Well, I found a solution - but that solution is part of a package that's interesting for more reasons than one. AccessControl, a package of useful tweaks designed to help folks with disabilities, had what I needed and more, along with a control panel that pulled it all together (of course, the individual utilities could still be used as stand-alone programs.) It's available at <https://cmos-eng.rehab.uiuc.edu/accessx/>.
Interestingly enough, Dan Linder (the author) says that a similar panel has been incorporated into X11R6.6 - a Very Good Thing, in my opinion. However, for those of us who'd like (or need) a bit more control over our keyboards, mice, display, etc. and are not willing to chase the bleeding edge, this package can be a useful tool in the sometimes confusing "battle of the interfaces".
After going back to my tried-and-true "icewm" (KDE was just too bloated for my 366MHz/64MB laptop), I gave a bit of thought to "URL clipping", which - if not over-automated - could be a handy feature indeed. Then, I remembered the "xclip" utility.
See attached clipurl.bash.txt
All that was left was tying "clipurl" to a key sequence in "icewm". To do that, I simply added the following line to my "~/.icewm/keys" file:
key "Alt+Ctrl+u" clipurl
Now, when I select a URL and want to launch it, I press "Alt-Ctrl-u", and - presto! A new Netscape window pops up (if Netscape is already running, it spawns a new one). It also works for files in your home directory, or "clips" that contain the entire path as well as the filename.
One of these days, I might write a little "chooser" for "ftp://", etc. URIs... but so far, it hasn't been a problem.
My tip concerns the CUPS configuration utility that is accessed through the webbrowser at https://localhost:631/
My default browser, galeon, takes awhile to start on my machine. If all I want to do is run the CUPS interface to change a printer parameter, then it's much quicker to call it up with the w3m webbrowser in an xterm. Though text based, w3m even supports inline images. I put a "printer" button on my gnome panel that launches the following command when pressed:
"xterm -title CUPS -bg black -fg white -geometry 110x46+240+50 -fn 7x14 -e w3m https://localhost:631/printers"
Steve Robertson
Hi,
I'm the editor of the 'Gazeta do Linux', the portuguese version of Linux Gazette. We received the attached email with a question for you from Alfredo Guimaraes Neto.
Cheers, Pedro Medas
Ola,
Gostaria de saber se voces teem um tutorial de como mudar a imagem de
inicializacao do linux, aquele pinguinzinho com um copo de cerveja, pois
tentei varias vezes e estou com dificuldades, quando mando compilar o
kernel, da sempre erro nesse arquivo.
Grato, Alfredo
Hi,
I would like to know if you have a HOWTO to change the boot image of linux, that penguin with a beer cup, I tried several times and I'm having difficulties, when I try to compile the kernel, it reports always the same error.
Greetings,
Alfredo
Thank you Pedro. I have an answer for him. If you would be kind enough to translate it back I think he'd appreciate it. -- Heather
Hi Heather,
Thanks for the answer to the 'Two Centavos Tip'.
I will translate it for him.
If you need any more info or help feel free to say so.
bests,
Pedro
Not precisely a HOWTO, but actually useful instructions, are at the Linux Kernel Logo Patch Project: https://www.arnor.net/linuxlogo/download.html
Apparently you are not the only one in the world who is inclined to change the boot logo, but finds it hard to figure out where you would tweak the kernel code to use your own. So these people have a patch that makes it easy for everybody, not just kernel-hackers, to put in a new image.
I think they're looking for help on getting the non-intel platform logos right.
For my own part, I like it, I think I'll be using it soon myself!
Hi Mailgang,
Concerning the question of Donal Rogers (rogers from clubi.ie) in the Mailbag of LG76 I found the following in: https://users.pandora.be/sim/euro/112/kde/kbdandbdf.html https://www.interface-ag.com/%7Ejsf/europunx_en.html
So: you may start a new xterminal screen with the Euro-enabled font:
xterm -fn -misc-fixed-medium-r-normal--13-120-75-75-C-70-ISO8859-15 &
In this terminal you can use the Euro-symbol (eg. echo -e "\244"). The question I cannot answer is: how do you force all of your applications to use this font (if indeed that is the best solution). But I hope it gives you something to start working with.
--
groeten,
Rene van Leeuwen
Hi,
Please kindly advise me on PPP.
I'm using RedHat 7.2, somehow I having difficulties in getting the modem setup and recognized.
I compiled the new kernel with PPP add-on: Network Device Support -> (Y) PPP Support -> (Y) PPP Support for async serial ports
1. My external modem was connected to com1, so when I echo > /dev/ttyS0, my TR on modem get lighted.
2. I set; setserial -g /dev/ttyS0, it shows: /dev/ttyS0, UART: 16550A, Port: 0x03f8, IRQ: 4
OK - those numbers look fine, and the above test says that you're definitely on the right port.
