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By Jim Dennis, Ben Okopnik, Dan Wilder, Breen, Chris, and the Gang,
	the Editors of Linux Gazette... 
	and You!
Send questions (or interesting answers) to
	tag@lists.linuxgazette.net
There is no guarantee that your questions
	here will ever be answered.  You can be published anonymously 
	- just let us know!
Contents:
- ¶: Greetings From Heather Stern
 help installing telnetd help installing telnetd
 touch files recursively linux mandrake 7.2 touch files recursively linux mandrake 7.2
 Winprinters Winprinters
 your mail --or-- your mail --or--
- Search and Replace Without Breaking Permissions
 your mail --or-- your mail --or--
- Kernel Panic after putting disk back
 Procmail and regular expressions....(Snowwhite...) Procmail and regular expressions....(Snowwhite...)
 Need to milk you again --or-- Need to milk you again --or--
- Timely Samba Release?
 3d linux 3d linux
 linux vectoring synergy linux vectoring synergy
 Why linux for routing Why linux for routing
 disappearing act disappearing act
 getting 2 dynamic ip addresses getting 2 dynamic ip addresses
 Greetings from Heather Stern
Greetings from Heather Stern
Once again, welcome to the wonderful world of The Answer Gang.  The peeve
of the month this time is a tie:
- AOL users asking for help regarding things which clearly would 
   not be answered by AOL's tollfree tech support by anything but closing the
   offending account.
 
 Folks, AOL doesn't have a Linux version, not even for SVGAlib.
        The closest we can get are a zillion instant messanger clients,
        including Netscape, for which the universal trick is "tell it who you
        are on AOL, then start IM'ing your friends."  If you can't figure
        out who you are on AOL, we certainly don't know!  So, we can't answer 
        any AOL questions at all.  Even ethical ones.
 
- Business people who want us to do their homework -
   asking very complicated questions clearly worth a certain amount of
   consulting time, frosted with an automatically tacked on "This message
   is confidential and may not be given to anyone but the intended recipient,
   legal mumbo jumbo, etc. etc." message which they may not even be aware of,
   and possible cherry on top "Please hurry."
 
 Understand we're not really peeved at the person who's asking, so much
    as the presumption.  Linux Gazette is for everyone ... to 
    Linux just a little more fun ... and if we don't get to (potentially)
    give your answer to the masses, too, then LG isn't getting
    "paid" to pass your question along to us.
 
 If you're a corporate type with an outbound mail gateway that adds such
    notes, and you're fairly sure your answer will be useful (maybe even fun)
    for the rest of the Linux Gazette readership, thengive us permission to
    publish the thread, up front, when you ask the question.
 
 
 Your company will still be anonymous.  You can be anonymous too, if 
    you say so.
 
 As for "hurry" -- if you want a timely answer, or even to be sure of
    getting one, pay a consultant.  
	(Cheap plug: some of the Gang happen to be consultants.  But not
	 all of us.)
We could probably use a few more articles that appeal to corporate
users, though!  Enough of that, though.  Onward to something fun.  The
fun I took on this month is to upgrade my system.
 
Oh boy.
Surely I mentioned that I've been on a continuous upgrade path of 
   SuSE since early 5.1?  No?  Well,
   okay, I admit, I did a "real" reinstall sometime around 6.1 or so,
   and then have chugged along on security updates and adding RPMs from
   the latest 6.x branch for a while.  With an occasional graft from
   Debian packages and source tarballs.
Like any normal user I also have lots of different things I do, so 
   my home directory's a bit messy, I have a few projects here and there,
   and I haven't been real prissy about which account I use to download
   general things like cartoons (Hi 
   Shane!) 
	or new kernel sources into.  Usually I remember to move them to 
	someplace under /usr/src eventually.
As Piglet was fond of saying, "Whatta... whatta mess."
Surely it would have been easier for me if I hadn't decided to buy an
   extra hard disk at the same time, discovered that my floppy bay stopped
   working (p.s. can't boot from my CD.  Something to do with it being a SCSI
   device in an IDE system), and (eek!) was reminded that we'd like to get
   the column fragments in early this month.
Of course, I was able to abuse about a CD's worth of free disk space to
   cover for this. I made the extra hard disk a feature rather than more
   trouble by installing the new setup solely to it.
The install went fine, but it wasn't completely smooth.  Here's a few
hints if you're plotting an upgrade, and I promise, they don't depend on
you using SuSE:
- Decide how much stuff you're going to put on there before
	you lay out your partitions, so you have enough.
 I ended up experimenting with parted after I foolishly
   made /usr a bit small (Hint: 2 Gb is not big enough.  
   What was I thinking?  Oh yeah.  My old drive didn't use Gnome and K
   desktop.  Now they're par for the course.  Heh.)  parted works
   great so far, provided you've had prior training with the "Towers of
   Hanoi" game first.  It can resize partitions, and it can move them, but
   it can't slide them forward.  I had this great wooden Hanoi game when
   I was a kid, and while I was juggling partitions I could almost hear the
   wooden clicks and swaps in my head.
 
- Check that you're going to be able to use the same account 
	numbers.
 This is more of a biggie if you're completely changing distros, but
    it still applies.  If you've created "system level" accounts for a
    database or something, and it wasn't a package designed for your
    distro, you may discover that something else expects to use that number 
    now.  Whether you move your own, or decide to do something about the
    interloper, things aren't going to work right until it's fixed.
 
 If you can't, and you're restoring accounts from a tarball, then
	just make sure you have the user and group accounts you need
	already assigned to their new numbers before you restore.  Then
	tar will deal with the number change for you.
 
- While we're talking about version numbers, check that config files
    haven't completely changed style during the upgrade.
 If they have, you probably cannot just drop the old ones back in
    safely at all.  In this category, I got off light... maybe because
    I'd already gone and upgraded a few things on my own.
 
- If it's in the retail channel, it's out of date -- get your security
    patches.
 The new version of YaST makes this easier, but I also had a few things
    of my own to add to the security plan.
Beyond these normal things, I really needed to get some of these projects
   into directories of their own, so it's clear where I should put stuff for
   those things from now on.  Rather like ordering the teenager to clean up
   their room...
Next thing I know the end of the month is approaching, and my dreams of 
   handling TAG at a dreamy summertime pace are dashed again
 
I still think backups are your friend, but at least I didn't need 'em
   this time.  All I need is more RAM and I'm set!  The weather is 
   improving and I'm having a great time.  So here's those answers --
   share and enjoy.
 
 
This page edited and maintained by the Editors
        of Linux Gazette
Copyright © 2001
Published in issue 66 of Linux Gazette May 2001

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