search for: autopsy

Displaying 12 results from an estimated 12 matches for "autopsy".

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2005 Jun 04
1
Stupid --delete mistake
Hi, I've a nasty feeling I know the answer to this post, but I'm gonna ask and pray anyway :-) I just made a rather stupid commandline ordering error and managed to delete a whole load of data (mostly word files/some pics fwiw) with rsync -delete. I know, I'm an idiot (and a big one at that). To make matters worse this was off an ext3 partition, which from what I can find out
2003 Apr 25
2
Comments about ext3 FS
...d dirs, where i have programs and docs of my work; and now i cant use them and cant recreate or rebuild. I read about umount my partition ( for what, ext3 FS clear the inodes), use lde, debufs, e2recover, etc ( this work only with ext2 FS), and some people saying that there is nothing to do. I use autopsy and task but dont work. Exist companies or people that can use ext3 FS in their linux systems and can survive if a file is deleted (if they dont have backups) or if they lost a very important project, or personal files. Or they use ext2 FS, preventing that they cant recover files?? This only thi...
2015 Jul 30
2
Fedora change that will probably affect RHEL
...ething? Prove it. Define strong. Diceware puts the minimum for large botnet protection at 5 word passphrases. 6 word passphrases for protection against a government entity. Your idea of strong thus far is 9 characters which seems to be b.s. today and certainly laughable in 6 years when we do the autopsy on today's policy successes and failures. > So your solution is to wait for unspecified innovations to come? All these problems will go away in the indefinite future, so we should do nothing now? I did say disable sshd by default, and several other suggestions many of which could be done...
2015 Jul 30
0
Fedora change that will probably affect RHEL
...constant. > Diceware puts the minimum for large botnet protection > at 5 word passphrases. 6 word passphrases for protection against a > government entity. Your idea of strong thus far is 9 characters which > seems to be b.s. today and certainly laughable in 6 years when we do > the autopsy on today's policy successes and failures. I've read your references to diceware here and earlier in this thread, and I'm pretty sure you don't understand it. Their page makes the purpose clear: "Short passwords are OK for logging onto computer system that are programmed to...
2003 Jan 17
0
Bad crash with Samba 2.2.7 and linux software RAID-5
...can't die. If this continues long enough, the whole machine locks up. And I mean LOCKS UP. Frozen video, and no response at all. The only way I've been able to recover control of the machine is to reboot from the switch. Also, there isn't anything in the log files. Nothing. On autopsy of the rebooted system, the system logs and the Samba logs show nothing strange prior to the reboot. I can log in via SSH, and everything is fine. If no one logs into the console, uptime is days, so far, with no errors or problems. I umounted the RAID array, and created a test share on the b...
1998 Jul 08
1
R-beta: POSIX and regcomp on SGI-IRIX 5.3
Hey Guys, I'm trying to install R on an SGI IRIX 5.3 machine. I'm having trouble getting R to use POSIX regular expressions. Here is the error message I get when I run help: > help() Error in gsub(pattern, replacement, x, ignore.case, extended) : POSIX regular expressions not available I looked through the R-help archives and I found a few tips concerning the problem. I tried them
2006 Aug 29
5
Strange POP3 problem...
I've been having this problem for a long time now. It started when I first began to use Dovecot (0.9x) and seems to have been occurring more and more frequently as we've progressed through the betas and now into RC7. I have been kind of chaulking it up to a "user issue" since the problem only seems to occur for one user (who has one machine at his office, and one at his weekend
2006 Jun 19
2
Asterisk 1.07 crash under Debian Sarge
...biz. hours, so all phones ring) 3. an employee answers the call. 4. the employee attempts a page (autoanswer + meetme AGI script with Polycoms) 5. about half the phones make it to the meeting, then the system crashes. 6. an executive calls my manager, who's on vacation, my manager calls me, autopsy begins. here's a few important snippets: ===========extensions.conf================= [system-page] exten => 999,1,Macro(system-page,${CALLERIDNUM}) ; The first variable is the originating caller, the others are phones I ; wish to exclude from the system-wide paging. [macro-system-page]...
2006 Nov 28
1
Best Practices for Data Recovery for corrupted EXT2/3?
...drive that I have been working on. But every time.. a fsck destroys all the data (moves everything to lost+found) and nothing that I've found is able to restore the dir structure... or allow me to superposition any of the subdirs (such as /home/*). I've tried testdisk, dd_recover, and Autopsy.. mounting and fsking with alternate superblocks, all with no success. I would like to retain file names.. as I see that SOME filename/dir structure is intact when the fsck starts nuking all my files that don't have a parent dir (e.g. ../home/user/file1 --> lost+found). Is there a way...
2015 Jul 26
4
Fedora change that will probably affect RHEL
On Sat, 25 Jul 2015 11:16:18 -0600 Chris Murphy <lists at colorremedies.com> wrote: > On Sat, Jul 25, 2015 at 9:40 AM, Scott Robbins <scottro at nyc.rr.com> wrote: > > This might show up twice, I think I sent it from a bad address previously. > > If so, please accept my apologies. > > > > > > In Fedora 22, one developer (and only one) decided that if
2015 Jul 28
5
Fedora change that will probably affect RHEL
On Tue, Jul 28, 2015 at 11:27 AM, Warren Young <wyml at etr-usa.com> wrote: > Much of the evil on the Internet today ? DDoS armies, spam spewers, phishing botnets ? is done on pnwed hardware, much of which was compromised by previous botnets banging on weak SSH passwords. > > Your freedom to use any password you like stops at the point where exercising that freedom creates a risk
2015 Jul 29
4
Fedora change that will probably affect RHEL
On Wed, Jul 29, 2015 at 4:37 PM, Warren Young <wyml at etr-usa.com> wrote: > Security is *always* opposed to convenience. False. OS X by default runs only signed binaries, and if they come from the App Store they run in a sandbox. User gains significant security with this, and are completely unaware of it. There is no inconvenience. What is the inconvenience of encrypting your device