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Full Discussion: Install HP UX
Operating Systems HP-UX Install HP UX Post 16380 by bbutler3295 on Thursday 28th of February 2002 07:13:09 PM
Old 02-28-2002
Install HP UX

Hey whats up all of you pro's i have one question for you im not to familiar with HP UX 11i, but i would like to load it on my home machine. I am sure this is a dumb question but is there any special hardware requirements. I have reloaded the sysem at my work on a L class 9000 well not exactly by my self but i am very interested in learing the in's and out's of hp systems and my job is to dam cheep to send me for training.

I also was interested in purchaseing a Unix workstation but on hp's website the dam things are 5,000.00+ dollars. if there are certin hardware requirements could sombody point me in the right direction as far as what i would need to purchase to build my own system.

Thanks
B. Butler
MCSE x 2
 

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MIMEDEFANG-NOTIFY(7)					 Miscellaneous Information Manual				      MIMEDEFANG-NOTIFY(7)

NAME
mimedefang-notify - Conventions used by mimedefang-multiplexor(8) to notify an external program of state changes. DESCRIPTION
If you supply the -O option to mimedefang-multiplexor, then it allows external programs to connect to a socket and be notified of certain state changes in the multiplexor. The external programs can react in whatever way they choose to these state changes. The external pro- gram that listens for state changes is referred to as a listener. NOTIFICATION OVERVIEW
From the point of view of a listener, notification works like this: 1) The listener connects to a TCP or UNIX-domain socket. 2) The listener informs mimedefang-multiplexor of the message types it is interested in. 3) The listener loops, reading messages from the socket and reacting to them. MESSAGES
Each message from the multiplexor normally consists of a single upper-case letter, possibly followed by a space and some arguments, and then followed by a newline. Two special messages are "*OK" followed by a newline, which is issued when a listener first connects, and "*ERR" followed by some text and a newline, which is issued when an error occurs. The normal messages are: B This message is issued whenever a slave is killed because of a busy timeout. F n This message is issued whenever the number of free slaves changes. The parameter n is the number of free slaves. R This message is issued whenever someone has forced a filter reread. S n nmsg This message is issued whenever slave n's status tag changes. The status tag is a string indicating what the slave is currently doing; the -Z option to the multiplexor allows the Perl code to update the status tag so you have a good idea what each slave is doing. U This message is issued whenever a slave has died unexpectedly. Y This message is issued whenever the number of free slaves changes from zero to non-zero. Z This message is issued whenever the number of free slaves falls to zero. EXPRESSING INTEREST
A listener does not receive any messages until it has expressed interest in various message types. To express interest, the listener should send a question mark ("?") followed by the types of messages it is interested in, followed by a newline over the socket. For exam- ple, a listener interested in the R and F messages would send this line: ?RF A listener interested in every possible message type should send: ?* Once a listener has expressed interest, it may receive messages at any time, and should monitor the socket for messages. Note that a listener always receives the special messages "*OK" and "*ERR", even if it has not expressed interest in them. EXAMPLE
The following Perl script implements a listener that, on Linux, rejects new SMTP connections if all slaves are busy, and accepts them again once a slave is free. Existing SMTP connections are not shut down; the system merely refuses new connections if all the slaves are busy. This script assumes that you have used the -O inet:4567 option to mimedefang-multiplexor. #!/usr/bin/perl -w # # On Linux, prepare to use this script like this: # /sbin/iptables -N smtp_connect # /sbin/iptables -A INPUT --proto tcp --dport 25 --syn -j smtp_connect # Then run the script as root. use IO::Socket::INET; sub no_free_slaves { print STDERR "No free slaves! "; system("/sbin/iptables -A smtp_connect -j REJECT"); } sub some_free_slaves { print STDERR "Some free slaves. "; system("/sbin/iptables -F smtp_connect"); } sub main { my $sock; $sock = IO::Socket::INET->new(PeerAddr => '127.0.0.1', PeerPort => '4567', Proto => 'tcp'); # We are only interested in Y and Z messages print $sock "?YZ "; $sock->flush(); while(<$sock>) { if (/^Z/) { no_free_slaves(); } if (/^Y/) { some_free_slaves(); } } # EOF from multiplexor?? Better undo firewalling system("/sbin/iptables -F smtp_connect"); } main(); SEE ALSO
mimedefang.pl(8), mimedefang(8), mimedefang-multiplexor(8), mimedefang-filter(5) 4th Berkeley Distribution 8 February 2005 MIMEDEFANG-NOTIFY(7)
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