Submitted by Hans Salvisberg on Thu, 2013-10-24 12:31
I found that Google/Gmail was suddenly filing email from my domains into the spam folder of the recipients. At that point I had implemented SPF a few years back. It's difficult to access whether SPF pass increases the chances for successful delivery, but SPF fails definitely increase the odds of rejections, which is a good thing, because it makes my domains unattractive for spoofing. This in turn has reduced the number of non-delivery messages (back-scatter) for spam that claimed to originate from one of my domains to just about none.
Submitted by Hans Salvisberg on Wed, 2013-09-11 01:19
Here's what 111.93.188.66 (presumably Parallels, India) did:
cat /etc/issue
/usr/local/psa/bin/admin --show-password
mysql -uadmin -p`cat /etc/psa/.psa.shadow ` psa
\q
use psa;
select id,name from domains where cl_id = vendor_id;
select id,login from clients where parent_id is null;
update domains set vendor_id=1 where cl_id=vendor_id;
Submitted by Hans Salvisberg on Sun, 2006-12-31 00:38
logrotate keeps Linux logs from growing indefinitely.
/var/lib/logrotate.status
shows the list of the logs under logrotate control as well as the date of when each was last rotated.
Submitted by Hans Salvisberg on Fri, 2006-12-29 12:57
If you need a way to control who can see your content, then you should tackle this early on. Generally, in Drupal 4.7, modules cannot deny access to certain nodes, but they must hide all nodes and then grant access selectively. If you already have content, installing such a module will make all of your content vanish!
I'm trying to find my way here, reporting as I go...