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
                http://www.Cramsession.com
              September 26, 2002 - Issue #100
===========================================================

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

1) Sean's Notes

2) Linux News

        Slapper Continues to Spread
        OEone HomeBase DESKTOP
        SuSE eMail Server: Best of Show?
        PostNuke Developer's Site Launched

3) Linux Resources

        Poke The Penguin, But Not Too Much!
        Syncing a USB PDA to Linux
        Instant Messaging Clients Compared
        Red Hat: Slapper Help
        Logical Volume Management

4) App o' the Week


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

I might have mentioned it before, but most of my day to day work
is as a network engineer, working on switches, routers, and
firewalls. I've always been a strong advocate of using Linux
boxes as firewalls, but have you ever thought of using them as
a router?

As bandwidth demands increase, providers are moving toward metro
Ethernet access. Rather than point to point T1's, you can have
10Mbit over Ethernet. The hardware to do the serial T1 has
existed on the PC for a while, but most prefer to buy a
dedicated router rather than mess with the Voodoo that is leased
lines and Frame Relay.

So a Linux box can route packets, big deal! In a large network,
dynamic routing is used to keep routes straight, and to provide
redundant paths. Unix has always supported basic routing
protocols like RIP (Routing Information Protocol), but more
advanced protocols like OSPF and BGP are out of reach. Those who
have played on routers will also know the flexibility that goes
on top of that, such as redistribution between protocols and
various filters.

So, a while back, a couple of guys got together and decided to
add some serious routing protocols to Linux. The project is
called Zebra, and is located at http://www.zebra.org. The
interface is, for the most part, a clone of the Cisco IOS,
though there are some enhancements that will either make you
weep for joy, or with frustration.

I pulled down a rpm of Zebra 0.93a from RPMfind.net, upgrading
the version that came with Red Hat. Once installed, you can fire
up the zebra daemon (/etc/rc.d/init.d/zebra start). To access
the router, you either run "vtysh", or telnet to port 2601.

Here's where the quirkiness of zebra kicks in. Each routing
process (zebra, bgpd, ospfd, etc) listens on a different port.
So, to configure Zebra itself, you telnet to 2601. To configure
bgp, you use 2605. Each configuration is separate from each
other. vtysh shows it all, but you can't save your changes from
within it.

That aside, people familiar with the Cisco IOS will be right at
home. Here's the routing table from zebra:

> show ip route
Codes: K - kernel route, C - connected, S - static, R - RIP,
       O - OSPF,  B - BGP, > - selected route, * - FIB route

K>* 0.0.0.0/0 via 192.168.1.1, eth0
C>* 10.0.0.0/8 is directly connected, eth1
C>* 127.0.0.0/8 is directly connected, lo
B>* 172.16.0.0/16 [20/0] via 10.0.0.2, eth1, 00:05:07
B   192.168.0.0/24 [20/0] via 10.0.0.2, eth1, 00:05:07
K>* 192.168.0.0/24 via 10.0.0.2, eth1
C>* 192.168.1.0/24 is directly connected, eth0
K>* 192.168.3.0/24 via 10.0.0.2, eth1

With Zebra, any route learned by a routing protocol is propagated
to the kernel. So, from the command line, my routing table looks
like:

$ netstat -rn
Kernel IP routing table
Destination     Gateway         Genmask         Iface
10.0.0.0        0.0.0.0         255.255.255.0   eth1
172.16.0.0	10.0.0.2	255.255.0.0	eth1
192.168.3.0     10.0.0.2        255.255.255.0   eth1
192.168.1.0     0.0.0.0         255.255.255.0   eth0
192.168.0.0     10.0.0.2        255.255.255.0   eth1
192.168.9.0     0.0.0.0         255.255.255.0   vmnet8
10.0.0.0        0.0.0.0         255.0.0.0       eth1
127.0.0.0       0.0.0.0         255.0.0.0       lo
0.0.0.0         192.168.1.1     0.0.0.0         eth0

The difference is that here, you can't see where you learned
the route from. However the fact remains, your box can interact
with other routers.

Those looking to augment their network test labs, or gain some
experience on Cisco devices without owning any, will also find
Zebra to be useful. The command syntax is almost directly ripped
from IOS, except that addresses are generally entered x.x.x.x/y
instead of x.x.x.x y.y.y.y. Subtle difference, but quicker for
those that think in CIDR.

