I've been running 10.2 for over 3 hours now, installed without a hitch on my Dell laptop. The whole set up just feels right, it's quicker than 10.1 too. Even Zen is playing ball too. A big thank you to all involved who help create this awesome distro. Matthew -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
On Thursday 07 December 2006 11:06, Matthew Stringer wrote:
I've been running 10.2 for over 3 hours now, installed without a hitch on my Dell laptop.
Wow. You've got a fast pipe, or something. I started retrieving the DVD torrent just under three hours ago and I'm now at the 58% mark, which is actually much faster than the torrents have proceeded for the alpha5 torrent and the beta1 through RC1 delta ISOs.
The whole set up just feels right, it's quicker than 10.1 too.
Even Zen is playing ball too.
Careful! Don't jinx it!!
A big thank you to all involved who help create this awesome distro.
Matthew
Randall Schulz -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
On Thursday 07 December 2006 21:13, Randall R Schulz wrote:
Even Zen is playing ball too.
Careful! Don't jinx it!!
For an hour now it's been trying to get past 'preparing software' on this RC1 box. You may wish to call it many things, but fast and efficient is not the right word. But it's getting better. Improvement over 10.1 is .. HUGE. -- // Janne -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
On Thursday 07 December 2006 11:06, Matthew Stringer wrote: I've been running 10.2 for over 3 hours now, installed without a hitch on my Dell laptop.
Wow. You've got a fast pipe, or something. I started retrieving the DVD torrent just under three hours ago and I'm now at the 58% mark, which is actually much faster than the torrents have proceeded for the alpha5 torrent and the beta1 through RC1 delta ISOs.
Randall Schulz
It does help working for an ISP, as soon as it appeared on ftp.mirrorservice.org I started the download, I get nearly 3MB/s from there! BitTorrent would have taken hours. My laptop is only a 1.4GHz P4 really pleased with it so far. Matthew -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
On Thursday 07 December 2006 13:09, Matthew Stringer wrote:
On Thursday 07 December 2006 11:06, Matthew Stringer wrote: I've been running 10.2 for over 3 hours now, installed without a hitch on my Dell laptop.
Wow. You've got a fast pipe, or something. I started retrieving the DVD torrent just under three hours ago and I'm now at the 58% mark, which is actually much faster than the torrents have proceeded for the alpha5 torrent and the beta1 through RC1 delta ISOs.
Randall Schulz
It does help working for an ISP, as soon as it appeared on ftp.mirrorservice.org I started the download, I get nearly 3MB/s from there!
BitTorrent would have taken hours.
I have a 6000 Mb inbound DSL line. I just finished burning and verifying the disc. Once I'm back from errands, I'm going to start the installation.
My laptop is only a 1.4GHz P4 really pleased with it so far.
My target is new, 3GHz Core 2 Duo w/ 1067 MHz FSB. Woo-Hoo!! I've been running pre-release versions since alpha5. I'm going to do a clean install of the GM, of course. I'm still trying to decide which file system to use for the root partition.
Matthew
RRS -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
On Thursday 07 December 2006 22:24, Randall R Schulz wrote:
My target is new, 3GHz Core 2 Duo w/ 1067 MHz FSB. Woo-Hoo!!
Oooh, how I hate you now! :-)
RRS
/me hopes to get a new box for X-Mas! :-) -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
Hi everybody, I have two suse 10.1 servers and the target server, is running vsftp, ports 20,21 are open from the firewall, I can ftp into from my desktop computer using command line ftp, but from the other server which also has port 20,21 open, I can login, but if I try to run any command as simple as a dir or ls, I get the following: 227 Entering Passive Mode (129,15,99,44,197,69) 200 PORT command successful. Consider using PASV. 425 Failed to establish connection. If I try the same from my desktop is run fine, I have tried using passive off/on, epsv on/off and same results all the time. Here are my vsftp.conf parameters: write_enable=YES dirmessage_enable=YES ftpd_banner="Welcome to THE ULFULS FTP service." local_enable=YES local_umask=022 chroot_local_user=YES local_max_rate=9200 anonymous_enable=NO anon_world_readable_only=NO anon_upload_enable=YES anon_umask=022 anon_mkdir_write_enable=YES anon_other_write_enable=NO anon_max_rate=9200 syslog_enable=YES log_ftp_protocol=NO xferlog_enable=YES vsftpd_log_file=/var/log/vsftpd.log xferlog_file=/var/log/xferlog connect_from_port_20=YES pasv_enable=YES pam_service_name=vsftpd listen=YES -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
Jose wrote:
Hi everybody,
I have two suse 10.1 servers and the target server, is running vsftp, ports 20,21 are open from the firewall, I can ftp into from my desktop computer using command line ftp, but from the other server which also has port 20,21 open, I can login, but if I try to run any command as simple as a dir or ls, I get the following:
227 Entering Passive Mode (129,15,99,44,197,69) 200 PORT command successful. Consider using PASV. 425 Failed to establish connection.
