Recently my desktop internet connection was closed by the department systems administrator because of suspicious frequent network accesses. Since I have been running SuSE for many years and never had virus problems I was quite surprised.
Anyway, in addition to the regular checks and tests they perform in these cases, I was asked whether there exists a system tool to verify the integrity of the system configuration. Basically they want to double check that all what is currently installed on my system, excluding my own applications, are regular SuSE updated packages rather than some malicious program, rootkit, and so on ...
Thank you in advance for your help.
Maura
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe(a)opensuse.org
For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help(a)opensuse.org
Summary: great and very stable, KDE4 is becoming more and more polished.
My BIG THXS to all the developers.
I will start with the only major problem I found
Problem: DNS
When I installed openseuse 11.1 the major problem I got was that I was
able to ping but not to be able to use firefox neither see any
repository. The problem was solved. It seems it came back again with
11.2 RC1. The temporary solution is to enter by hand the DNS's. This
occurs both in the liveCD and in the DVD x86-64.
I will not expand here. Bug 549447 - Able to ping, no DNS
1. The creation of a usb stick is very easy and reliable which was not
the case before. An improvement would be to be able to save changes into
a file, but now is like a CD whatever you change goes to the ram disk
and then is not retained. Some of the small distros devoted to usb stick
like puppy linux save the changes and then this file is read when you
boot the usb stick again. The speed is very fast comparing with the real
CD. I will use the usb stick for maintenance mainly system backups to
tape. Until now I use physical partition because it was simple to do
backups using puppy linux for maintenance, now I can use easily LVM and
backup and restore the whole system from the usb stick. GREAT.
2. Yast looks great. The partitioner works perfect, webpin is a new
addition. Well all is good.
3. Firefox integration is big plus for kde users.
4. It is hard to evaluate performance comparing it with a production
system like I use opensuse 11.1 but it feels faster and more responsive,
mainly faster.
5. ext4 seems to work very well, no problem since I use it. I crushed it
few time to evaluate recovery and everything has been fine. I have not
experimented with Btrfs yet.
6. KDE 4x is getting better and better. Still there is a problem with
the system tray widget. I filled bug report before, I'll do it again.
The widget fails in two ways a) the icons are represented by a blank
square (the only one ok is the mixer) this is a new problem b) if you
have opened another activity the system tray widget will show in all
activities and the graphics are distorted and you can no see the config
and it can not be resize or removed except only in the original
activity. BTW the system tray works very well on the panel. This bug
creates a problem if you want to remove the panel and replace its
functionality with widgets.
This is going to be a great release.
-=terry=-
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe(a)opensuse.org
For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help(a)opensuse.org
Doing my first baby steps with IPv6, I've just now come across the issue
of the default gateway. It's easy enough to set up manually or with
YaST, but apparently it's no longer necessary due to the "Neighbor
Discovery Protocol":"Router Solicitation"?
/Per
--
Per Jessen, Zürich (12.7°C)
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe(a)opensuse.org
For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help(a)opensuse.org
Listmates,
One thing with kde4 I haven't had time to sort out is the help system. In
KDE3, I could use it and it was helpful. In kde4, it's like the search index
just gives me formatted or hyperlinked grep output of the help directory. If I
search for a term, I get 30 copies of the same information, and a hand full of
htdig errors. Have I screwed up my help config somehow? This is on 11.0 with
kde4 factory installed.
For example, just a minute ago, I wanted to look up how to send mail to a
distribution list in kmail. Simple enough, I chose help from the kmail menu
and waited for the help to appear. It did, and I looked though the TOC and
didn't find anything. So I read the FAQ, still no help (I'm not saying I
didn't miss it). So I then just did a simple search putting "distribution
list" into the search box. (using kde4 default 'or' search). What I got back
was a mess:
(16k text)
http://www.3111skyline.com/download/openSUSE_bugs/kde4/data/kmail-help-or.t…
tar.bz2 of both kmail-help-or.txt, kmail-help-and.txt
(1.7k)
http://www.3111skyline.com/download/openSUSE_bugs/kde4/data/kde4-help-src-
results.tar.bz2
So I figured that the 'or' conditional for the search must have been too
broad and that an 'and' connector would narrow the search (and was proper to
begin with, but I wanted to see what the 'or' would return) I ran the search
with an 'and' and got back what looked like the same mess. So I saved the file
and ran diff on them. To my amazement, the two files were binary equal -- Huh?
