Hi, I would like to be able to serve a local webpage (on a LAN) when someone connects to a WiFi network. This happens quite often in libraries, cafes etc, so i'm sure it can be done, but I have no idea how and can't seem to find much through searching the web. That, and my very limited networking knowledge means I'm hoping you guys can point me in the right direction. Many thanks!
I'm experimenting with large changes to Linux system runtime parameters exposed through the sysfs virtual file system.
What is the most efficient way to maintain these parameters so that they persist across reboots on a RHEL/CentOS-style system? Is it simply dumping commands into /etc/rc.local? Is there an init script that's well-suited for this? I'm also thinking about standardization from a configuration management perspective. Is there a clean sysfs equivalent to sysctl?
Hi All,
I have installed wordpress on my windows vista machine. and I want other people of my team to access it from my local machine.
How I can do that?
Please help.
Thanks in advance.
Regards,
Manasi Save
There is a router between the modem and the server. In the admin panel, I use single-port forward
Internal Port External Port IP
80 80 to 192.168.1.100 (Web Server)
Basically, I'm not on site, and there is a local IT person who is supposed to have this ready. I saw the port forward page, and it was configured as described above.
So my question is, the only other thing it could be is firewall software, or some other device on the network that their not telling me about, right?
I'd like to mirror a site with wget and convert all the links to the local copies I've downloaded. So far that's easy all I have to do is wget -mk http://site.com
However all of the static media is located in a different domain, if I follow all of the foreign hosts using the -H option it will download that static media files, but it will also download anything else externally linked.
Is there a way to specify 'only download foreign hosts specified in list X'?
Say you have a directory with tens of thousands of messages in it. And you want to separate the spam from the non-spam.
Specifically, you would like to:
Run spamassassin against the directory, tagging each message with an X-Spam-Flag: YES if it thinks it's spam
Have a tcsh shell or perl one-liner grep all mail with the flag and move those mails to /tmp/spam
What command can you run to accomplish this? For example, some pseudocode:
/usr/local/bin/spamassassin -eL ./Maildir/cur/* | grep "X-Spam-Flag: YES" | mv %1 /tmp/spam
Is it possible to let the Chrome browser prefer all DNS resolvable URLs over a search?
Everytime I use a local name not matching a usual domain scheme, I got search results for it.
I first thought that no nonsense DNS lookup is made if the URL seems to be a search keyword, however Chrome always detect this condition and asks me if I like to go to my domain instead. So the DNS lookup is made anyway.
I was trying to follow the instructions found here to set up a catch-all account, but still I get the following message for mails sent to non-existent users:
The error that the other server returned was: 550 550 5.1.1 [email protected]... User unknown (state 14).
Everything else works, though... /etc/mail/local-host-names and /etc/mail/virtusertable were set up as instructed. Any advice? Thanks!
Hello, everyone!
Opera (version 10.10) under Linux (don't know about other OSes) does not recognize http://0.0.0.0/ as local address (http://127.0.0.1/) , while Firefox does.
What is the difference between these addresses?
Which ob the two browsers in this case is standard conform?
I have a LAN with 50 clients and my company has made me do a local WebApp. This is new territory for me, but as I see it, the individual internal IP's are regulated by MikroTIK.
I was wondering, how does one make MikroTIK recognise internal domain names for this IPs?
Right now, the WebApp works fine and can be used by entering 192.168.3.150/app/
But since most people have difficulties entering IPs I was wondering if i could do smth like :
myroom.lan would be just as you typed 192.168.3.150
Possible Duplicate:
Can you help me with my software licensing question?
One of my customers wants me to provide my web-app to be installed in his local area network, behind the firewall - it will not be accessible from the Internet. They require the server to be run on windows (linux is not acceptable). What windows licence shoud I purchase to run my web-based app for 400 users not violating Microsoft licencing terms?
What I'm trying to do is set up a udev rule for my HP headphones (usb) with the aid of several tutorials out there.