I suspect that your firewall is not ftp aware. Please check that the neccessary iptables modules ip_conntrack_ftp (ip_nat_ftp if you use NAT), ip_conntrack are loaded. To check disable your firewall and try to ftp. If it works the firewall must be configured to track ftp connections. Sandy -- List replies only please! Please address PMs to: news-reply2 (@) japantest (.) homelinux (.) com -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
Sandy Drobic wrote:
Jose wrote:
Hi everybody,
I have two suse 10.1 servers and the target server, is running vsftp, ports 20,21 are open from the firewall, I can ftp into from my desktop computer using command line ftp, but from the other server which also has port 20,21 open, I can login, but if I try to run any command as simple as a dir or ls, I get the following:
227 Entering Passive Mode (129,15,99,44,197,69) 200 PORT command successful. Consider using PASV. 425 Failed to establish connection.
I suspect that your firewall is not ftp aware. Please check that the neccessary iptables modules ip_conntrack_ftp (ip_nat_ftp if you use NAT), ip_conntrack are loaded.
To check disable your firewall and try to ftp. If it works the firewall must be configured to track ftp connections.
Sandy Hi Sandy,
Thanks for your reply, I tried it turning off the firewall first on the tagret server, same problem, then I turned off firewall on the client server, same problem, how can I check I have those modules loaded? Thanks -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
Jose wrote:
Sandy Drobic wrote:
Jose wrote:
Hi everybody,
I have two suse 10.1 servers and the target server, is running vsftp, ports 20,21 are open from the firewall, I can ftp into from my desktop computer using command line ftp, but from the other server which also has port 20,21 open, I can login, but if I try to run any command as simple as a dir or ls, I get the following:
227 Entering Passive Mode (129,15,99,44,197,69) 200 PORT command successful. Consider using PASV. 425 Failed to establish connection.
I suspect that your firewall is not ftp aware. Please check that the neccessary iptables modules ip_conntrack_ftp (ip_nat_ftp if you use NAT), ip_conntrack are loaded.
To check disable your firewall and try to ftp. If it works the firewall must be configured to track ftp connections.
I tried it turning off the firewall first on the tagret server, same problem, then I turned off firewall on the client server, same problem, how can I check I have those modules loaded?
lsmod | grep ftp ip_nat_ftp 2448 0 (unused) ip_conntrack_ftp 3568 1 iptable_nat 15790 8 [ipt_MASQUERADE ip_nat_quake3 ip_nat_proto_gre ip_nat_pptp ip_nat_mms ip_nat_irc ip_nat_h323 ip_nat_ftp] ip_conntrack 18896 7 [ipt_MASQUERADE ipt_state ip_nat_quake3 ip_conntrack_quake3 ip_nat_pptp ip_conntrack_pptp ip_conntrack_proto_gre ip_nat_mms ip_conntrack_mms ip_nat_irc ip_conntrack_irc ip_nat_h323 ip_conntrack_h323 ip_nat_ftp ip_conntrack_ftp iptable_nat] Can you use passive ftp on the server itself? Sandy -- List replies only please! Please address PMs to: news-reply2 (@) japantest (.) homelinux (.) com -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
Sandy Drobic wrote:
Jose wrote:
Sandy Drobic wrote:
Jose wrote:
Hi everybody,
I have two suse 10.1 servers and the target server, is running vsftp, ports 20,21 are open from the firewall, I can ftp into from my desktop computer using command line ftp, but from the other server which also has port 20,21 open, I can login, but if I try to run any command as simple as a dir or ls, I get the following:
227 Entering Passive Mode (129,15,99,44,197,69) 200 PORT command successful. Consider using PASV. 425 Failed to establish connection.
I suspect that your firewall is not ftp aware. Please check that the neccessary iptables modules ip_conntrack_ftp (ip_nat_ftp if you use NAT), ip_conntrack are loaded.
To check disable your firewall and try to ftp. If it works the firewall must be configured to track ftp connections.
