(Illustration by Gaich Muramatsu)
>>>>> "Stephen" == Stephen J Turnbull <turnbull_at_sk.tsukuba.ac.jp> writes: Stephen> I noticed the debconf stuff being there, but it didn't Stephen> seem to get triggered using dpkg -i ... is that only for Stephen> dselect? This seems to be more "existing setup" stuff; I installed to a system that didn't have coda on it (although it did have the remnants including the device node alias in modules.conf and a /usr/coda hierarchy) and I got the debconf stuff OK. Very slick; debconf has improved a lot. I don't have much more to say about that, because I was in a hurry to get it installed. (I had files on that system that needed to be transferred to my webserver for use in a lab that started 3 minutes after I realized the server was out of date. I guess it's a compliment to say that I was only 2 minutes late for the lab! ;-) Here's some more weirdness (on a laptop at home; the first cfs cs was before the PPP link came up, the second after): bash-2.04$ cfs cs Cannot read configuration file '/usr/local/etc/coda/venus.conf', will use default values. Contacting servers ..... These servers still down: 109.98.158.130 bash-2.04$ cfs cs Cannot read configuration file '/usr/local/etc/coda/venus.conf', will use default values. Contacting servers ..... All servers up Why are we looking in /usr/local/etc/coda/venus.conf? Is the server address intentionally backwards (in the usual MSB first order it is 130.158.98.109), or are we missing an ntohl() call? (In case you're wondering, DNS is unreliable on the dialup link so I intentionally configured it as a numerical IP address.) -- University of Tsukuba Tennodai 1-1-1 Tsukuba 305-8573 JAPAN Institute of Policy and Planning Sciences Tel/fax: +81 (298) 53-5091 _________________ _________________ _________________ _________________ What are those straight lines for? "XEmacs rules."Received on 2000-10-10 10:26:04