[03:23] <code|work> nictuku: ping
[03:24] <nictuku> code|work, hi
[03:25] <code|work> nictuku: hi.  may i ask you some questions about NWU?
[03:25] <nictuku> sure
[03:28] <nictuku> I'm going to bed soon, so if needed we can continue the conversation by e-mail
[03:29] <code|work> nictuku: ok.  that'd work best.
[03:30] <nictuku> code|work, are you interested in using, contributing, or both?
[03:40] <birdfish> How would I go about getting a personal script to run at boot time? (but only after the  network interfaces have been brought up)
[03:41] <birdfish> I have an idea that i need to add the script to the default runlevel, but I can't find any manual entries regarding the correct way to rc-update under Ubuntu
[03:47] <infinity> birdfish: If you want it done when the interfaces come up, you can make it an "up" action in /etc/network/interfaces (man 5 interfaces)
[03:47] <infinity> birdfish: If you just want it "sometime in runlevel 2", put an init script in /etc/init.d, and use update-rc.d to add the symlinks you want for start/stop in the right runlevels.
[03:49] <birdfish> infinity: ah, the up action sounds like a great alternative (since it's going to be a script to populate my firewall)  Thanks =)
[03:53] <birdfish> BRB
[03:54] <birdfish> Ah, worked a charm =)
[04:50] <levander> When you are dist-upgrading, and a configuration file has changed in a package, does update-manager still let you choose whether to keep your old configuration files that you've modified or upgrade to the new configuration just like apt-get does?  Or, has update-manager "simplified" the process so much, you aren't given this option?
[04:55] <infinity> levander: It has a GUi interface that does exactly the same thing (lets you see the diff, lets you pick the action to take, etc), then feeds that back to dpkg's conffile handling.
[04:59] <levander> infinity: thanks man, i asked that question in 4 ubuntu channels, you were only one who knew answer for some reason
[05:00] <levander> I gotta shut down IRC client to upgrade...
[09:45] <foo> I need some way to set up a linux vpn server.. something nice, easy, and secure. Any recommendations? openvpn? Hm
[10:10] <silya> Hi all! I have installed ubuntu-server and want to install mc, but "no package" message appears. so I need to add extra repository to apt?
[10:11] <Burgwork> yes, universe
[10:11] <silya> when I run command `sudo apt-get install dhcpd` message appears E: "Can't find package dhcpd"
[10:11] <silya> but such pkgs as postfix installs well from cd
[10:12] <Burgwork> try removing the cd from your apt sources
[10:13] <silya> Burgwork, when I run dovecot installation its begin installation via internet
[10:14] <silya> And I am very confused. I read and heard better things bout ubuntu server edition
[10:15] <Burgwork> it is the same base as Ubuntu
[10:15] <Burgwork> merely without X
[10:15] <silya> what integrated tools present for fast configuration?
[10:15] <silya> why there is no mc??????????????
[10:16] <Burgwork> server is bare minimum to get you up
[10:16] <Burgwork> and mc is there, just in universe
[10:16] <silya> mc depends from X in ubuntu?
[10:16] <Burgwork> no
[10:16] <silya> cool
[10:17] <Burgwork> https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Repositories/CommandLine
[10:17] <silya> :) I love command line, but sometimes mc very useful...
[10:17] <silya> thx for link
[10:22] <silya> webmin works with ubuntu?
[10:22] <Burgwork> yes, although it is not in the repos
[10:23] <silya> so I need download it manually?
[10:23] <Burgwork> yep
[10:24] <silya> server manual says that all ports closed by default but... http ftp ssh opened :(
[10:25] <Burgwork> if you installed those, yes
[10:33] <silya> So as I understand pkgs from universe don't supports by security team?
[11:00] <silya> anyone heard anything about sams (squid account management syste,)?
[11:02] <FlyingSquirrel32> Where do I go to formally request a server install configuration (like the LAMP setup)
[11:06] <silya> DNS and LAMP server options presents 
[11:07] <Euler> hi...anyone here use ubuntu on a Sun T1000?
[11:12] <silya> Ohh... DHCP server called in guide dhcpd in fact calls dhcp