Paul Kraus wrote:
> > What does foo stand for. It is used everywhere. I understand its just a
> > placeholder for the file name or what ever is pertinent to the context
> > it is used but I would still like to know what it means.
> >
> > Paul Kraus

http://www.linuxvoodoo.com
perl -le '$_="75>42833<33.=3?,13406577073890:;90833<330690<3!!";tr[0-?][ 
YXOUIWLVETHDCNM];print'

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* 'nobody' is using my system !!!
  2002-09-25 21:22   ` Wladimir Foo
@ 2002-09-26 10:05     ` Chuck Gelm
  2002-09-26 14:58       ` Ray Olszewski
                         ` (2 more replies)
  0 siblings, 3 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Chuck Gelm @ 2002-09-26 10:05 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-newbie

G'day, Y'all:

 I awoke at 04:40 AM today when the internal speaker of my
Win2k boxen started sounding a tone.  While I was up shutting
it down, I noticed the HD activity lamp on my linux firewall
was indicating activity.  I selected the console window where
I leave 'top' running.  I found that 'find' and 'sort' were
being run by 'nobody'.  I've installed no 'at' or 'cron' jobs.
It is a Slackware v8.0, kernel 2.2.19, custom compile system.

'who' showed my console logins only.

Why was 'find' and 'sort' running at 4:40 AM ?

Regards, Chuck
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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* Pop Up Banner Adds
  2002-09-25 19:07     ` X pa3gcu
@ 2002-09-26 14:46       ` Frank Roberts - SOTL
  2002-09-26 17:24         ` Arthur Othieno
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Frank Roberts - SOTL @ 2002-09-26 14:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-newbie

Another dumb question but this one is beginning to drive me nuts.

In KDE one can easily delete unwanted cookies on a dial up connected box with 
out network capabilities.

Is there some easy way to delete unwanted Pop Up Banner Adds which appear when 
you access a site. 

Clicking on the URL to the add shows that it originates from a different site 
than the one being visited.

Personally I know of no way of filtering out such trash without setting the 
box up on a network.

Thanks

Frank
 
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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* Re: 'nobody' is using my system !!!
  2002-09-26 10:05     ` 'nobody' is using my system !!! Chuck Gelm
@ 2002-09-26 14:58       ` Ray Olszewski
  2002-09-26 15:54       ` pa3gcu
       [not found]       ` <3D92F8D1.9010604@xts.ro>
  2 siblings, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Ray Olszewski @ 2002-09-26 14:58 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Chuck Gelm, linux-newbie

At 06:05 AM 9/26/02 -0400, Chuck Gelm wrote:
>G'day, Y'all:
>
>  I awoke at 04:40 AM today when the internal speaker of my
>Win2k boxen started sounding a tone.  While I was up shutting
>it down, I noticed the HD activity lamp on my linux firewall
>was indicating activity.  I selected the console window where
>I leave 'top' running.  I found that 'find' and 'sort' were
>being run by 'nobody'.  I've installed no 'at' or 'cron' jobs.
>It is a Slackware v8.0, kernel 2.2.19, custom compile system.
>
>'who' showed my console logins only.
>
>Why was 'find' and 'sort' running at 4:40 AM ?

One can only guess. My guess would be that even though *you* didn't install 
any cron jobs, the install itself did so.

The obvious candidate is an update of the locate database. See if 
"updatedb" is also running at this time. See if there is  a cron script 
that runs either find or updatedb or both (on my systems, it is 
/etc/cron.daily/find, but I've no idea how standard this location is).

If that is not it, I'd look through the scripts in the /etc/cron.* 
directories, or their analogs on our system, for a candidate.


--
-------------------------------------------"Never tell me the odds!"--------
Ray Olszewski					-- Han Solo
Palo Alto, California, USA			  ray@comarre.com
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* Re: 'nobody' is using my system !!!
  2002-09-26 10:05     ` 'nobody' is using my system !!! Chuck Gelm
  2002-09-26 14:58       ` Ray Olszewski
@ 2002-09-26 15:54       ` pa3gcu
       [not found]       ` <3D92F8D1.9010604@xts.ro>
  2 siblings, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: pa3gcu @ 2002-09-26 15:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Chuck Gelm, linux-newbie

On Thursday 26 September 2002 10:05, Chuck Gelm wrote:
> G'day, Y'all:
>
>  I awoke at 04:40 AM today when the internal speaker of my
> Win2k boxen started sounding a tone.  While I was up shutting
> it down, I noticed the HD activity lamp on my linux firewall
> was indicating activity.  I selected the console window where
> I leave 'top' running.  I found that 'find' and 'sort' were
> being run by 'nobody'.  I've installed no 'at' or 'cron' jobs.
> It is a Slackware v8.0, kernel 2.2.19, custom compile system.
>
> 'who' showed my console logins only.
>
> Why was 'find' and 'sort' running at 4:40 AM ?

