search for: incautious

Displaying 5 results from an estimated 5 matches for "incautious".

Did you mean: cautious
2018 Jun 30
1
How to log a Sieve match in Dovecot debug_log
Sorry @lbutlr, this is a very silly answer to my question...! My script is not the definite spam solution on my mail server, obviously. In addition to Spamassassin, blacklist implementation, SPF, DKIM and more, I need to filter some specific messages with particular words and log the script action. In my first mail I made an example with three really obvious words but my need is not about sex or
2003 Aug 18
1
Can I runAsterisk remotely from telnetsession?
> From: Steven Critchfield [mailto:critch@basesys.com] > On Fri, 2003-08-15 at 12:42, Adams, Gavin wrote: > > Another thing I'm doing while soak testing an application (pre > > /etc/init.d startup script) is to run 'screen' as an unpriviledged user, > > then 'su -' to root (or even better, 'sudo su -') followed by starting > > the
2010 Dec 19
1
Unable to build R-2.10.0 and later releases on AIX 6.1
Hi, I have been able to build R-2.9.2 on AIX 6.1 and AIX 5.2. However, I failed to build R-2.10.0 and later releases on these AIX platforms. The error messages I got are attached below: "connections.c", line 461.10: 1506-022 (S) "truncate64" is not a member of "struct Rconn". "connections.c", line 772.10: 1506-022 (S) "truncate64" is not a member
2015 Feb 04
5
Another Fedora decision
...at were intended. The whole matter of attending to the risk of brute force password discovery rather misses the point. Amateurs hack systems, professionals hack people. No matter how resistant your password is to brute force discovery, it only takes one careless mistake to have it revealed by an incautious or suitably deceived sysadmin. Look up 'Robin Sage' and the follow on study 'Emily Williams' and then ask yourself: How does a strong password on the root account deal with that? I really wonder sometimes if the software development people that write so much about security 'be...
2008 Jul 31
17
Can I trust ZFS?
Hey folks, I guess this is an odd question to be asking here, but I could do with some feedback from anybody who''s actually using ZFS in anger. I''m about to go live with ZFS in our company on a new fileserver, but I have some real concerns about whether I can really trust ZFS to keep my data alive if things go wrong. This is a big step for us, we''re a 100% windows