Unfortunately Zebra's documentation is sparse, so you should be
familiar with routing protocols in general before starting in.

Here's an interesting link showing Zebra as part of a global
load balancing network. An interesting project, if you ask me:

http://www.supersparrow.org/ss-0.0.0/cf/pop_x/gnu_zebra.sh.html

The functionality of Linux as a router is coming close to the
appliance-based routers such as those that Cisco sells. Quality
of Service, routing protocols, and filtering are all available.
Depending on your needs, such as simple routing between Ethernet
interfaces, the cost of a Linux box might be a lot cheaper than
a Cisco router. Mind you, the performance peaks might not be as
high, but if we're only talking about 10Mbit interfaces, it's
not an issue.


Long live the Penguin,

Sean
mailto:swalberg@cramsession.com


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

----------------------------
Slapper Continues to Spread
----------------------------

The Slapper worm has been making its rounds by exploiting the
SSL flaws in Apache. It's on its third variant already, and
seems to be causing a great deal of havoc.

http://www.vnunet.com/News/1135304


-----------------------
OEone HomeBase DESKTOP
-----------------------

In an effort similar to Ximian's, OEone has come up with a Linux
desktop. They're trying to bundle it with a sort of Internet
backup service, prices seem fairly reasonable. Just like Ximian,
the install can be done over the Internet, so it might be worth
taking a look. Here's a review from Linuxorbit.

http://www.linuxorbit.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=Reviews&file=
index&req=showcontent&id


---------------------------------
SuSE eMail Server: Best of Show?
---------------------------------

"Pop quiz: what messaging server has group calendaring,
including free/busy notifications, group contacts, POP3 and
IMAP, built-in encryption, Web mail, low system requirements,
high scalability, reasonable cost, and non-restrictive
licensing? Answer: SuSE Linux eMail Server 3.1."

http://networking.earthweb.com/netos/article/0,,12083_1466561,00.ht
ml


-----------------------------------
PostNuke Developer's Site Launched
-----------------------------------

PostNuke is a more serious offshoot of PHPNuke, a Content
Management System written in PHP. They've just announced a
developer's site devoted to extending this fantastic piece of
software.

http://developers.postnuke.com/


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

------------------------------------
Poke The Penguin, But Not Too Much!
------------------------------------

Here's a fun little Flash program that lets you poke a Penguin.
Do you think he'll put up with it though? Try and see what
happens when you make a penguin angry!

http://www2.gamesville.lycos.com/html_poke/poke_penguin.htm


---------------------------
Syncing a USB PDA to Linux
---------------------------

Follow a sysadmin as he sets up his Visor to back up to his
Linux box over USB!

http://www.linuxplanet.com/linuxplanet/tutorials/4445/1/


-----------------------------------
Instant Messaging Clients Compared
-----------------------------------

"Somehow, some way, people who are new to Linux have gotten the
idea that Linux has limited IM choices. Since the Unix family
was the first to have popular IM clients (with "talk" leading
the way), that's more than a little silly. It is true that if
you want the latest AOL Instant Messenger (AIM) features or MSN
Messenger you're out of luck, but there are many other clients
to choose from, and some will let you talk to your buddies
whether they're on AIM, MSN, or even Yahoo!."

http://freshmeat.net/articles/view/563/


----------------------
Red Hat: Slapper Help
----------------------
Here's a document from Red Hat that specifically talks about
the Slapper worm. Turns out the fix has been available since
the end of July (up2date took care of my web server).

http://www.redhat.com/support/alerts/linux_slapper_worm.html


--------------------------
Logical Volume Management
--------------------------

"With LVM, you can combine partitions or drives into one large
storage pool, called a volume group, and from there create
logical volumes for filesystems." LVM is cool stuff, allowing
on-the-fly disk management.

http://www.linuxjournal.com/article.php?sidY57


===============================================================
4) App o' the Week
===============================================================

PHPMyAdmin is a great web-based administration tool for MySQL
databases. It's currently popular with hosting sites, to make it
easier for users to create tables and manage their database.

http://www.phpmyadmin.net/


===============================================================
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===============================================================
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