Get up at the same time tommorow morning and it will be doing the same thing.
Like Ray said, its a normal system update.

>
> Regards, Chuck

-- 
Regards Richard
pa3gcu@zeelandnet.nl
http://people.zeelandnet.nl/pa3gcu/

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* Re: Pop Up Banner Adds
  2002-09-26 14:46       ` Pop Up Banner Adds Frank Roberts - SOTL
@ 2002-09-26 17:24         ` Arthur Othieno
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Arthur Othieno @ 2002-09-26 17:24 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Frank Roberts - SOTL; +Cc: linux-newbie

I do not know if other browsers support this, but with Mozilla you can 
successfully block almost all unwanted pop-up banner ads. I'l quote this 
from the mozilla faq 
(http://www.mozilla.org/start/1.0/faq/browser.html#2.4):

"2.4. I've heard about 'popup blocking'. How do I do this?
Go to Edit | Preferences | Advanced | Scripts & Windows, and uncheck the 
powers you do not want to grant to web pages. Unchecking 'Open 
unrequested windows' blocks most unrequested popups."

Hope that helps

Arthur

Frank Roberts - SOTL wrote:

> Another dumb question but this one is beginning to drive me nuts.
> 
> In KDE one can easily delete unwanted cookies on a dial up connected box with 
> out network capabilities.
> 
> Is there some easy way to delete unwanted Pop Up Banner Adds which appear when 
> you access a site. 
> 
> Clicking on the URL to the add shows that it originates from a different site 
> than the one being visited.
> 
> Personally I know of no way of filtering out such trash without setting the 
> box up on a network.
> 
> Thanks
> 
> Frank
>  
> -
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> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
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> 
> 


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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* Re: X
  2002-09-25 16:59   ` X Ray Olszewski
  2002-09-25 19:07     ` X pa3gcu
@ 2002-09-26 18:55     ` Daniel Provin
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Daniel Provin @ 2002-09-26 18:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-newbie

I already solved my problem. The thing was that I was writing on the
XF86Config instead of the XF86Config-4

thanks
Daniel Provin
Lixux User #191271
EEL LABMETRO UFSC

On Wed, 25 Sep 2002, Ray Olszewski wrote:

> At 01:24 PM 9/25/02 -0300, you wrote:
> >Hi there
> >
> >Is there any program that usualy change the XF86Config file?
> >cause everytime I change my XF86Config and start X it go back to the
> >original
>
>
> Depends a bit on the distro, but I can't think of any common app that would
> rewrite XF86Config *every* time you start X.
>
> Perhaps you'd benefit from telling us the details?
>
> 1. What distro and version?
>
> 2. How do you start X? (startx, xdm, something else)?
>
> 3. What version of X? (At least on some distros, X 4.x.x uses a config file
> called XF86Config-4, not the older XF86Config used with X 3.x.x. Might you
> be editing the wrong file?)
>
> 4. What changes are you making (or trying to make)? Might you be making a
> change that does not work? And how are you making the changes -- editing
> XF86Config in vi, using xf86config, something else?
>
> 5. Exactly what do you mean by "it go back to the original"? Examples of
> what you *might* mean are:
>
>          A. the changes in XF86Config do not show up in the way X starts.
>          B. after starting X, you open XF86Config again, and the changes
> you made are lost.
>          C. The same as B, plus the XF86Config file has an old timestamp,
> not a recent one.
>
> In cases B and C, if you edit the XF86Config file, save it, close your
> editor, restart your editor, and open XF86Config again (without starting X
> in the meantime), do you see the changes you made?
>
>
> --
> -------------------------------------------"Never tell me the odds!"--------
> Ray Olszewski					-- Han Solo
> Palo Alto, California, USA			  ray@comarre.com
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> -
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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* Re: 'nobody' is using my system !!!
       [not found]       ` <3D92F8D1.9010604@xts.ro>
@ 2002-09-26 19:55         ` Chuck Gelm
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Chuck Gelm @ 2002-09-26 19:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Dragos LUNGU; +Cc: linux-newbie

Howdy, Dragos LUNGU:

 Thanks.  You are right.  I did a 'cat'
and that was the only line!