I tried it turning off the firewall first on the tagret server, same problem, then I turned off firewall on the client server, same problem, how can I check I have those modules loaded?
lsmod | grep ftp
ip_nat_ftp 2448 0 (unused) ip_conntrack_ftp 3568 1 iptable_nat 15790 8 [ipt_MASQUERADE ip_nat_quake3 ip_nat_proto_gre ip_nat_pptp ip_nat_mms ip_nat_irc ip_nat_h323 ip_nat_ftp] ip_conntrack 18896 7 [ipt_MASQUERADE ipt_state ip_nat_quake3 ip_conntrack_quake3 ip_nat_pptp ip_conntrack_pptp ip_conntrack_proto_gre ip_nat_mms ip_conntrack_mms ip_nat_irc ip_conntrack_irc ip_nat_h323 ip_conntrack_h323 ip_nat_ftp ip_conntrack_ftp iptable_nat]
Can you use passive ftp on the server itself?
Sandy Hi Sandy,
No, after I sent las t email, I tried "passive" just after login to the server (turns off passive), and then "epsv" and then it works, I have the firewall of the target server on, and client's firewall is off, and I am able to download the files I need, but I don't think this is a good solution, the target server is actually a Suse10.0 and client is a Suse10.1, don't know if that would be part of the problem. Tried your command, nothing at all. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
Jose wrote:
Can you use passive ftp on the server itself?
No, after I sent las t email, I tried "passive" just after login to the server (turns off passive), and then "epsv" and then it works, I have the firewall of the target server on, and client's firewall is off, and I am able to download the files I need, but I don't think this is a good solution, the target server is actually a Suse10.0 and client is a Suse10.1, don't know if that would be part of the problem.
Hm, I am a bit baffled. What does your vsftpd.conf look like without comments? This is my configuration (on Suse 9.2): # egrep -v "^#" /etc/vsftpd.conf write_enable=YES dirmessage_enable=YES ftpd_banner="Welcome to japantest.homelinux.com" local_enable=YES local_umask=022 chroot_local_user=YES chroot_list_enable=YES chroot_list_file=/etc/vsftpd.chroot_list local_max_rate=40200 userlist_enable=YES userlist_deny=NO userlist_file=/etc/vsftpd_userlist user_config_dir=/etc/vsftpd_user_conf anonymous_enable=NO anon_world_readable_only=YES syslog_enable=YES log_ftp_protocol=YES xferlog_enable=YES vsftpd_log_file=/var/log/vsftpd.log xferlog_std_format=YES session_support=YES setproctitle_enable=YES connect_from_port_20=YES idle_session_timeout=600 pam_service_name=vsftpd You probably do not want the excessive logging that I enabled. I also do not have anonymous ftp and only allow explicitely listed users in /etc/vsftpd_userlist to log in at all. Sandy -- List replies only please! Please address PMs to: news-reply2 (@) japantest (.) homelinux (.) com -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
Sandy Drobic wrote:
Jose wrote:
Can you use passive ftp on the server itself?
No, after I sent las t email, I tried "passive" just after login to the server (turns off passive), and then "epsv" and then it works, I have the firewall of the target server on, and client's firewall is off, and I am able to download the files I need, but I don't think this is a good solution, the target server is actually a Suse10.0 and client is a Suse10.1, don't know if that would be part of the problem.
Hm, I am a bit baffled. What does your vsftpd.conf look like without comments?
This is my configuration (on Suse 9.2):
# egrep -v "^#" /etc/vsftpd.conf write_enable=YES dirmessage_enable=YES ftpd_banner="Welcome to japantest.homelinux.com" local_enable=YES local_umask=022 chroot_local_user=YES chroot_list_enable=YES chroot_list_file=/etc/vsftpd.chroot_list local_max_rate=40200 userlist_enable=YES userlist_deny=NO userlist_file=/etc/vsftpd_userlist user_config_dir=/etc/vsftpd_user_conf anonymous_enable=NO anon_world_readable_only=YES syslog_enable=YES log_ftp_protocol=YES xferlog_enable=YES vsftpd_log_file=/var/log/vsftpd.log xferlog_std_format=YES session_support=YES setproctitle_enable=YES connect_from_port_20=YES idle_session_timeout=600 pam_service_name=vsftpd
You probably do not want the excessive logging that I enabled. I also do not have anonymous ftp and only allow explicitely listed users in /etc/vsftpd_userlist to log in at all.
Sandy Sorry for the late repy, I got stuck with another project.
write_enable=YES dirmessage_enable=YES local_umask=022 chroot_local_user=NO #chroot_list_enable=YES #chroot_list_file=/etc/vsftpd.chroot_list local_max_rate=0 anonymous_enable=NO anon_world_readable_only=NO anon_upload_enable=YES anon_umask=022 anon_mkdir_write_enable=YES anon_other_write_enable=NO #chown_uploads=YES #chown_username=whoever anon_max_rate=0 syslog_enable=YES log_ftp_protocol=NO xferlog_enable=YES vsftpd_log_file=/var/log/vsftpd.log #xferlog_std_format=YES xferlog_file=/var/log/xferlog #dual_log_enable=YES #setproctitle_enable=YES connect_from_port_20=YES #idle_session_timeout=600 #data_connection_timeout=120 #async_abor_enable=YES #ascii_upload_enable=YES #ascii_download_enable=YES pasv_enable=YES pam_service_name=vsftpd local_root=/ listen=YES -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
Sandy Drobic wrote:
Jose wrote:
Can you use passive ftp on the server itself?
