They're old, and if noone buys them, I'm just going to toss them. Last I
knew all these cards were working properly. I have no drivers, .cfgs,
manuals, or cables with them... however I found all of these very easily
on the web.
I'm making a push to eliminate all my EISA equipment. 5 bucks a card, any
card, OBO. All sales final. No returns or refunds, I want this stuff
gone. Make sure this stuff runs on the platform your going to run before
buying. I ran most of them either under x386 …
[View More]Linux 2.2.x, Alpha OpenVMS,
or Alpha Digital UNIX. I believe all have drivers for WinNT 4.0
too, if your into that sort of thing.
-Model EILA8215 Intel EtherExpress32 LAN Adapter(AUI/BNC combo)
-DTC-3292 SCSI controler(SCSI-2 narrow)
-two 3com 3c597-TX NIC(10/half, 10/full, 100/half, no 100/full)
-Adaptec AHA-2740A(FW SCSI-2)
-Adaptec AHA-1740(SCSI-2)
-DEC Etherworks DE422(TP/BNC combo)
Reply if interested
Phil
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Phil Deneault "We work in the dark, We do what we can,
deneault(a)wpi.edu We give what we have. Our doubt is our passion,
WPI NetOps and our passion is our task. The rest is the
OpenVMS Guy maddness of art." - Henry James
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
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You need to tell apache that index.php is a page to load as a 'DirectoryIndex'. In your httpd.conf file (mine is in /etc/httpd/conf on RHL 7.1) append index.php to the line that loooks like this:
DirectoryIndex index.html index.htm index.shtml {.... maybe more things}
so it should now read:
DirectoryIndex index.html index.htm index.shtml index.php
(BTW, you can define other filenames to be handled in this way.)
On Monday, January 28, 2002 5:15 AM, David Lee Ludwig <davidl(a)WPI.EDU> …
[View More]wrote:
>I'm currently trying to set up Apache and PHP4 under Debian woody. So
>far, I have Apache and php4 up and running (using apt-get retrieved
>binaries.) I can load php pages w/o problems, provided I specify the file
>directly. That is, the following URL will work:
>
>http://my.domain/some_dir/index.php
>
>but loading the following:
>
>http://my.domain/some_dir/
>
>will result in Mozilla (0.9.5) giving me a download dialog box telling me:
>"You have chosen to download a file of type: application/x-httpd-php",
>which is followed by a choice to either pick a helper app or to save to
>disk.
>
>Any thoughts on how I would go about fixing this?
>
>--
>David Ludwig | "The Linux philosophy is laugh in the face of
>davidl<at>wpi.edu | danger. Oops. Wrong One. 'Do it yourself.'
>http://www.wpi.edu/~davidl | That's it." -
>Linus Torvalds
>
>
>_______________________________________________
>Wlug mailing list
>Wlug(a)mail.wlug.org
>http://mail.wlug.org/mailman/listinfo/wlug
>
--
Peter Gutowski <peter(a)linuxchamps.com> // tel.: (413) 531-0123
"When in company, put not your hands to any part of the body not usually discovered." --George Washington, _Rules for Civility and Decent Behavior_
[View Less]
I'm currently trying to set up Apache and PHP4 under Debian woody. So
far, I have Apache and php4 up and running (using apt-get retrieved
binaries.) I can load php pages w/o problems, provided I specify the file
directly. That is, the following URL will work:
http://my.domain/some_dir/index.php
but loading the following:
http://my.domain/some_dir/
will result in Mozilla (0.9.5) giving me a download dialog box telling me:
"You have chosen to download a file of type: application/x-httpd-…
[View More]php",
which is followed by a choice to either pick a helper app or to save to
disk.
Any thoughts on how I would go about fixing this?
--
David Ludwig | "The Linux philosophy is laugh in the face of
davidl<at>wpi.edu | danger. Oops. Wrong One. 'Do it yourself.'
http://www.wpi.edu/~davidl | That's it." - Linus Torvalds
[View Less]
Chuck Anderson demo'd a PS-RISC system running Debian Linux. I have a
similar system that I am offering up for sale. Its an HP 9000 model J210
than has:
-2 PA-RISC 120mhz processors
-1 gig of memory
-2 four gig HVD SCSI drives
-SCSI CD-ROM
-An extra 10/100 ethernet NIC card(there is already one built in)
-VGA adapter(although as Chuck pointed out, the display card isn't
supported yet under Linux)
-an external HVD SCSI interface as well as an external SCSI-2 interface
It all works and …
[View More]currently has a version of HP-UX 11 that I need to wipe
before selling it. As stated before, there is a working Linux kernel for
it and it would make a great server or at the very least, a great hobby
system.
$250 or best offer
Reply if your interested.
Phil
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Phil Deneault "We work in the dark, We do what we can,
deneault(a)wpi.edu We give what we have. Our doubt is our passion,
WPI NetOps and our passion is our task. The rest is the
OpenVMS Guy maddness of art." - Henry James
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
[View Less]
Folks,
Saturday, Andy sent out a note from Rob Belleville asking for help in
getting Linux running on some 20-30 Macs. I've looked at the proposal, and
Rob's proposal to setup a terminal server is pretty much impossible, as the
PROM code for doing remote boot is restricted to the Intel platform.
So, the counter proposal is to install the kernel on each box, and use NFS
to mount most of the "stuff" needed on the client. This shouldn't be too
hard, since all Rob wants to do is print and run a …
[View More]web browser from the
clients. (Rob wants the clients to come up with autologon and possibly just
start the web browser as well.)
I could use some help with setting up the (Intel) server: DHCP, Cups or LPR
or ..., NFS and getting the directories mounted on the clients at boot time.
If someone would be willing lend a hand with this, please let me know.
Another idea: If someone wants to do the server, I'll help out with getting
the Macs running.
--Skip
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