Cramsession Linux Newsletter

Cramsession.com Linux News Archive

Please note that I've stopped writing the Linux News as of January 30, 2003, as Cramsession has cancelled most of their newsletters. You can send any questions or comments about this content to me (sean at ertw . com)
People have been asking for a downloadable version of the archives. [My mbox (one big file, 1.4MB)] [Individual files, text, tarball] [Individual files, html, tarball]
If you're looking for more Linux content, you might like my blog.
Jan 30, 2003
  Linux News - Issue #117
Jan 23, 2003
  Linux News - Issue #116
Jan 16, 2003
  Linux News - Issue #115
Jan 9, 2003
  Linux News - Issue #114
Jan 2, 2003
  Linux News - Issue #113
Dec 19, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #112
Dec 12, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #111
Dec 5, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #110
Nov 28, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #109
Nov 21, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #108
Nov 14, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #107
Nov 7, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #106
Oct 31, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #105
Oct 24, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #104
Oct 17, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #103
Oct 10, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #102
Oct 3, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #101
Sep 26, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #100
Sep 19, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #99
Sep 12, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #98
Sep 5, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #97
Aug 29, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #96
Aug 22, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #95
Aug 15, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #94
Aug 8, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #93
Aug 1, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #92
Jul 25, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #91
Jul 18, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #90
Jul 11, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #89
Jul 4, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #88
Jun 27, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #87
Jun 20, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #86
Jun 13, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #85
Jun 6, 2002
  Linux News - Issue #84
May 30, 2002
  Linux News - May 30, 2002
May 23, 2002
  Pearl In The Shell
May 16, 2002
  Linux Filesystems - Part Two
May 9, 2002
  Inside The Linux Filesystem
May 2, 2002
  CD Burning Under Linux
Apr 25, 2002
  Star Office Vs. Open Office
Apr 18, 2002
  Surfing With Mozilla
Apr 11, 2002
  "We Don't Support Linux..."
Apr 4, 2002
  Visit The UNIX Library
Mar 28, 2002
  Linux and World Domination
Mar 21, 2002
  Working With Keyservers
Mar 14, 2002
  A Look At Public Key Cryptography
Mar 7, 2002
  Monitoring Systems With "vmstat"
Feb 28, 2002
  Star Office 6 Not to be Free for Linux?
Feb 21, 2002
  How Can Programming Benefit a Systems Administrator?
Feb 14, 2002
  Alias: It's Not Just a TV Show
Feb 8, 2002
  Using The diff and patch Utilities
Jan 31, 2002
  How To Detect Cracks
Jan 24, 2002
  Using Razor to Shave Away Spam
Jan 17, 2002
  Stomping Spam
Jan 10, 2002
  Sair Linux Courseware Review
Jan 3, 2002
  2002: The Year of the Penguin!
Dec 27, 2001
  UNIX Apps on a Windows Box?
Dec 20, 2001
  Directory Assistance
Dec 13, 2001
  How Do You Kill Zombies?
Dec 6, 2001
  Using Hard and Soft Symlinks
Nov 29, 2001
  Change Terminal-Based Apps Into Network Apps
Nov 22, 2001
  Adventures In Booting
Nov 15, 2001
  Getting To Know PAM
Nov 8, 2001
  Know Your Enemy
Nov 1, 2001
  Do Mulder and Scully Use X-Windows?
Oct 25, 2001
  A Quick Look at the RHCE Certification
Oct 18, 2001
  What's Up With Linux Certification?
Oct 11, 2001
  Express Yourself Regularly
Oct 4, 2001
  Advice For Lazy Penguins?
Sep 27, 2001
  NVIDIA Jumps On Linux Bandwagon
Sep 20, 2001
  Understanding DNS in a Linux Environment
Sep 13, 2001
  Be Careful With Binaries
Sep 6, 2001
  Party Like It's 999,999,999
Aug 30, 2001
  Rooting Out Memory Hogs
Aug 23, 2001
  Spin Your 'Top'
Aug 16, 2001
  Keeping Time With NTP
Aug 9, 2001
  Supporting True Type Fonts
Aug 2, 2001
  Getting Perl To Fetch
Jul 26, 2001
  Who's The Man?!
Jul 19, 2001
  Adobe Cracks The DMCA Whip
Jul 12, 2001
  Due Processes
Jul 5, 2001
  Going Adobe Free
Jun 28, 2001
  Don't Send Mixed SIgnals
Jun 21, 2001
  Everything is a File. (almost)
Jun 14, 2001
  Know Your Partitions
Jun 7, 2001
  Where it's "at"!
May 31, 2001
  A Sneak Peek at RedHat 7.1
May 24, 2001
  Scheduling Tasks With cron - Part 2
May 17, 2001
  Scheduling Tasks With cron
May 10, 2001
  Open Source - Seeing Through The FUD
May 3, 2001
  A Look At Ximian's New Release
Apr 26, 2001
  Rev Up Your X-Windows Session
Apr 19, 2001
  Wrangling With GNU Cash
Apr 12, 2001
  Tame the syslogd Daemon
Apr 5, 2001
  Test Your Admin Skills At Honeynet
Mar 29, 2001
  Software RAID on Your Linux Box
Mar 22, 2001
  Prevent Disasters: Back It Up
Mar 15, 2001
  Notes From Underground!
Mar 8, 2001
  SuSE 7.1 - A First Look
Mar 1, 2001
  Certification Boot Camp
Feb 22, 2001
  Understanding Runlevels
Feb 15, 2001
  What Are The Advantages of Joining a LUG?
Feb 8, 2001
  Diving For Perls
Feb 1, 2001
  How To Secure Your Linux Installation
Jan 25, 2001
  Linux Problem Solving
Jan 18, 2001
  Stand up and Be Counted!
Jan 11, 2001
  2.4.0 is Here!
Jan 4, 2001
  When will Mom use Linux?
Dec 28, 2000
  The Year in Review
Dec 21, 2000
  The SourceForge Solution
Dec 15, 2000
  How to Compile and Install the New Kernel
Dec 7, 2000
  Put Your E-mail Into A Blackberry Basket
Nov 30, 2000
  Using Perl With Linux
Nov 23, 2000
  Working With MP3's Under Linux
Nov 16, 2000
  Apache 2.0 alpha 4
Nov 9, 2000
  Dell loves Linux!
Nov 2, 2000
  What's Up With RedHat 7?
===========================================================
                        LINUX NEWS
            Resources & Links From CramSession.com
                Thursday, December 27, 2001
===========================================================

