From kb1czq at sonic.net Mon Aug 23 16:02:27 1999
From: kb1czq at sonic.net (Brad Cox)
Date: Sun Feb 20 16:52:46 2005
Subject: [GLoraditch@ci.santa-rosa.ca.us: Linux Comic]
Message-ID: <19990823160227.C29469@sonic.net>
http://comics.com/universal/foxtrot/ab.html
Brad Cox
--
The North Bay Linux Users' Group
http://www.nblug.org
webmaster@nblug.org
From mrp at sonic.net Fri Aug 20 12:02:01 1999
From: mrp at sonic.net (Mitchell Patenaude)
Date: Sun Feb 20 16:52:46 2005
Subject: Firewall & HTTP>FTP question
In-Reply-To: <37BD9873BC.8489LIST@smtp.mindling.com>; from Sebastian Mindling on Fri, Aug 20, 1999 at 11:03:31AM -0700
References: <37BD9873BC.8489LIST@smtp.mindling.com>
Message-ID: <19990820120201.A29643@sonic.net>
On Fri, Aug 20, 1999 at 11:03:31AM -0700, Sebastian Mindling wrote:
> I'm serving http and ftp thru a router with pretty restrictive packet
> filtering enabled (basically just ports 80 and 21 allowed). From outside
> this firewall, users can access both the website and the ftp server
> independently, but if I put a link on the website pointing to our ftp
> server, the link does not work. If you put the link's URL into the
> location field of the browser manually, it works just fine.
>
> Does anyone know what port(s) the web browser is trying to open up when
> it follows such a link? Or what else this could be?
Some more information that might be useful:
What does the browser to when you click the link?
Have you tried this with other links?
But, having asked those questions, I'm pretty sure that the answer has
nothing to do with a firewall, but is most likely an HTML issue.
(otherwise, why would pasting in the URL work? It doesn't sound like
a network error.) Check to see if the tag is munged up.
Try putting the URL in double quotes, etc.
Probably a better forum is sonic.web or sonic.programmer newsgroups.
-- Mitch
From list at mindling.com Fri Aug 20 11:03:31 1999
From: list at mindling.com (Sebastian Mindling)
Date: Sun Feb 20 16:52:46 2005
Subject: Firewall & HTTP>FTP question
Message-ID: <37BD9873BC.8489LIST@smtp.mindling.com>
This may not be the right forum, but I thought I'd pick your collective
brains anyway....
I'm serving http and ftp thru a router with pretty restrictive packet
filtering enabled (basically just ports 80 and 21 allowed). From outside
this firewall, users can access both the website and the ftp server
independently, but if I put a link on the website pointing to our ftp
server, the link does not work. If you put the link's URL into the
location field of the browser manually, it works just fine.
Does anyone know what port(s) the web browser is trying to open up when
it follows such a link? Or what else this could be?
_________________________________________________________
Sebastian Mindling
From eric at eisenhart.com Tue Aug 10 22:30:17 1999
From: eric at eisenhart.com (Eric Eisenhart)
Date: Sun Feb 20 16:52:46 2005
Subject: Free AFS implementation for Linux
Message-ID: <19990810223017.A20209@eisenhart.com>
At the meeting today the main topic was the new Kernel NFS implementation,
but talk of a few other filesystems came up. AFS and CODA both came up as
interesting alternatives to NFS.
The free implemtation of AFS that works under Linux is called Arla. The
main concentration of arla is a good client implentation, but there's a
server and other AFS tools as well. Here are some URLs for it:
http://freshmeat.net/appindex/1998/08/19/903504756.html
http://www.stacken.kth.se/projekt/arla/
And for RPMS: http://light-brigade.mit.edu/projects/athena/
CODA is originally based on AFS2, but has added more things in. It can be
found at:
http://freshmeat.net/appindex/1998/02/03/886521560.html
http://www.coda.cs.cmu.edu/
And, of course, Alan's page on Kernel NFS daemon is at
http://www.csua.berkeley.edu/~gam3/knfsd/
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From luvisi at andru.sonoma.edu Mon Aug 2 11:49:23 1999
From: luvisi at andru.sonoma.edu (luvisi@andru.sonoma.edu)
Date: Sun Feb 20 16:52:46 2005
Subject: [gnu.announce,comp.os.linux.misc] Bay Area GNU Picnic, August 14 at Lake Temescal
Message-ID:
I can't make this... but I thought others might be interested.
andru
------- Start of forwarded message -------
From: Richard Stallman
Newsgroups: gnu.announce,comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: Bay Area GNU Picnic, August 14 at Lake Temescal
Date: Fri, 30 Jul 1999 18:06:55 -0600 (MDT)
Organization: Massachvsetts Institvte of Technology
Message-ID:
To: info-gnu@gnu.org
[ Please repost this wherever you think is appropriate! ]
Bay Area GNU Picnic, August 14 at Lake Temescal (Oakland)
Who: People who like or work on the GNU system. Perhaps you.
What: A GNU picnic on the beach. With grill, music, and filking.
When: Saturday August 14 from noon to 5pm
Where: Lake Temescal. More precisely, ...
Lake Temescal is off Broadway Terrace in Oakland. Admission is charged
daily, at $2.50 for adults, and $1.50 for children from ages 1-15.
If driving, Take Hwy 24 from Oakland and take the Broadway exit. Cross
Broadway and continue straight on the frontage road, as if going onto Hwy
13. Lake Temescal Regional Park is on the right, and there is ample
signage.
There are two buses that go by Lake Temescal from downtown Oakland:
Bus 59 (catch it at 20th & Broadway, near the 19th St. BART station, or on
Oak St. outside the Lake Merritt BART station);
64 (catch it in front of the Rockridge BART station);
Ask the driver where to get off. It is approximately a half-mile walk into
the park from either bus stop.
Why: To have fun and get to know other people who use and work on GNU.
Smoking Policy: no smoking near the GNU Picnic site.
Software Policy: GPL
Please bring:
* Musical instruments. (ie. drums, flutes, and anything that makes a noise)
* Frisbies, kites, and other suitable toys.
* CDs and tapes to play.
* Blankets and towels for swimming.
* Food. Bring something you'd like to grill. Also bring another item
according to your last name. If your last name starts with:
- A through H, bring two quarts of a non-alcoholic beverage.
- I through P, bring cooked veggies or salad.
- Q through Z, bring dessert.
- a character from a foreign character set, bring some exotic
foreign edible.
- anything else, bring a dragon to grill the food. (If no one
brings a dragon, we'll use charcoal.)
Note: tabouli containing more cracked wheat than parsley is strictly
forbidden!
------- End of forwarded message -------
--
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| Programmer/Analyst | Library Resources Online |
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