Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Usenet is dead
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Usenet is dead Post 302444437 by cjcox on Thursday 12th of August 2010 12:00:51 AM
Old 08-12-2010
Perhaps... I follow several newsgroups... some are general usenet comp.*, others are Novell and openSUSE's own forums which have nntp as well. So... I still use nntp anyhow.
 

7 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Dead SUN

My SUN V210 refuses to fully boot up. We had a power outage (ie. someone tripped the cord) and thereafter the Sun will not come up, and the OS is not starting. The LED on the front is not lit. Monitor gets no feed, so I plugged in via the management port. The system comes up to: Trap 3e. and... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: ireeneek
7 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

dead.letter

HI, I am pretty new to Unix...but here is 1 serious problem...atleast for me..:-) now..the dead.letter file in /var/tmp has been growin continuously..n i dont know why..I ve even killed the sendmail process..but the dead.letter file keeps on increasin..Can anyone tell me where do I start... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: unisam
6 Replies

3. Linux

Kinda OT: USENET Linux Groups

First, Please feel free to move or delete this thread if you do not feel it's appropriate. I used to be a regular user of Linux USENET groups such as alt.linux, alt.os.linux, and others. I haven't used the said groups for a couple of months now, but imagine my HORROR when I thought I'd drop by... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: zazzybob
2 Replies

4. Answers to Frequently Asked Questions

USENET Unix FAQS

I have been working on another faq thread sites recommended by users and these Usenet FAQs really belong there. But I decided to give them their own thread and link in each faq. This overflowed the 10000 character limit per post so I had to break it into two posts. I reread all of the faqs as... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Perderabo
1 Replies

5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Dead pseudo-ttys

We are having a problem on an AIX 4.3 system, whereby users somehow exit the system in a way such that their process continues to run. In the who listing, the user may or may not be listed. Processes are still listed in ps, and are still assigned to the pseudo-tty. Processes continue to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: markat2k
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

what is dead.letter ??

Hi all can you please help me what is dead.letter file ? when it is created ? for the first time i have seen this file getting created in my current directory? I am using SunOs. Any IDEA ?? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: jambesh
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

sed is dead

Hello everybody, I'm new to bash scripting (and scripting in general) but I'm making decent progress in the hands-on solutions I need... I've encountered a problem that seemed very simple to me at first, but had me going on for hours. Maybe you can help me. Say I have an input text file like... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: origamisven
2 Replies
HOSTS.NNTP(5)							File Formats Manual						     HOSTS.NNTP(5)

NAME
hosts.nntp, hosts.nntp.nolimit - list of hosts that feed NNTP news DESCRIPTION
The file /etc/news/hosts.nntp is read by innd(8) to get the list of hosts that feed the local site Usenet news using the NNTP protocol. The server reads this file at start-up or when directed to by ctlinnd(8). When a host connects to the NNTP port of the system on which innd is running, the server will do a check to see if their Internet address is the same as one of the hosts named in this file. If the host is not mentioned, then innd will spawn an nnrpd(8) to process the connection, with the accepted connection on standard input and stan- dard output. Comments begin with a number sign (``#'') and continue through the end of the line. Blank lines and comments also ignored. All other lines should consist of two or three fields separated by a colon. The first field should be either an Internet address in dotted-quad format or an address that can be parsed by gethostbyname(3). If a host's entry has multiple addresses, all of them will be added to the access list. The second field, which may be blank, is the password the foreign host is required to use when first connecting. The third field, which may be omitted, is a list of newsgroups to which the host may send articles. This list is parsed as a newsfeeds(5) subscription list; groups not in the list are ignored. Posts crossposted in groups matched by a @group.* entry are dropped. For example: ## FOO has a password, UUNET and VIX dont. ## UUNET cannot post to local groups. ## Example is not part of Usenet II. ## These are comment lines. news.foo.com:magic uunet.uu.net::!foo.* data.ramona.vix.com: newspeer.example.com::*,@net.* The first field may be suffixed by ``/s'' to indicate that streaming commands are specifically permitted to be used by this host. By default streaming commands are available to all hosts. If any entry in hosts.nntp has a ``/s'' suffix, then only those hosts with the ``/s'' suffix will be permitted to use streaming commands. For example, with the following hosts.nntp file, only the host data.ramona.vix.com is allowed to use the streaming commands. ## As above, but news.foo.com:magic uunet.uu.net::!foo.* data.ramona.vix.com/s: The first field may be suffixed by ``/a'' to indicate that the IP address of the feeding hosts allowed by this entry should always be included in the Path line of articles, or by ``/t'' to indicate that the address should not be included, or ``/a'' followed by a pathhost value to indicate that the IP address should be included if the most recent Path entry does not match the pathhost specified after ``/a''. The default is to log the address in articles whose most recent Path entry is not the same as the hostname in the hosts.nntp entry. Since innd is usually started at system boot time, the local nameserver may not be fully operational when innd parses this file. As a work-around, a ctlinnd ``reload'' command can be performed after a delay of an hour or so. It is also possible to provide both a host's name and its dotted-quad address in the file. If the file contains passwords, it should not be world-readable. The file /etc/news/hosts.nntp.nolimit, if it exists is read whenever the ``hosts.nntp'' file is read. It has the same format, although only the first field is used. Any host mentioned in this file is not sub- ject to the incoming connections limit specified by innd's ``-i'' flag. This can be used to allow local hosts or time-sensitive peers, to connect regardless of the local conditions. HISTORY
Written by Rich $alz <rsalz@uunet.uu.net> for InterNetNews. This is revision 1.22, dated 1996/11/27. SEE ALSO
ctlinnd(8), innd(8), nnrpd(8). HOSTS.NNTP(5)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:04 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy