Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
Mark
ParticipantIndividually:
In /Library/Tomcat/blojsom_root/webapps/ROOT/WEB-INF/
/blog.properties change blog-comments-enabled=true to blog-comments-enabled=false
If anyone has a way of doing this globally or via template for new blogs, I would be keen in hearing it.
Cheers,
MarkMark
Participant[QUOTE BY= macshome]Assuming that works then try your AFP tunnel. If the SSH endpoint is also the AFP server then do your portmaping to 127.0.0.1. E.g. “ssh -l admin -L 1025:127.0.0.1:548 theirhostname.dyndns.org”.[/QUOTE]
THANK YOU!!! This fixed it.[QUOTE BY= macshome]As far as the double NAT for un-restricted wireless. Why not put the access point outside the firewall/in the DMZ for guests and have employees VPN in, or have a hidden access point inside that’s WPA protected for them?[/QUOTE]
The dsl modem/router is also the wireless ap, so it is in fact outside the firewall (the sonicwall). If I could make the dsl modem not a router and put it in bridging mode I would – then I could put it in the sonicwall’s dmz and be a happy camper. I’m somewhat against having a wireless network directly attached (no nat or anything) to a network, even if it’s ssid is hidden and it’s WPA encrypted… mostly because I like to be overly paranoid about wireless security.I still set things like that up occasionally, but I make sure folks fully understand what they’re getting into! In this particular (small) office, it’s easy enough to just plug into ethernet if they want access to secure services. Plus they’re lawyers so they don’t mind going the extra mile for security.
Thanks again for your time and help.
Mark
ParticipantI have the same issue!
The operation could not be completed because you do not have enough access privileges.I use a 10.3.9 client and it works. I use a 10.4.1 client and they all get this same error!
Any idea’s
Mark
ParticipantWe too are having the same/similar problem. We have four xserves with 10.3.9 server. Each serves Windows 2000 and Mac OS 10.3.9 clients. At random times the AFP service will slow to a crawl (64K/sec). All other services, FTP, Samba work at full speed (Gig core to 100Mbit desktop). There is nothing of note in the logs, AFP error, system.log, etc. The only fix is to stop the AFP service (therefore disconnecting all the Mac users, preventing them from saving their work) and start it again. The speed then returns to normal. I tried killing lookupd, no change. Tried sharing another folder from the boot drive and copying a file to it, no different. Can you send a signal to the AFP process to restart but not disconnect everyone? Any help would be great.
February 19, 2005 at 3:59 pm in reply to: DiskSpaceMonitor running hourly not as specified in crontab #360763Mark
Participanti think i resolved the problem. i modified my crontab as follows:
$ sudo crontab -l
@daily /usr/sbin/diskspacemonitor checkand so far it appears to be working as i hoped. i suspect the max number of minutes is probably 59. anything larger and it uses 60.
August 17, 2004 at 5:41 am in reply to: MIT KDC/Unix Openldap integration to provide Mac & WINDOWS authentication #358801Mark
ParticipantWell, I have used pgina but it seemed like I would be missing out on some functionality. I was under the impression that pam-keberos modules were available for samba 3.
Thanks for the reply
Mark
Mark
ParticipantAny luck with this? I have the same problem
-
AuthorPosts
Recent Comments