I ensured that IRQ 4 is not used by other program by cat /proc/interrupts
3. When I performed; wvdialconf /etc/wvdial.conf, the results show ttyS0 modem was not found.
I tested out on 2 external modems, same problem arise. but of course my both modems (one of them was MERZ 566) were in working condition.
Where did I went wrong?
As far I can tell, you didn't; "wvdialconf" does not guarantee to detect all modems. Try using "minicom" to test it: do the serial port setup (it's pretty self-explanatory) and see if the modem will respond to simple commands like "AT" (it should come back with "OK"), "AT&V" (show the profiles), "ATDT5555555" (dial those numbers), etc. If it responds, just use those values in your "/etc/wvdial.conf", and everything will be fine.
xmodmap -e "pointer = 1 3 2 4 5"
If that works for you, you can place the expression (the part between the double quotes) in a ".Xmodmap" file in your home directory - or launch it directly by specifying the entire command line in your "~/.xinitrc" or "~/.xsession" file, depending on how you start your X session.
Hi,
In the 2 cent tips from LG 77, Chris Gianakopoulos writes:
"It is my belief that Net4, although it may be influenced by other
protocol suites, was written from scratch (other han being derived
from NET3.)"
I read recently in Linus Torvalds' "Just for Fun" (and again in in Glyn Moody's "Rebel Code") that the TCP/IP implementation in Linux was written from scratch in order to avoid being hassled by AT&T, who owned UNIX at the time. I suppose AT&T was using their legion of lawyers to go after other UNIX implementors for royalties.
Thanks,
Brian Finn
Hi Brian,
That makes sense. I've read somewhere that the book, "The Design of the Unix Operating System" by Maurice Bach, influenced Linus Torvalds with respect to his Linux stuff. The book described the algorithms of System V Release 2. Of course, other stuff influenced him also. Thanks for that info, Brian.
Regards,
Chris G.
Hi there Ben,
I am responding to you as you were first on the list of answer people:-
I refer to "ntfs clobbered my ext3fs!!" in Linux Gazette 77 in which the questioner asks about a partition overlap.
I have encountered this twice. Both times it has been with a mixed Windows/Linux drive and using automated partitioning (ie Disk Druid or DiskDrake). Your questioner has exactly this scenario.
Now, I never use automated partitioning and I partition the drive using parted before I start the installation. I use primary partitions where possible and avoid mixed Windows/Linux disk setup.
I have experienced the overlapping partition syndrome and have found it very difficult to overcome. I have not been able to sort it out using fdisk as either Linux or Windows fdisk can not do anything to such corrupted partitions. I have only been able to recover using disk manager software and this was a destructive recovery.
Regards
Frank Brand
Hi there
I would like to know how to set up my email on my home network with win98 outlook express and Linux.
I would like to set it up so that I can email anybody else in the house on the network and email via the internet when needed.
Thank You
Cheryl
There are a couple of linuxWorld articles describing Nicholas Petreley's setup, which may be suitable for you requirements.
https://www.linuxworld.com/site-stories/2002/0318.ldap1.html
https://www.linuxworld.com/site-stories/2002/0401.ldap2.html
Simple question: What is a ".RPM" and how do I use them. I assume they are a type of compression file, but what do I need to use them.
RPMs are RedHat Package manager files. They contain the necessary files for a package, including setup scripts to be run pre- and post-install. They also have a list of dependencies, so they can determine whether you have installed the other packages on which this one depends.
Simple usage
rpm -Uvh pkg.rpm # install package from pkg.rpm rpm -Fvh pkg.rpm # freshen (update) package from pkg.rpm
In both the above examples v is verbose and h is using a hash mark progress indicator.
- For examples of other usages see
- https://www.getlinuxonline.com/omp/distro/RedHat/rpm.htm
Neil Youngman
P.S. If you're asking questions of this list, please turn off MIME and HTML.
Hi,
Check out www.linuxtoys.com. This site has some great examples of how to read/write form serial ports in linux.
The
Radio Shack DVM with RS-232 <https://www.linuxtoys.com/dvm/dvm.html>
article was of particular use for me.
Good luck,
G Wozniak
Hi,
check out the Serial Programming Guide for POSIX Compliant Operating Systems at https://www.easysw.com/~mike/serial You can find the answer in chapter 4.
Best regards,
Matthias
Why when starting SSH client does a subset of sftp open up in the background by default?
