• General Linux Chat and Small Questions
    3,153 replies, posted
I'm trying to setup authentication with squid so I don't re live the vladh incident but last time I did it, I did it while using apache. Is it possible to setup squid authentication through squid when using nginx? Here are the errors I'm getting... And htpasswd only comes with apache2 which I don't have so I just used perl to encrypt the a password and made a htpasswd file that looks like this: <username>:as;ldkjaiencryptedpassword And my errors look like this: [code]Reloading Squid configuration files. 2010/09/17 13:50:06| Invalid Proxy Auth ACL 'acl ncsa_users proxy_auth REQUIRED' because no authentication schemes are fully configured. FATAL: Bungled squid.conf line 26: acl ncsa_users proxy_auth REQUIRED Squid Cache (Version 2.7.STABLE3): Terminated abnormally. done. [/code] And I was just following [URL="http://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/linux-unix-squid-proxy-server-authentication.html"]this.[/URL]
[QUOTE=ROBO_DONUT;24881964]Nope. Very few Gentoo users believe it does. It's really part of a [url=http://funroll-loops.info/]running joke[/url]. Regardless, Gentoo can be educational ("I didn't even know it was possible for a Linux system to bork like that!"), it gets package updates earlier than most other distros (probably even Arch), from-source allows it to support many different architectures, and the flexible nature of its install process makes it easy to install Gentoo when other distros would be impractical (such as over an ssh session or cross-compiling for an embedded device). But mostly, it's just fun.[/QUOTE] yeah I wouldn't run gentoo as my main OS under any circumstances. it's more a learning experience than a usable operating system.
[QUOTE=ButtsexV2;24884710]yeah I wouldn't run gentoo as my main OS under any circumstances. it's more a learning experience than a usable operating system.[/QUOTE] I take that as a challenge! (In a year or so)
[QUOTE=birkett;24876020]Overheating? Was it a hardware or software invoked shutdown?[/QUOTE] Nah, i just shut it down beceause i'll retry later. That and reinstallation.
[QUOTE=ButtsexV2;24884710]yeah I wouldn't run gentoo as my main OS under any circumstances. it's more a learning experience than a usable operating system.[/QUOTE] what are you talking about? I use gentoo as my main OS.
[QUOTE=snuwoods;24889247]what are you talking about? I use gentoo as my main OS.[/QUOTE] I prefer binary distributions. [editline]01:36AM[/editline] gonna start using tomsrtbt as my main os because it's totally usable for day-to-day computing
Ugh, need to install Corona(7 year old library) on CentOs 5 :(. Not sure what to do about all these dependencies. Already stuck at libgif.
[QUOTE=snuwoods;24889247]what are you talking about? I use gentoo as my main OS.[/QUOTE] I ran gentoo as my main OS for years. I really appreciate the experience it gave me, but seriously [i]there is no greater time-sink in the world[/i]. Use if you have fun using it. That's what I did. It doesn't make you any more productive, though.
[QUOTE=ROBO_DONUT;24891532][i]there is no greater time-sink in the world[/i].[/QUOTE] pretty much this
Arch is where you build your own distro out of lego. Gentoo is where you build your own distro out of lego that you have to have to make. It's the reason why geeks still have a cup of coffee near their desk when installing an OS.
similarly, sourcemage is building your own distro out of mega blocks that you have to make
I burnt an Ubuntu CD today, just to see what it's like, because I'm planning on installing it on a laptop. From the LiveCD session, it seems kind of... basic, but then again it's LiveCD and you can't do jack shit on there. Anyone want to suggest a different distro to me before I start partitioning my drive tomorrow?
[QUOTE=wlzshroom;24913213]I burnt an Ubuntu CD today, just to see what it's like, because I'm planning on installing it on a laptop. From the LiveCD session, it seems kind of... basic, but then again it's LiveCD and you can't do jack shit on there. Anyone want to suggest a different distro to me before I start partitioning my drive tomorrow?[/QUOTE] There's no difference between a live cd and the real deal except the fact that it slower. I'm assuming, because It's limited to the speeds of the cd and the limited virtual disk space, but I'm not really sure.
[QUOTE=Maccabee;24913444]There's no difference between a live cd and the real deal except the fact that it slower. I'm assuming, because It's limited to the speeds of the cd and the limited virtual disk space, but I'm not really sure.[/QUOTE] LiveCDs also tend to blow up after 24 hours of use because they keep every change you make to the virtual filesystem in RAM.
