Ubuntu :: Can't Find Smtpd.conf / What To Get That?
Jun 30, 2011I can't find smtpd.conf as described here: https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Postfix
Do I create the file or do I have to do something to install saslauth?
I can't find smtpd.conf as described here: https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Postfix
Do I create the file or do I have to do something to install saslauth?
phpmyadmin files are in usr/share/phpmyadmin but i cant find anything in my apache2.conf or httpd.conf files that point to that directory.How do I find the route taken from the Server root "ServerRoot "/etc/apache2"" to the phpmy admin files.
View 5 Replies View RelatedBeen trying for some time to get Postfix to not allow some internal users to send email externally. I have found some good resources online but none of them work. The user is still able to send email internally and externally.
I used the following web pages to assist me... [URL]
Below is my main.cf
# See /usr/share/postfix/main.cf.dist for a commented, more complete version
# Debian specific: Specifying a file name will cause the first
# line of that file to be used as the name. The Debian default
# is /etc/mailname.
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I have searched other post on here and they appear to be relevant but when I enter in the exact same commands it denies relay access to everyone. I have also used the postmap command to refresh the database.
Feb 16 15:54:48 EMAIL2 postfix/smtpd[6512]: NOQUEUE: reject: RCPT from localhost[127.0.0.1]: 554 5.7.1 <josh.dobs@gmail.com>: Recipient address rejected: Relay access denied; from=<msolis@EMAIL2.drewmedical.com> to=<josh.dobs@gmail.com> proto=ESMTP helo=<192.168.1.51>
I used this page as reference. [URL]
Below is my main.cf
# See /usr/share/postfix/main.cf.dist for a commented, more complete version
# Debian specific: Specifying a file name will cause the first
# line of that file to be used as the name. The Debian default
# is /etc/mailname.
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Ubuntu 10.04
I can't find xorg.conf on /etc/X11/ How to create it?
I've been trying to setup dual-screen in my system, but the control panel complains it can't find xorg.conf and so I can't save changes I make in the nvidia control panel. I was trying various methods of trying to get a dual screen working how I like it.Left = 17" 1280x1024 that sometimes works (needs hitting a few times)Right = 21" 1680x1050 main screenI wanted to have everything on the right one, my main workspace. And I wanted a seperate x workspace on the left hand one. (Mainly so that when the one on the left decides to not work, I can use the panel thing at bottom to move apps to the right one)
Now I know since 9.10 xorg.conf is non-existant and so determind on the fly or something.Is there a way to get X to write out the current working xorg.conf that's it's using? i.e. It's auto determind x,y,z and that's what right now this second is being used. I want to save this as a working xorg.conf so I can fine tune it etc.
I am trying to edit the xorg.conf file as described here:
[URL]
However, I cannot find the xorg.conf file anywhere.
i have dual boot system with windows7 and ubuntu 9.04 i am unable to find lilo.conf file in /etc. what's this file? what to do?
View 2 Replies View RelatedI am trying to get a touchscreen driver installed and I am talking to the techs at the company and they asked for a copy of my xorg.conf file. I have done several searches on my computer and looked on other forums posts as to where that file should be located and I cannot find this file anywhere on the system. Does Ubuntu 10.4 even have a xorg.conf file?
View 2 Replies View RelatedI am currently running Jaunty 9.04 and find the xorg.conf in /etc/X11. I just booted Lucid 10.04 from the Live CD just to take a look at things. I could no longer find xorg.conf any place in the booted file system.
View 1 Replies View RelatedHow do i find the file /etc/rsyslog.conf so i can modify it.
View 1 Replies View RelatedI have Red-Hat 5.6 , bind package and chroot installed, but i did not find the file named.conf in /etc !!!
View 3 Replies View RelatedI'm reading about how to set log options and I can't find /etc/syslog.conf?
I'm using fedora12 , ubutnu 10.04 and suse 11.2.
And Can't find syslog.conf anywhere.
I can not find xinetd.conf on my server (CentOS 5.4 operation system).
View 2 Replies View RelatedI have managed to delete my yum.conf file and do not have a backup. I have tried reinstalling yum and it does complete but when I try and run yum I get cannot find any conf file. Is there a standard conf file I can download? I am running centos 5.3.
View 8 Replies View RelatedI just installed Fedora 12 on a RM (research machines) nBook 4000.
Whilst the trackpad allows me to move the mouse pointer about, it doesn't respond to tapping. Is there anything I can do to get it working properly?
Also, the laptop has an integrated Intel 82852/82855 GM/GME graphics card. How can I tell if it is being detected and working properly? I don't seem to have an xorg.conf file.
Just have F-13 32 bit installed. But can't find xorg.conf. The screen resolution is only 800x600. The LCD display and the video card can support 1640x1280. Please where can I find a standard xorg.conf. Or how to create it here?
View 14 Replies View RelatedI have the following section in xorg.conf
Section "Device"
Identifier "Default Device"
Driver "fglrx"
EndSection
In what directory does it look to find the fglrx driver?
How can I find the size of units in sysctl.conf e.g whatis the size of the shmmax variable i.e. is it byte kb , Mb etc....???