No, after I sent las t email, I tried "passive" just after login to the server (turns off passive), and then "epsv" and then it works, I have the firewall of the target server on, and client's firewall is off, and I am able to download the files I need, but I don't think this is a good solution, the target server is actually a Suse10.0 and client is a Suse10.1, don't know if that would be part of the problem.
Hm, I am a bit baffled. What does your vsftpd.conf look like without comments?
This is my configuration (on Suse 9.2):
# egrep -v "^#" /etc/vsftpd.conf write_enable=YES dirmessage_enable=YES ftpd_banner="Welcome to japantest.homelinux.com" local_enable=YES local_umask=022 chroot_local_user=YES chroot_list_enable=YES chroot_list_file=/etc/vsftpd.chroot_list local_max_rate=40200 userlist_enable=YES userlist_deny=NO userlist_file=/etc/vsftpd_userlist user_config_dir=/etc/vsftpd_user_conf anonymous_enable=NO anon_world_readable_only=YES syslog_enable=YES log_ftp_protocol=YES xferlog_enable=YES vsftpd_log_file=/var/log/vsftpd.log xferlog_std_format=YES session_support=YES setproctitle_enable=YES connect_from_port_20=YES idle_session_timeout=600 pam_service_name=vsftpd
You probably do not want the excessive logging that I enabled. I also do not have anonymous ftp and only allow explicitely listed users in /etc/vsftpd_userlist to log in at all.
Sandy Sorry for the late reply, I got stuck with another project.
write_enable=YES dirmessage_enable=YES local_umask=022 chroot_local_user=NO #chroot_list_enable=YES #chroot_list_file=/etc/vsftpd.chroot_list local_max_rate=0 anonymous_enable=NO anon_world_readable_only=NO anon_upload_enable=YES anon_umask=022 anon_mkdir_write_enable=YES anon_other_write_enable=NO #chown_uploads=YES #chown_username=whoever anon_max_rate=0 syslog_enable=YES log_ftp_protocol=NO xferlog_enable=YES vsftpd_log_file=/var/log/vsftpd.log #xferlog_std_format=YES xferlog_file=/var/log/xferlog #dual_log_enable=YES #setproctitle_enable=YES connect_from_port_20=YES #idle_session_timeout=600 #data_connection_timeout=120 #async_abor_enable=YES #ascii_upload_enable=YES #ascii_download_enable=YES pasv_enable=YES pam_service_name=vsftpd local_root=/ listen=YES -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
Even Zen is playing ball too.
What a profound philosophical statement... Does installing Fedora affect one's karma I wonder. Does using Ubuntu make one more likely to be accepted into Valhalla? :) -- James Ogley james@usr-local-bin.org http://usr-local-bin.org GNOME for openSUSE: http://repos.opensuse.org/GNOME:/ Help end poverty: http://oxfam.org.uk/in -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
On Thu December 7 2006 2:06 pm, Matthew Stringer scratched these words onto a coconut shell, hoping for an answer:
I've been running 10.2 for over 3 hours now, installed without a hitch on my Dell laptop.
The whole set up just feels right, it's quicker than 10.1 too.
Even Zen is playing ball too.
A big thank you to all involved who help create this awesome distro.
Matthew yup, I think we have to admit or proclaim this is a nearly perfect version. (10.2) The reports seem to be running overwhelmingly positive, w/ minor irritating things. Often, it seems the problems are idiosyncratic hardware, or just not yet very well supported hardware ( ATI vid cards seem to be top of the list for not being 100% easy to set up, but I don't think anyone has had so much trouble they didn't get up and running. )
Not too many whines either. Well, other than it takes an eternity to download the dvds. ( I'm trying to get the 386 version now for the "normal" PCs about the place.) My few problems have not been due to the Suse install but to my ever loved/hated isp.. and the network which will just quit on every box in the joint, in the middle of doing nothing at all..Kweather and any other item that checks online occasionally will suddenly begin to complain the "network is unreachable." -- j Santa's helpers are subordinate clauses. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
participants (8)
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James Ogley
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Janne Karhunen
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jfweber@gilweber.com
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Jose
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Matthew Stringer
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Randall R Schulz
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Sandy Drobic
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Stelian Iancu