That can't be! How does "distribution || list" return the same thing as
"distribution && list"? That shouldn't happen.
Anyway I have resolved that I must have something wildly misconfigured. Here
is the first bit of the results returned from my search for "distribution
list" in the kde4 help system. Do the results point to anything I could have
misconfigured? Can somebody else type "distribution list" into the help index
and see if they get anything else and let me know? Also let me know if it is
an openSuSE issue or a kde4 issue (I fairly sure it is kde4 if it isn't me)
Here is the help window I typed the search into:
http://www.3111skyline.com/download/openSUSE_bugs/kde4/screenshots/kdehelp.…
And here is the first bit of repeating stuff I got back (both times)
Search Results
Search Results for 'distribution list':
Start-Up
Installation and Setup
Chapter 30. Managing X.509 Certification (06/06/08)
7.2. The Linux File System (06/06/08)
Chapter 12. Help and Documentation (06/06/08)
A.2. GNU Free Documentation License (06/06/08)
B.2. GNU Free Documentation License (06/06/08)
19. GNU Free Documentation License (06/06/08)
19. GNU Free Documentation License (06/06/08)
B.2. GNU Free Documentation License (06/06/08)
2.2. LVM Configuration (06/06/08)
Chapter 20. LDAP—A Directory Service (06/06/08)
Basics
Chapter 30. Managing X.509 Certification (06/06/08)
7.2. The Linux File System (06/06/08)
Chapter 12. Help and Documentation (06/06/08)
A.2. GNU Free Documentation License (06/06/08)
B.2. GNU Free Documentation License (06/06/08)
19. GNU Free Documentation License (06/06/08)
19. GNU Free Documentation License (06/06/08)
B.2. GNU Free Documentation License (06/06/08)
2.2. LVM Configuration (06/06/08)
Chapter 20. LDAP—A Directory Service (06/06/08)
Mobility
Chapter 30. Managing X.509 Certification (06/06/08)
7.2. The Linux File System (06/06/08)
Chapter 12. Help and Documentation (06/06/08)
A.2. GNU Free Documentation License (06/06/08)
B.2. GNU Free Documentation License (06/06/08)
19. GNU Free Documentation License (06/06/08)
19. GNU Free Documentation License (06/06/08)
B.2. GNU Free Documentation License (06/06/08)
2.2. LVM Configuration (06/06/08)
<snip>
This same set of files repeats ~30 times, then the htdig errors. I have run
htdig and created the initial databases, so what could I have messed up?:
KDE User Guide
Introduction
Htdig error:
Unable to read configuration file
Managing Files and Resources
Htdig error:
Unable to read configuration file
GNOME User Guide
Introduction
Htdig error:
Unable to read configuration file
Internet Connectivity, Files and Resources
Htdig error:
Unable to read configuration file
<snip> ~10 times
Then more of the same. Finally, we get to another new htdig error that is
looking in my old kde3 config directory which seems strange:
openSUSE Documentation (en)
Htdig error:
Unable to read word database file
'/home/david/.kde/share/apps/khelpcenter/index//opensuse-manualen.words.db'
Did you run htdig?
Like I said, yes, I ran htdig, I ran it again just for good measure -- no
change.
Will, Dotan, kde4 folks, what's the trick? What does it look like I've done
to my help?
--
David C. Rankin, J.D.,P.E.
Rankin Law Firm, PLLC
510 Ochiltree Street
Nacogdoches, Texas 75961
Telephone: (936) 715-9333
Facsimile: (936) 715-9339
www.rankinlawfirm.com
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe(a)opensuse.org
For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help(a)opensuse.org
I'm running KDE 4.3.2 on my netbook.. works very well... except for
one little annoyance. The netbook has a scroll area on the right hand
side of the mouse touchpad, and it's VERY sensitive. If I happen to
have the mouse cursor on the desktop, and accidentally brush that spot
on the touchpad, the desktop spins wildly depending on how much of a
swipe I gave the scroll area.