 Geesh, I added 'updatedb' to rc.local thinking that I was
updating my database.  It would have happened at the next
04:40 anyway!  :-|

 I guess that I will remove that line from my rc.local from
all my linux boxes. 

Regards, Chuck

Dragos LUNGU wrote:
> 
> Hi,
> 
> Chuck Gelm wrote:
> > G'day, Y'all:
> [snip]
> >
> > Why was 'find' and 'sort' running at 4:40 AM ?
> 
> My guess is : updatedb
> 
> i did a grep on /var/spool/* and this is what came out :
> 
> /var/spool/cron/crontabs/nobody:40 04 * * *       cd / ; updatedb 1>
> /dev/null 2> /dev/null
> 
> -> updatedb at 4.40 AM as nobody
> 
> slackware 8.0 here as well, and I'm sure I didn't write that cron job
> myself.
> 
> hope it helps,
> 
> Dragos.
> 
> >
> > Regards, Chuck
> 
> --
> 
> | Dragos LUNGU
> |
> | http://www.xts.ro
> | dragos@xts.ro
> | mobile (+40)745 379 734
> | office (+40)251 190 561
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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* Re: 'nobody' is using my system !!!
@ 2002-09-27  0:00 Heimo Claasen
  2002-09-28  0:09 ` lawson_whitney
  2002-09-28  1:57 ` Peter
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Heimo Claasen @ 2002-09-27  0:00 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-newbie

Which reminds me of one of my beloved taglines:
 * And why does my computer suddenly think it's April? *

On a less serious note, based on the impression that it's indeed a
stand-alone unit: Why is that thing _running_ at all at 4:40 AM
and when you sleep ?

At least I prefer to shut tools and machines OFF when I don't need/use
them - the chain saw, the motor of the car, and the 'puter.

Though I learn each day anew why there is an understandable reason
for so many of the otherwise so wellbehaving Linusians to fall into
the built-in traps of wasteproduction(*): the often endless pain in
the sitting region to start the dang thing up again - mount count
reached, force filesystem check: And there it goes for the full 60 GB.

BTW, _once_ I stumbled (per pure chance and hazard) into the place where
this mount counter is set, gladly changed it from 20 (yes, that _was_
the default) to 99 (ouf, I dare say, still a "safe and secure" setting);
but one bad day I did a new install on that box: and _never_ever_ found
back the hint where this "secret" sacred place was, despite of dozens of
HOwTOs, hundreds of mans, thousand of scribbled notes and well-printed
articles to read. Anyone who knows and _dares_ to tell about ?!

// Heimo Claasen // <hammer at revobild dot net> // Brussels 2002-09-27
The WebPlace of ReRead - and much to read  ==>  http://www.revobild.net

(*) For the consumption of "sleeping" electronic gear almost the full
capacity of two of the GW-class nuclear plants is needed in Germany
alone.

The Linux box here with screen and peripherals, when in "sleep" mode draws
33 W (rather precisely what the ol'Dos box takes - 34 W - to _run_ while
I write and send this mail), with all buttons pushed well to OFF it
_still_ eats 7 W (the dang ATX power unit).
Go count what that gives if everyone on earth had such a nice Linux box
like the one I have, with "green" labels all over and in it.  -hc
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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* Re: 'nobody' is using my system !!!
  2002-09-27  0:00 Heimo Claasen
@ 2002-09-28  0:09 ` lawson_whitney
  2002-09-28  1:57 ` Peter
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: lawson_whitney @ 2002-09-28  0:09 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: hammer; +Cc: linux-newbie

On 27 Sep 2002, Heimo Claasen wrote:

> BTW, _once_ I stumbled (per pure chance and hazard) into the place where
> this mount counter is set, gladly changed it from 20 (yes, that _was_
> the default) to 99 (ouf, I dare say, still a "safe and secure" setting);
> but one bad day I did a new install on that box: and _never_ever_ found
> back the hint where this "secret" sacred place was, despite of dozens of
> HOwTOs, hundreds of mans, thousand of scribbled notes and well-printed
> articles to read. Anyone who knows and _dares_ to tell about ?!