I got Ubuntu on my desktop. Suprisingly easy to use and install.. though I'm probably doing it wrong. Also: :iia:
Did you install it from within windows, or did you installing by booting in the liveCD and choosing the install option? If you installed it within windows, Yes you are doing it wrong.
[QUOTE=Boris-B;24926955]Did you install it from within windows, or did you installing by booting in the liveCD and choosing the install option? If you installed it within windows, Yes you are doing it wrong.[/QUOTE] I installed it from the live CD. I started the Wubi installation while reading this thread to find out some stuff and other possible distros and stuff, and read about how buggy WUBI is. So i just burnt it to a CD. Well worth it, from what I heard.
So I put Ubuntu 10.04 Netbook Edition on my netbook. I'm digging the layout and all that and it's all pretty sweet. When I tried to connect to the wifi though it asked for my password and all that so I entered it and then something about a keyring popped up. I tried my password stuff here and it didn't work and I can't seem to find anything about it. What is it and how do I get it let me connect to the internet?
snip rate me boxes
yeah it's something specific to gnome involving passwords and such. Since I don't use Gnome I'm not totally sure how to fix that.
[QUOTE=Nautsabes;24932765]So I put Ubuntu 10.04 Netbook Edition on my netbook. I'm digging the layout and all that and it's all pretty sweet. When I tried to connect to the wifi though it asked for my password and all that so I entered it and then something about a keyring popped up. I tried my password stuff here and it didn't work and I can't seem to find anything about it. What is it and how do I get it let me connect to the internet?[/QUOTE] The Gnome keyring stores passwords, such as your network login details. The keyring requires you to set a master password upon first launch. Type whatever password you want to use, as long as you remember it.
[QUOTE=ROBO_DONUT;24933058]The Gnome keyring stores passwords, such as your network login details. The keyring requires you to set a master password upon first launch. Type whatever password you want to use, as long as you remember it.[/QUOTE] Oh, alright, thanks.
So this last week I got 4 friends together and we started a small PGP web of trust. :iia: Also, I'm trying to get Monodevelop to work... I ended up changing my username after I installed because of a typo that I somehow missed, and monodevelop insists the old user directory still exists. How would I force it to use the new .settings folder instead of the one that doesn't exist?
The gnome keyring pisses me off, it doesn't just ask me for an unlock password when I login, it asks me for one whenever it's connecting to a network, that sort of shit. There any way I can get it to shut up and automatically auth programs? No, I'm not bothered about security, not on a netbook I'm not gonna leave outta my sight. I've already altered /etc/sudoers so I never have to enter my password when su'ing.
My volume is at the highest when i'm at 20%, Ubuntu, is this a big problem? Like one click on the keyboard sound wheel thingy, the volume maxes out.
[QUOTE=TehDoomCat;24936851]The gnome keyring pisses me off, it doesn't just ask me for an unlock password when I login, it asks me for one whenever it's connecting to a network, that sort of shit. There any way I can get it to shut up and automatically auth programs? No, I'm not bothered about security, not on a netbook I'm not gonna leave outta my sight. I've already altered /etc/sudoers so I never have to enter my password when su'ing.[/QUOTE] gksudo should have it's own config. Poke around the man pages. [QUOTE=Giraffen93;24939588]My volume is at the highest when i'm at 20%, Ubuntu, is this a big problem? Like one click on the keyboard sound wheel thingy, the volume maxes out.[/QUOTE] Common problem, caused by the sound card driver. I'm sure I read a fix for it a while back (2-3 years?) but can't remember where.
I see in alsamixer if i change my volume the master mixer goes up and down, but the speakers start to move when i'm < 10%. And where would i go to find this fix? :v: Well, this OS switch didn't go to well, i'm really pissed at this. I'm almost switching back to 7 now.. What the fuck, when i play music, 1 speaker works fine, but the other plays a garbled low-pitch mess of the song. :argh: you ubuntu!
Okay, so i changed sound card, but still no bass, and the software equalizers are shit. Foobar2000 works wonders in windows, is there something very similiar?
[QUOTE=Giraffen93;24958964]Okay, so i changed sound card, but still no bass, and the software equalizers are shit. Foobar2000 works wonders in windows, is there something very similiar?[/QUOTE] Deadbeef. [url]http://deadbeef.sourceforge.net/[/url]
Still doesn't fix the audio problems. Thanks though. [editline]09:55PM[/editline] Fuck it, it doesn't work. I'll use my phone instead.
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