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I was trying to install on Debian postfix or some mail client to have mails,(its ok if i install a client and it install by itself all the things needed, like postfis and stuffs) Ive read a lot and many tutorials seems to be pretty long, complicated and the worste of all at the end of the configuration just doesnt work anything at my mail, i am novice in this, please, could anybody help me to find a solution a tutorial or give me an explination of how to install it??
Thanks in advance
The question would most likely yield better results on SuperUser instead, however I just did the same thing, only in Fedora. Here is the walkthrough I used:
http://www.techotopia.com/index.php/Configuring_a_Fedora_Linux_Email_Server
I'm sure you can use it and simply replace 'yum' with 'apt-get'. Good Luck.
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The TeamViewer7 trial version is currently installed on my Ubuntu linux system. It has expired. How do I clear the registry. How do I change the settings 'For personal use' for the new install which I see in some of the urls which I have come across on the net. Please guide.
TeamViewer bundles its own version of Wine, so all you have to do is delete the directory you extracted it to. All its settings are kept in "teamviewer7/.wine".
Best way ist to BUY the full version of TeamViewer.
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One of my servers just had the memory exhausted by a load of Perl scripts, we use plesk and they seem to have appeared under the /var/www/vhosts/domainexample.com/cgi-bin/ directory, I managed to stop all of the processes and delete the scripts but I have absolutely no idea how they would've got there.
Can someone point me in the right direction in order to prevent further attacks?
Who should have access to your webserver machine?
Does this include the owner/operator of domainexample.com?
Do you expect the owner to be placing cgis on your server?
Does domainexample.com need to run cgis?
does domainexample.com need to run perl?
You might want to start researching here:
http://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/misc/security_tips.html
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Sometimes my friend give me root access to his CentOS VPS to help him install some programs and he leaves. Sometimes I mess with it, but I don't have the login information for Parallels Virtuozzo Containers, so can I clean the VPS using SSH?
It's faster than formatting the VPS and re-installing the OS.
You could always take a backup before you being work and revert the changes after the face. rsync is one potential tool you could use to do this.
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If it is, can someone provide me with a download link? I've been looking through google and through the couchbase website, and so far haven't found any reference to the dbx builds.
Couchbase is different from CouchDB, so if you can't use it in your shop (like me), CouchDBX is still available here:
http://dl.couchone.com/dl/384fe8cac77f981551a6632c020259a3/CouchDBX-1.0.2.0.zip
(Please don't take it down :-)
If you follow the link from CouchDBX page, you will land on Couchbase's site, where to find the OS X binary package under its new name, Couchbase Server Community Edition (direct link to download page).
This is were I got it, at least.
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I'd like to know how to setup my exim4 on Debian so that it can use gmail as the smarthost, rather than my ISP. It appears to need TLS to be setup, and of course a gmail userid and password. The "standard" smarthost example that comes with exim4 in Debian doesn't have these.
The above solution didn't work for some reason but the solution here worked for me.
http://www.manu-j.com/blog/wordpress-exim4-ubuntu-gmail-smtp/75/
The only change I did was to use xyz#mydomain.com instead of xyz#gmail.com in the “begin authenticators” section.
First, install stunnel4 and configure it to map [127.0.0.1]:587 to smtp.gmail.com:465 like this:
client=yes
[smtp-gmail]
accept = 587
connect = smtp.gmail.com:465
Then reconfigure exim4:
dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config
Configure exim4 to use a lot of small files, smarthost through localhost:587
Edit /etc/exim4/passwd.client and add:
localhost:yourname#gmail.com:yourpassword
Remember to check permissions, and then run:
update-exim4.conf
That should do it.
See the instructions on Debian Wiki:
http://wiki.debian.org/GmailAndExim4