tune2fs -c 99 <device>

man tune2fs

e2fsprogs package.
>
> // Heimo Claasen // <hammer at revobild dot net> // Brussels 2002-09-27
> The WebPlace of ReRead - and much to read  ==>  http://www.revobild.net
>
Lawson
---oops---



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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* Re: 'nobody' is using my system !!!
@ 2002-09-28  1:02 John E. Jay Maass
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: John E. Jay Maass @ 2002-09-28  1:02 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-newbie

I am enjoying your posts, Heimo. What I recently read
somewhere about leaving computers on overnight related to
prevention of thermal stress in components transitioning from
relative hot to cold, and back. Isn't component failure rather
rare these days in either case? When was the last time someone
had to get out a soldering iron and replace an open resistor?

I shut down my systems at night because I must keep my utility
expenses to a minimum, and because one of my machines creates
considerable radio-frequency interference (RFI) to my night-time
AM radio listening.

Your monitoring of electrical power consumption in specific watts
is admirable. Good for you. So many people take energy for
granted and waste it wantonly.

Along these lines, please allow me to jump to a parallel track
and go off topic:

Why doesn't the Western World become as technologically energy
independent of Mid-East oil as soon as possible? Workarounds
abound. We could not become independent of Mid-East oil overnight.
We could, however, practice ever-so-much-better conservation of
existing energy, while developing yet untapped, alternative energy.

One of the first things United States President George W. Bush
did NOT do upon taking office was give a thought to the capture
of alternative energy when the issue was up for conference.
Bush is an oil man. However, would not the oil men be the
entrepeneurs best positioned and most capable of leveraging
new energy sources to their own advantage?

One last thing. Many electrical devices these days run on little
power supplies that plug into the wall and remain on 24/7. For
instance, my indoor television rabbit ears rely on a relationship
with the AC power lines. However, I refuse to leave the antenna's
power supply on 24/7. I use power strips that are on/off switchable
wherever possible. When I'm not watching the television, which is
often (NOT watching it), off goes the supply to the antenna.

Oh brother...

Jay
suburban Philadelphia












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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

* Re: 'nobody' is using my system !!!
  2002-09-27  0:00 Heimo Claasen
  2002-09-28  0:09 ` lawson_whitney
@ 2002-09-28  1:57 ` Peter
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Peter @ 2002-09-28  1:57 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-newbie

It's in the /etc/crontab file where you can set the time for running those 
various updates or use anacrontab for which you must enable the daemon. I too 
switch my computer off at night and I ended up with monstrous files in 
/var/log since the log rotates were set at 4 in the morning and therefore 
never happened.
There is a file where you can set what log-rotate will do such as to gzip the 
files I only can't remember now where that file is.

-- 
Peter

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2002-09-28  1:57 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 21+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2002-09-25 13:23 Dumb Questions Paul Kraus
2002-09-25 15:28 ` Ray Olszewski
2002-09-25 15:29 ` pa3gcu
2002-09-25 15:38   ` Mr. James W. Laferriere
2002-09-25 16:13     ` Jim Reimer
2002-09-25 16:24 ` X Daniel Provin
     [not found] ` <Pine.LNX.4.44L.0209251323230.16419-100000@labmetro.ufsc.br >
2002-09-25 16:59   ` X Ray Olszewski
2002-09-25 19:07     ` X pa3gcu
2002-09-26 14:46       ` Pop Up Banner Adds Frank Roberts - SOTL
2002-09-26 17:24         ` Arthur Othieno
2002-09-26 18:55     ` X Daniel Provin
2002-09-25 20:19 ` Dumb Questions Chuck Gelm
2002-09-25 21:22   ` Wladimir Foo
2002-09-26 10:05     ` 'nobody' is using my system !!! Chuck Gelm
2002-09-26 14:58       ` Ray Olszewski
2002-09-26 15:54       ` pa3gcu
     [not found]       ` <3D92F8D1.9010604@xts.ro>
2002-09-26 19:55         ` Chuck Gelm
  -- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2002-09-27  0:00 Heimo Claasen
2002-09-28  0:09 ` lawson_whitney
2002-09-28  1:57 ` Peter
2002-09-28  1:02 John E. Jay Maass

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