People I'm trying to enable de smtp services of a solaris 10 and i get this
sendmail: daemon MTA-v4: problem creating SMTP socket
sendmail: NOQUEUE: SYSERR(root): opendaemonsocket: daemon MTA-v4: server SMTP socket wedged: exiting
Anyone Knows what is bad? Thank for your time
... (1 Reply)
I'm not sure if anyone can help here. I don't know much about Unix but will give the information that I can.
I am trying to run audits of my data with the command sas audit. When it asks for a batch number I put in the number that I am looking to print.
When I do this I am getting the... (1 Reply)
Hello there,
My mulithreaded application (which is too large to represent the source code here) is crashing after installing FreeBSD 7.1-RELEASE/amd64.
It worked properly on others machines (Dual Cores with 4GB of RAM - FreeBSD 6.2-RELEASE/i386).
The current machine has 2x Core 2 Duo... (1 Reply)
Hi everyone,
I wonder if anyone ever came across the idea of unifying AD and Linux user accounts
We have a Linux machine with 'samba' 'winbind' service configured to let Windows AD users to logon locally using their AD accounts and passwords.
I can use 'su' to get to the local user privilege... (0 Replies)
It appears there is alot of talk about different utilities that will pull data from PACCT files, sulogs, loginlogs, etc and put it in a format that is easy to read from multiple systems. Has anyone used or recommend any of these? I need to keep track of security on multiple systems running Non-Stop... (3 Replies)
I followed the directions under 10.10.6, but nothing seems to have happened. When I try logging in, nothing has changed. I still login using my username/password combination.
I've already created the keyparis, but why isn't this working?
What I'm looking to do is to put the pub keypair... (2 Replies)
PROCDESC(4) BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual PROCDESC(4)NAME
procdesc -- process descriptor facility
DESCRIPTION
procdesc is a file-descriptor-oriented interface to process signalling and control, which supplements historic UNIX fork(2), kill(2), and
wait4(2) primitives with new system calls such as pdfork(2), pdkill(2), and pdwait4(2). procdesc is designed for use with capsicum(4),
replacing process identifiers with capability-oriented references. However, it can also be used independently of capsicum(4), displacing
PIDs, which may otherwise suffer from race conditions. Given a process descriptor, it is possible to query its conventional PID using
pdgetpid(2).
SEE ALSO fork(2), kill(2), pdfork(2), pdgetpid(2), pdkill(2), pdwait4(2), wait4(2), capsicum(4)HISTORY
procdesc first appeared in FreeBSD 9.0, and was developed at the University of Cambridge.
AUTHORS
procdesc was developed by Robert Watson <rwatson@FreeBSD.org> and Jonathan Anderson <jonathan@FreeBSD.org> at the University of Cambridge,
and Ben Laurie <benl@FreeBSD.org> and Kris Kennaway <kris@FreeBSD.org> at Google, Inc.
BUGS
procdesc is considered experimental in FreeBSD.
BSD August 21, 2013 BSD