View 8 Replies View RelatedI deleted the snmptrapd.conf from /etc/snmp/ and now I want to see the default content to create that file.. Been searching the web but can't find it.
View 2 Replies View RelatedI am unable to find any ldap.conf parameter or pam.d/system-auth setting from where i can restrict the LDAP users having uidNumber less than a particular number, say 500 to login into the system.I am using OpenLDAP server and tried pam_max_uid 500 in ldap.conf but it didn't work.
View 2 Replies View RelatedUsing google with search option: cman not started: Can't find local node name in cluster.conf /usr/sbin/ cman_tool: aisexec daemon didn't start.I found this URL...I have found the config_version in cluster.conf. Unfortunately, as everyone may have noticed, english is not my native tongue so I am having trouble understanding the part "Make sure you bumped the cluster config version number". Can anyone enlightened me on what should I be doing so that I could "bump" the cluster config version?
View 3 Replies View RelatedWhere can I find the httpd.conf files in FC11 ??
View 1 Replies View RelatedI am not able to find /etc/resolve.conf on my centos machine.it says no such file or dir .with out this file i am not able to connect to internet.when i ping my localhost and my machines ip address i am getting a reply.but when i ping some domain(eg - google.com) i get no reply.i tried manually entering the dns nameserver from system->adminstration->network->dns tab.i dono what ip to enter there..
View 2 Replies View RelatedIf I do something to the effect of this:ldapsearch -b "dc=example,dc=com" -x -z 3000
I'll get this back at the end of the result set:
# search result
search: 2
result: 4 Size limit exceeded
The thing is is that I have way more (thousands) than what's being displayed here. And I've tried to mess around with /etc/ldap.conf, changing the SIZELIMIT directive to something else, 10000, let's say, and restarting the server, but the same goddamn thing happens.
I've been messing around with this for quite some time now, hopefully someone will be able to shed some light on this so that I can learn my way out of this mess that is LDAP. Also in a related matter, I'm running Mint (based off of Ubuntu), and all the documentation that I've seen (probably read a good 100+ pages in a few days now on this) keeps telling me to make changes to my slapd.conf file. What slapd.conf file? It doesn't exist, I can't find it at least. find / -name slapd.conf turns up nothing.
I had a problem with qmail-smtpd which didn't want to start, throwing a segfault.
Now, it starts but it doesn't live more than 1 sec. I can send emails but can not receive them.
I did a strace:
I've been scanning the apache2 docs for the past few days and have not come up with an answer my following issue:
In my httpd.conf file, at the very end, I have the line
Include conf/vhosts/vhost_*.conf
However, when I run apache checkconfig or try to start apache, it gives me the error:
httpd: Syntax error on line 993 of /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf: Could not open configuration file /etc/httpd/conf/vhosts/vhost_1.conf: Permission denied
It appears as if the Include line is correct - in terms of it grabbing the first virtual host conf file. However, I'm confused on the permissions. the /etc/httpd folder is owned by root:root, as are the subfolders. As a test, I chown'd the conf/vhost folder combination and all the vhost files to apache:apache to see if that made a difference, and it appeared to make no difference at all. The log files don't contain anything (assumed because apache isn't starting). If I place the contents of the vhosts in a singular vhosts.conf it works - with the permissions set to root:root. I'd like to avoid having to use one vhosts conf for the configuration I'm trying to achieve - as it would make my life a lot easier.
I'm trying to set up samba. I am editing the smb.conf.master file, and then using the testparm -s "smb.conf.master > smb.conf" command to make the smb.conf file. I am running this command as root. However, the smb.conf is not updating with the changes I am making. Does anyone know why? It just stays the same no matter what I change. The only way to change it is to edit the smb.conf file itself.
View 1 Replies View RelatedI have used nVidia my entire linux life (about 5 years clean and sober from M$). Recently, I have switched over to an ATI Radeon HD 5550 card. After many trial and error setups, I finally got the resolutions and screens set properly with a xrandr command, which I have now added to a shell script in ~/.kde4/Autostart. It has worked for me for a while now, but I really would like to get it set in the xorg.conf.d files so that I don't have to wait that extra few seconds after login for the screens to fix themselves.
Is there an easy way to take what xrandr does and export it to the xorg.conf.d files? If my video card recognizes my default monitor as DFP2 and the tv that I only sometimes use with this computer as DFP1, how can I ensure that the login screen for openSUSE/KDE4 appears on my default screen (an issue that drove me nuts a few months ago when I tried Ubuntu to see what all the fuss was about)?
My xrandr command that I use to fix it all is:
xrandr --output DFP2 --auto --pos 0x0 --primary --output DFP1 --auto --right-of
I am using the proprietary Radeon driver from the ioda repository. DFP2 is a monitor which has a optimum resolution of 1920x1200, and DFP1 is an 1080p HDTV. I can not reverse the output plugs for the screens even though my monitor is an HDMI monitor because I use the actual HDMI port on the video card to output audio to the television and the other plug is a DVI that I convert to HDMI for the monitor.
I've just done a fresh install of Lubuntu 10.10 on an older Sony Vaio laptop. Having learned the hard way about editing xorg files, I wanted to create a backup of the xorg.conf file so that I dont have to do another install when I screw everything up. In a terminal, I typed
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