Take a look at the last line of your "/etc/ssh/sshd_config":
Subsystem sftp /usr/lib/sftp-server
Also, from "man sshd":
Subsystem Configures an external subsystem (e.g., file transfer daemon). Arguments should be a subsystem name and a command to execute upon subsystem request. The command sftp-server(8) implements the "sftp" file transfer subsystem. By default no subsystems are defined. Note that this option applies to protocol version 2 only.
I find the next-to-the-last sentence very interesting... on Solaris, for example, it's defined but commented out. On Debian Linux, it's defined and enabled by default. I suppose you could turn it off by commenting out the line, but I'd make absolutely certain that I didn't have any need for it first.
Hello everybody,
I have emails with a MS-TNEF file and a humor.mp3.scr file as attachments waiting in my inbox. How do I view/listen to these attachments?
You really don't want to open humor.mp3.scr. That's the Badtrans virus! Fortunately, as a linux user you're immune
See https://vil.nai.com/vil/content/v_99069.htm for more info.
Neil Youngman
As a general point, anything which has two whole three letter extensions (.jpg.pdf, .mp3.scr, and so on) especially when the second is one that may be reasonable to auto-view, you should be immediately suspicious that it's probably a virus. The same goes for MIME types which represent auto-view type files but which do not match the extensions given on the attachment (e.g. audio/wav but the attachment says .jpg).
However, there are 4 or 5 different small utilities that will deal with a true "TNEF" attachment, easily found at freshmeat.net -- Heather
On Fri, Apr 12, 2002 at 06:02:39AM +0100, Alok Garg wrote:
Hello Sir,
I have 2 HDD of 20 Gig each, on the Primary drive I
have WinNT and on the secondary I have Linux RH 6.2 I
wanted to uninstall Linux from the system without
effecting my data on Win NT. I wanted to move my
secondary drive to other machine.
I'm sorry, but that's impossible. Removing Linux from your machine would utterly destroy (beyond any hope of recovery) the data on every WinNT machine in a 60-mile radius of where you are. Note that everybody will know exactly who is responsible: you'll be left in the center of a large charred circle. Even if you removed the HD with Linux and carried it off, as soon as you erased it, your NT would know.
It all happens magically, really.
(HINT: There's no magic. NT may be evil, but it does not watch your Linux drive and explode if anything changes.)
See <https://www.linuxgazette.net/tag/kb.html#uninstall> for tips on uninstalling Linux.
Make sure sshd is "always" there for you.
Using OpenSSH (circa 2.95 or later?) you can configure the sshd to run directly from your /etc/inittab under a "respawn" directive by adding the -D (don't detach) option like so:
# excerpt from /etc/inittab, near end ss:12345:respawn:/usr/sbin/sshd -D
This will ensure that an ssh daemon process is always kept running even if the system experiences extreme conditions (such as OOM, out of memory, overcommitted memory) or a careless sysadmin's killall which kills the running daemon. So long as init can function it will keep an sshd running (just as it does with your existing getty processes).
This is particularly handy for systems that are co-located and which don't have (reliable) serial port console connections. It just might save that drive across town or that frustrating, time consuming and embarassing call to the colo staff, etc.
If Python's built-in recursion limit keeps your incredibly cool recursive function from working, you can temporarily set a different recursion limit with the sys module.
oldlimit = sys.getrecursionlimit() sys.setrecursionlimit(len(big_hairy_list)) incredibly_cool_recursive_function(big_hairy_list) sys.setrecursionlimit(oldlimit)
If you have an account on a system where only your ssh1 key is installed in your authorized_keys file, you can force your ssh connection to use version 1 of the protocol with ssh -1 example.com.
Then you can use scp with the -1 option to transfer your ssh2 key there, so that you can use version 2 to connect from now on. Paranoid sysadmins are turning off version 1 access, so you should be using version 2 everywhere by now to be on the safe side.
To make executables smaller, try running strip(1) with the options -R Comment -R Note. This removes "comment" and "note" sections that the compiler and linker may have added during the build process.
(source: MontaVista Software's MontaVista Zone customer support site.)
If you're running your headphones straight out of your sound card's "Line out" jack, you might notice there's no volume control. Instead of trashing your ears or firing up a audio mixer every time you need to set the volume, just bind the commands
aumix -v+4 # crank up the volume!
and
aumix -v-4 # turn that crap down!
to two spare function keys. (In Sawfish, this is under the "Bindings" menu in the sawfish-ui program.) Presto--free and easy volume control straight from the keyboard.
There are also nifty little volume control applets for the KDE and GNOME taskbars, but why spend pixels on a common task when you have all those keys just sitting there?