Not sure if this is the best place to post, but at this point my question seems to be an advanced topic.
I'm curious why it is that the "office phone" column of finger does not seem to report anything even when data is entered in the GECOS field of /etc/passwd. I am using Ubuntu 8.10, kernel... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I have to install MS office on the Linux 9. As it is the essential part of my Internship. So I just want to know the following things:
1. Is it possible?
2. From where I can get the MS Ofiice for Linux 9.
3. From wher I can get the Documentation for Installing it.
Thanks in... (2 Replies)
POPPER(8) BSD System Manager's Manual POPPER(8)NAME
popper -- POP3 server
SYNOPSIS
popper [-k] [-a plaintext|otp|sasl] [-t file] [-T seconds] [-d] [-i] [-p port] [--address-log=file]
DESCRIPTION
popper serves mail via the Post Office Protocol. Supported options include:
-a plaintext|otp|sasl
Tells popper which authentication mode is acceptable, sasl enables SASL (RFC2222), and otp enables OTP (RFC1938) authentication.
Both disable plaintext passwords.
--address-log=file
Logs the addresses (along with a timestamp) of all clients to the specified file. This can be used to implement POP-before-SMTP
authentication.
-d Enables more verbose log messages.
-i When not started by inetd, this flag tells popper that it has to create a socket by itself.
-k Tells popper to use Kerberos for authentication. This is the traditional way of doing Kerberos authentication, and is normally done
on a separate port (as it doesn't follow RFC1939), and should be used instead of using SASL.
-p port
Port to listen to, in combination with -i.
-t file
Trace all commands to file.
-T seconds
Set timeout to something other than the default of 120 seconds.
SEE ALSO push(8), movemail(8)STANDARDS
RFC1939 (Post Office Protocol - Version 3)
AUTHORS
The server was initially developed at the University of California, Berkeley.
Many changes have been made as part of the KTH Kerberos distributions.
HEIMDAL July 14, 2004 HEIMDAL