-----------------
TABLE OF CONTENTS
-----------------

1) Sean's Notes

2) Linux News

	KDE Beta Ready
	Red Hat Linux - The Best of the Best
	SUN Still Top UNIX Vendor
	Hurry Up and Get StarOffice 6

3) Linux Resources

	Sendmail Denying Relaying?
	Automating Network Administration
	Calling the Elite...
	Become Your Own Employer
	Alternative Rescue Disk

4) App o' the Week


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===========================================================
1) Sean's Notes
===========================================================

A while ago, I talked about X-Windows, and mentioned that it
was network transparent.  Simply put, an X application
(client) doesn't care where the display (server) is, since it
communicates through Xlib.  Xlib, in turn, connects over a
socket to the server.  This socket can be on the local host
(such as a directly attached monitor) or across the world.
Therefore, you can run your web browser, xterm, or anything
else from any X-Windows station, assuming you've got a network
connection.  Think of it as a thin client...you can have a
relatively slow machine running applications over the network.
You can also mix local and remote services, such as having
everything run local, and fire up xterms to remote servers,
or maybe a special application.

XServers aren't limited to Unix, though.  Wouldn't it be
nice to run some Unix apps on your Windows box?  How about
a Windows XServer?

I use StarNet's X-Win32 (http://www.starnet.com), which is a
commercial product.  You can find a list of shareware servers at:

http://tucows.cableregina.com/xwinserver95.html

This week, I'm going to show you how to use the Cygwin port
of XFree86.  While it's a lot heavier than some of the other
products, you end up with a lot of UNIX utilities on your
WindowsPC.

First, download and install Cygwin, which is a port of UNIX
utilities to Windows.  Cygwin centers around the Cygwin DLL,
which emulates the UNIX libraries.  Most UNIX sources can
then be compiled on a Windows machine (it even has gcc!)

Browse to http://cygwin.com and select the "Install Cygwin
Now" link off to the right.  You can select the "Run from this
location" option if you'd like, or save the .exe to your hard
drive.  Upon running this, you'll be presented with some
options.  The easiest is to select "Install from Internet",
which will download and install packages in one step.  Pick
a mirror, and then a temporary directory.

Now you'll be presented with the options for packages to
install.  The default selection is good, though you'll want
to add "bunzip" and "ssh" because we'll need them later.
Let it cook for a while as it downloads all the packages and
installs them.  Once completed, you'll have a shortcut on
your desktop which brings you to a bash shell.

Back to http://cygwin.com --look for the Xfree link off to
the right.  Find a mirror site from there, and browse to the
xfree/xc-4-binaries/4.1.0 directory.  Download everything to a
temporary directory.  For now, I'll assume this directory is c:\x.

Fire up that bash shell I told you about earlier.  If you type
"mount", you'll see that your drive C is mapped to /cygdrive/c.
So, our X files will be in /cygdrive/c/x.

$ cd /cygdrive/c/x
$ bunzip2 extract.exe.bz2
$ ./Xinstall.sh

This will get the X installation script going.  The defaults
are fine.  When you get to the stage where it asks you for
extra packages to install, I installed the following:

- font server
- 100 dpi fonts
- Speedo/Type 1 fonts

Once that's all done, there are some helper scripts you can use:

$ cd /usr/X11R6/bin
$ tar -xzf /cygdrive/c/x/startup-scripts.tgz

>From /usr/X11R6/bin, you can start X-Windows:

$ ./startxwin.sh

You'll get the plain old twm window manager, but for our
purposes, that's great.

>From this point, there are a few ways to run remote X clients
on your local display.  The first is pretty simple.  First,
in the xterm window that popped up, allow your remote machine
to connect:

local$ xhost +192.168.1.10

(assuming 192.168.1.10 is the IP of your remote Unix box).
Telnet into that machine, and set your DISPLAY environment
variable

remote$ export DISPLAY=windowsmachine:0.0    (sh)
remote$ setenv DISPLAY windowsmachine:0.0    (csh)

where "windowsmachine" is the IP or DNS name.

Now, run the command in the telnet window, and it should
appear inside the local window:

remote$ xterm &

The big problem with this is that the remote machine must be
able to initiate a TCP connection back to the local machine,
which will likely be blocked by the firewall.  SSH to the
rescue!

local$ ssh -C -X 192.168.1.10 -l username
username@192.168.1.10's password:
remote$

The -C and -X switches enable compression and X forwarding,
respectively.  You'll notice the DISPLAY has already been
set for you

remote$ echo $DISPLAY
remote:10.0
remote$ xterm &

This method has the advantage of added security, and it is a
bit cleaner.

The third, and final method I'll talk about lets you run your
whole session from the Windows machine.  You'll need XDMCP
enabled (GNOME users can do this from the main GNOME login).
>From the Cygnus bash prompt,

$./XWin -query 192.168.1.10

will initiate a remote session to 192.168.1.10.  You'll get
the regular login window, just as if you were sitting at the
console.

With the addition of some simple software, you can run X
software remotely on your Windows-based machine.  Due to the
network transparency aspect of the X-Windows system, it's
just a matter of setting an environment variable.  With SSH's
compression, it's also quite efficient, and will work across
the Internet.

Happy New Year, and long live the Penguin!


Sean
mailto:swalberg@cramsession.com

===========================================================
2) Linux News
===========================================================

---------------
KDE Beta Ready
---------------
Many features have been added to the development KDE tree,
and the developers have released it as 3.0b1. Other than
bugs, nothing is supposed to change to the 3.0 release, so
if you're a KDE fan that likes to be on the leading edge,
get downloading!

http://www.kde.org/announcements/announce-3.0beta1.html

--------------------------------------
Red Hat Linux -- The Best of the Best
--------------------------------------
"Professional Server 7.1 gets one of our Best Of The Best
nods because of its overall excellence rather than for
superlative performance in any one area. It begins with a
solid software package that includes the operating system
along with utilities and applications for creating a variety
of task-specific servers, ranging from Web servers to
firewalls."

http://www.internetweek.com/enterprise/enterprise121701-1.htm

--------------------------
SUN Still Top UNIX Vendor
--------------------------
There is no mention of Linux, but in terms of commercial
Unix vendors, it would appear that SUN is on top. If you're
looking to pick up a second Unix flavour to round out your
Unix skills, Solaris is still a great choice.

http://www.sun.com/executives/marketreality/reality-20011219.html

------------------------------
Hurry Up and Get StarOffice 6
------------------------------
Anticipating the release of Star Office 6.0 by July '02,
SUN is cutting off the downloads of the beta by Dec 31. If
you haven't got it yet, I'd suggest doing so, as it's a huge
improvement on 5.2.

http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,5100706,00.html

===========================================================
3) Linux Resources
===========================================================

---------------------------
Sendmail Denying Relaying?
---------------------------
Later versions of sendmail really clamp down on relaying,
which is the method that spammers use to send their email.
However, if not set up properly, you might not be able to
use your own mail server! This document explains how to fix
that up, and selectively grant the relaying privileges.

http://www.sendmail.org/~ca/email/relayingdenied.html

----------------------------------
Automating Network Administration
----------------------------------
I'm a big fan of automating any work that I have to do. This
article is part one in a series that will eventually cover
many aspects of automation. Part One of this series explains
what the goals of automation are.

http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/onlamp/2001/12/20/sysadmin.html

---------------------
Calling the Elite...
---------------------
This recently-created board on Cramsession.com is devoted
to sharing those clever hacks you've created. Since Unix
lends itself to clever hacks, come and share your stories,
and listen to those of others.

http://boards.cramsession.com/boards/vbt.asp?b&40

-------------------------
Become Your Own Employer
-------------------------
Even though it looks like jobs are scarce, the problems faced
by business haven't gone away. Maybe venturing out on your own
is the way to go? This Cramsession Infocenter article looks at
one person's experiences with the self-employment way of life.

http://infocenter.cramsession.com/tutorials/tutorial.asp?t=S1TU1573


------------------------
Alternative Rescue Disk
------------------------
This crash recovery toolkit looks pretty handy. It was
developed out of frustration with the Red Hat rescue CD.
Some form of rescue disk is a necessity!

http://crashrecovery.org/

===========================================================
4) App o' the week
===========================================================
"WikkiTikkiTavi" is a Wiki Engine. A Wiki is a living
document that anyone can edit, and is smart enough to
eliminate most of the hassle associated with running an
intranet documentation site. The concept is probably a new
one, but the web site for the project is a Wiki itself, so
you can see how it goes.

http://tavi.sourceforge.net/

===========================================================
(C) 2001 BrainBuzz.com, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
===========================================================
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