search for: thesatya

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

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2005 Jan 09
2
Bug#289529: logcheck: "Ghandi" should be "Gandhi" in README.how.to.interpret
Package: logcheck Version: 1.2.32 Severity: minor "Ghandi" should be "Gandhi" in README.how.to.interpret, assuming that you mean the Indian freedom fighter M.K. Gandhi a.k.a. Mahatma Gandhi. -- System Information: Debian Release: 3.1 APT prefers unstable APT policy: (500, 'unstable') Architecture: i386 (i686) Kernel: Linux 2.6.7 Locale: LANG=C, LC_CTYPE=C
2005 Jan 20
2
Bug#291395: logcheck-database: Rules dirs are setuid, they should be setgid
Package: logcheck-database Version: 1.2.33 Severity: normal I just installed 1.2.33, and it made my rules dirs setuid, not setgid... - Marc -- System Information: Debian Release: 3.1 APT prefers testing APT policy: (900, 'testing'), (300, 'unstable') Architecture: i386 (i686) Kernel: Linux 2.6.8-1-k7 Locale: LANG=en_CA, LC_CTYPE=en_CA (charmap=ISO-8859-1) Versions of
2005 Jan 11
2
Bug#289801: Logtail should output error messages to stderr, not stdout
Package: logtail Version: 1.2.33 Severity: normal Hi... Logtail should not output error messages to standard output, since this violates the principle of least surprise. In particular, my application was broken by the semantics of logtail changing in version 1.2.21 (when you added switches for the default arguments to logtail). I think this was a bad move -- you broke an interface used by
2005 Jan 14
3
Bug#290511: logcheck: syslogd restart in cron.daily/sysklogd causes a log message
Package: logcheck Version: 1.2.32 Severity: wishlist /etc/cron.daily/sysklogd restarts syslogd at the end of the script. This causes a daily log message, currently missed by logcheck: Jan 14 06:55:22 pyloric syslogd 1.4.1#16: restart (remote reception). I'm currently using this regex in ignore.server.d/local-syslogd: ^\w{3} [ :0-9]{11} [._[:alnum:]-]+ syslogd 1\.4\.1#16: restart \(remote
2005 Jan 12
3
Bug#290195: violations.d/sudo and violations.ignore.d/logcheck-sudo missing sudo log entries
Package: logcheck Version: 1.2.32 Severity: normal It seems when someone runs a sudo command on my system, logcheck misses it. The second line of /etc/logcheck/violations.d/sudo matches them, but the /etc/logcheck/violations.ignore.d/logcheck-sudo kills them. Furthermore, when users run commands like '$ sudo rm *' in a directory with lots of files, we reports with lines like: Jan 13