You are not logged in. Login Now
 0-24   25-49   50-74   75-99   100-124   114-138   139-163   164-188   189-213 
 214-238   239-263   264-288   289-313   314-338   339-363   364-388   389-413   414-438 
 439-463   464-488   489-513   514-538   539-563   564-588   589-613   614-638   639-663 
 664-688   689-713   714-738   739-763   764-788   789-813   814-838   839-863   864-870 
 
Author Message
25 new of 870 responses total.
twenex
response 139 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 02:12 UTC 2005

I have a problem while using backtalk. The program refuses to recognize that
not all the items in a conference are new, even when i click on "mark all
responses read".
twenex
response 140 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 02:14 UTC 2005

Hmm; is your terminal setting ('echo $TERM') the same dialling direct as when
connecting over the net?
drew
response 141 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 03:12 UTC 2005

Assuming you mean me: TERM is vt100 on
the net. I'm not at home at the moment to
dial in; will check that when I'm there.
gelinas
response 142 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 03:58 UTC 2005

When a user goes over quota, they have seven days to get back under the quota.
If they don't, quota prevents their creating new files.  Several people are
over quota right now.  They are (mostly) in the grace period.  Some people
are already contacted staff for help.  Others, like Jim through you, find
other ways of dealing with the problem.
keesan
response 143 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 04:22 UTC 2005

But why does the 'over quota' message appear when you go into pine and not
when you log in?  This is confusing, not helpful.  
cross
response 144 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 04:25 UTC 2005

This response has been erased.

keesan
response 145 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 04:31 UTC 2005

Jim had 9MB of files in his home directory and nothing in /tmp and 100K in
the inbox.  I can try to duplicate the problem by downloading a 2MB file to
his home directory if that helps.  I went in and out of pine several times
and kept getting that over quota message every time.  Or maybe he also had
the 9MB in /tmp?  Does it stay there for a week?  
gelinas
response 146 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 04:39 UTC 2005

Pine was trying to write to a file in his home directory.  That attempt
triggered the quota notification.
drew
response 147 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 04:53 UTC 2005

When dialing direct:
    Pine exits with "Cannot open terminal capabilities database".
    TERM is set to "dialup". Changing it to "vt100" does *NOT* fix the
problem.
    When trying to enter a response in BBS, spacebar enters a new line, and
typing any other character results in a "Core dumped" followed by "OK to enter
this response?".

    When connected via the internet:
    TERM is set to "vt100".
    Pine and BBS work normally.
drew
response 148 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 04:55 UTC 2005

Scratch that, TERM is now set to "xterm", logged in from home in Putty under
Windoze 98SE in VMWare. It was "vt100" in ssh on the Zaurus.
gelinas
response 149 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 04:57 UTC 2005

Try editting your .login to remove the '"$TERM"' from the end of the tset
command.
albaugh
response 150 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 05:08 UTC 2005

What is the user quota on /tmp ?  Can it be raised?  I'm being thwarted in
sending e-mail with long text (a few 100K characters).
gelinas
response 151 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 05:11 UTC 2005

The quota on /tmp is 200 KB.  The limit is 1100 KB.
cross
response 152 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 05:11 UTC 2005

This response has been erased.

cross
response 153 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 05:12 UTC 2005

This response has been erased.

gelinas
response 154 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 05:13 UTC 2005

BTW, the command to see _your_ quota is "quota".  Personally, I prefer the
"-v" option:

        quota -v
bru
response 155 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 11:00 UTC 2005

var system is full
bru
response 156 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 11:30 UTC 2005

/var: write failed, file system is full

cannot log into party.
nharmon
response 157 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 12:56 UTC 2005

> df

/dev/sd2d      6092380  6039150  -251388   104%    /var

heh, how can a file system be 104% full? ;)

Anyway, what bru said, /var is full.
nharmon
response 158 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 13:09 UTC 2005

It appears to be email spools that are filling up /var.

> du -h /var |more

999M    /var/mail
942M    /var/tmp/mail-spool
void
response 159 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 14:04 UTC 2005

Thanks to everyone who got the new machine up and running!  Very nice.

What became of /usr/local/lib/global.cshrc?  Upon logging in, I see a 
message that there is no such file, and my usual shell prompt and some 
other things don't work.  What should I be using instead?
twenex
response 160 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 14:10 UTC 2005

As a side note, drew, if you're using Windoze under VMWare so you can get at
PuTTY whilst using Linux/UNIX, PuTTY is now available for Linux, whilst the
BSDs have compatibility packages for Linux software.
gelinas
response 161 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 14:11 UTC 2005

The global dot files are in /usr/local/etc/ .  However, you may need to add
your own prompt.  I added

        set prompt="`hostname -s`% "

to my .cshrc file.
void
response 162 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 14:13 UTC 2005

Thanks, gelinas.  :)
jvmv
response 163 of 870: Mark Unseen   Jan 2 16:07 UTC 2005


             The same thing to me in party:

             /var: write failed, file system is full
 0-24   25-49   50-74   75-99   100-124   114-138   139-163   164-188   189-213 
 214-238   239-263   264-288   289-313   314-338   339-363   364-388   389-413   414-438 
 439-463   464-488   489-513   514-538   539-563   564-588   589-613   614-638   639-663 
 664-688   689-713   714-738   739-763   764-788   789-813   814-838   839-863   864-870 
Response Not Possible: You are Not Logged In
 

- Backtalk version 1.3.30 - Copyright 1996-2006, Jan Wolter and Steve Weiss