I want to disable or remove the mouse scroll binding from the desktop
switching, but... after much searching and prodding, I cannot seem to
find any way to disable it. Anyone here know how to disconnect the
scroll wheel from desktop switching?
Switch on desktop edge is disabled (not the trigger in this case anyway)
C.
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe(a)opensuse.org
For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help(a)opensuse.org
Aaron Kulkis wrote:
> boot to runlevel 3 by either...
----
Thank-you, but I was obviously unclear. Sorry, I'll explain
in more detail...
I already run in mode 3, but in mode 3, the system is still using a
'frame buffer' rather than an SVGA text mode. The switch to frame
buffer seems to happen when grub starts and displays a graphical menu
rather than a text menu. From there, it's all downhill -- they system
boot using a framebuffer, I don't see the actually boot text coming
out to the console reliably or, right now, at all.
Normally, whether or not you see boot text or a snazzy boot screen,
depends on the setting of the verbose parameter to the kernel in the
boot file. But either way, snazzy screen or scrolled text in a
framed area -- it's a frame buffer and not actually using the
hardware's internal text modes.
So when the hardware switch modes into the framebuffer, information
is visually lost (though can be perused later in a log if you want
to go back and check every time but when looking for problems,
I prefer to see the actual text on the screen wizzes by ...
though it's getting harder to read these days, usually the
hardware scrollingis synced with the screen refresh and scrolls a
line at a time, vs. the frame buffer,I think, doing smooth scrolling
via bit-shifting (but not sure about that).
Anyway...I'd prefer it boot normally and not use the frame buffer
during boot. It's not reliable -- due to the lost output -- and,
right now, I don't get anyoutput at all -- I just get a blank screen f
from the time the boot starts till I get a login prompt -- I don't
even see services start.
Does this make my question more clear?
-linda
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe(a)opensuse.org
For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help(a)opensuse.org
I'd like to keep my console in native vga/ega mode -- its'
faster, I don't miss output, nor do I have long blank periods and
it's more reliable (right now I see NO output from when the
kernel starts to boot until the login prompt appears, so I
don't know if a kernel is coming up or has hung until the boot
process has finished).
So how do I disable the switch to using the frame buffer,
globally for all boots on my system?
Is there a simple switch I can set somewhere?
Or is this a problem (a 'bug'?)...? ;-)
thanks much!
-linda
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe(a)opensuse.org
For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help(a)opensuse.org
I recently obtained a Trust WB-6250X webcam with built-in microphone. It is a
UVC device and supported according to http://en.opensuse.org/HCL/Web_Cameras.
The camera is working fine, but I found as yet no way to get the mic working.
(mostly by trying every possible input setting in kmixer and switching between
mic1 and mic2)
Did any of you gurus find a way to wake this mic from the dead?
--
Jos van Kan registered Linux user #152704
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe(a)opensuse.org
For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help(a)opensuse.org
Will, List,
You are not going to believe this. What's with the kde developers? You try
and help and get the "kiss off" response. That's one of the big things that is
wrong with KDE4. This was files as a "Wish" and "Closed INVAL" -- Huh?? Go
figure...
https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=211288
--
David C. Rankin, J.D.,P.E.
Rankin Law Firm, PLLC
510 Ochiltree Street
Nacogdoches, Texas 75961
Telephone: (936) 715-9333
Facsimile: (936) 715-9339
www.rankinlawfirm.com
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe(a)opensuse.org
For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help(a)opensuse.org
I've gone through about a thousand google searches and I can't find out
how to make my system (11.1, KDE4.1 with KDE3 and Gnome installed) allow
a window manager selection at login. There is nothing on the login
screen besides users and password fields.
I know this works for some people.
Any ideas what I could be doing wrong?
TIA,
Jim
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe(a)opensuse.org
For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help(a)opensuse.org