It can be done using netgroups and the +/- syntax in /etc/passwd. The /etc/nsswitch.conf looks like this:
passwd: compat
passwd_compat: nisplus
group: files nisplus
...
netgroup: nisplus
In /etc/passwd you can include or exclude netgroups with +/-...
/etc/init.d/xntp does run ntpdate, if you have defined a server in /etc/inet/ntp.conf, before starting xntpd.
If you have Solaris 10, smf runs ntp as network/ntp.
I think SMClxml2 installs in /usr/local, so you should run configure like this:
./configure --with-mysql --with-apxs=/usr/apache/bin/apxs --enable-libxml --with-libxml-dir=/usr/local
svcadm disable svc:/network/ipfilter:default will stop the firewall, if it is running. The config file is /etc/ipf/ipf.conf. ipfilter is a nice packet filter known from the BSD systems, I used it under OpenBSD some years ago. IMHO it's easier to configure than iptables.
We use a Sun branded QLogic 2 GBit HBA with SUNWqlc and SFS/SUNWsan in a Sun Blade 150 and an original JNI HBA with JNIC drivers in a Sun Blade 100 ... both are almost Ultra 5 ;-)
Yes, syslog-ng is the way. You can filter by hostname. Have a look at Nate Campi's page http://www.campin.net/syslog-ng/faq.html and http://www.campin.net/newlogcheck.html#syslog-ng for examples.
Regards,
Huebs
===
Sorry, I couldn't spot any reference to the kernel message regarding the dump device at docs.sun.com ... just to help you with your boss.
We are running Solaris 8 and 10 here and all recently rebootet machines show the log entry "<hostname> genunix: [ID 454863 kern.info] dump on <device> size...
We use a bunch of Cyclades TS2000 and Cyclades Alterpath (www.cyclades.com).
They're running some linux, lot's of features (ssh, webgui, radius, ipfilter, ...), no problems so far.
Use "savecore -d" to write out the dump disregarding the dump header valid flag.
Use dumpadm(1m) to configure your dump device, the default is to use the swap partition.
Sunny,
did you try the lpadmin command I posted above? (The one with port 9100, /dev/null, netstandard ...)
If you did, you might try adding "-o timeout=10" after the "protocol=tcp" (which means raw tcp printing).
If you don't have tcp communication between host and printer, maybe your print...
AFAIK you don't need the jetdirect software.
What does "lpstat -t" say ?
What's in /var/lp/logs/lpsched ?
What's in /etc/lp/printers/sunny/configuration ?
Huebs
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