Created a file ( 90-local.rules ) in /etc/udev/rules.d and added the following:
ACTION="add",SUBSYSTEM="usb", ATTR{vendor}=="Hewlett-Packard", RUN+="sh /home/alex/Scripts/usb.sh"
The problem is nothing happens when I connect the headphones! What am I doing wrong?
note: I did restart udev and the script works also, so it's not that
Can anyone recommend a linux command line tool to monitor the number of bytes transferred between the local server and a specified IP address/port.
The equivalent tcpdump command would be:
tcpdump -s 0 -i any -w mycapture.trc port 80 host google.com
which outputs :
46 packets captured
131 packets received by filter
0 packets dropped by kernel
I'd like something similar that outputs:
54 bytes out, 176 bytes in
I'd like it to work on RHEL and be free/open-source. It would be good if there was an existing tool which I was just missing too!
I have about four or five machines in the Pentium 3-4 era and I'm interested in creating a Linux server comprised of these machines. The server's main purposes would be to host several low-medium traffic websites/services (voice and game), and share terabytes of data on a local network.
I could probably throw together one modern computer as a server and call it a day, but I'm interested in using these machines to do it instead. Where would I get started in this cluster/cloud setup?
I've written a batch script which copies of some files in the CommonAppData folder (C:\ProgramData) to the logged in User's Local AppData. What I would like to do is to execute this script for every user every time they login. I found many articles talking about the execution of batch files on startup but I would like to know how to do the same on each login.
I've a written a batch file and copied it in :
C:\Windows\System32\GroupPolicy\User\Scripts\Logon
But it does not seem to be working.
I would like to share my www folder on my local machine with others in my office but when I do this and try navigate back to my localhost sites, I get the error HTTP Error 401.3 - Unauthorized.
Now I have done a search already and found this http://forums.iis.net/t/1048841.aspx but it's a bit too technical for my skill level and was hoping someone here might be able to give me an easier way to understand this?
People who use OpenDNS and go to a non-existing domain are getting a nice fancy search page telling them that the domain doesn't exists instead of the browser error page.
here in my home network we have a win 2008-r2 server with the dns role enabled. Is there any way to make my own fancy looking error page to show up at all computers when they enter a domain not found by the local dns server and the Forwarders / root hints servers?
-- David,
I hope someone can help me with this problem that's just occurred, I've never seen it before and I'm stumped as to what's causing it. Basically whenever I try and open any folder on the PC, whether it be network or local it asks me what I want to open it with.
Have any of you seen this error before?
I usually check "Restore last view settings" in preferencs of Acrobat Reader. But I'm actually wondering where Acrobat Reader saves this information? In Windows Registry? In PDF file itself? On my local disk?
We have a Small Business Server (SBS) Windows 2003, and we need to setup a shared outlook calendar using exchange (comes with the SBS), however my client does not want to use exchange mail. In other words, they would like to use Outlook to send an receive emails using some hosted web mail service (using POP) but have the Outlook calendar shared among users using exchange on local SBS server. All users have domain accounts configured. Is this possible to do?
My employer requires a smartcard to login to their web-based remote working platform. I want to access this platform by using a Remote Desktop Connection on to my Windows 7 Virtual Machine, with the smartcard plugged into my home PC. However, whilst I can see the smartcard on my home PC, it doesn't appear in the virtual machine, despite me having "Smart Cards" enabled in the Local Resources page of Remote Desktop Connection. Is it possible to get this working?
I increased the disk size of one of my VM when it was running. After a reboot, I get the following error message (at boot time):
Mounting local filesystems...failed
Now the VM is only accessible through ESX console (not through ssh), and nothing is working anymore....
I already tried to run fsck, but without success.
The result of mount:
The result of blkid:
The result of fstab:
Thanks for your help
I edited the file /etc/rc.d/rc.local and added the following lines in order to mount a remote directory through sshfs at boot time:
su user -c "/usr/bin/sshfs -o idmap=user -o reconnect -o allow_other -o uid=500 -o gid=500 user@remote:/home/shares/allusers /home/user/mnt"
The problem is that is not mounting the directory on startup but when I execute this command manually after logging in everything works as expected an the directory is mounted.
Any suggestions?