[2369] in bugtraq
Re: a point is being missed
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Scott Barman)
Wed Nov 8 03:34:24 1995
Date: Mon, 6 Nov 1995 10:40:36 -0500
Reply-To: Bugtraq List <BUGTRAQ@CRIMELAB.COM>
From: Scott Barman <scott@Disclosure.COM>
X-To: Bugtraq List <BUGTRAQ@CRIMELAB.COM>
To: Multiple recipients of list BUGTRAQ <BUGTRAQ@CRIMELAB.COM>
In-Reply-To: <199511042024.OAA00029@cheshire.eng.auburn.edu>
On Sat, 4 Nov 1995, Doug Hughes wrote:
(actually, he didn't write this part but I lost the attribution!):
> >This recently drove a co-worker and I to the brink of insanity when we
> >tried statically linking "ls" for our anonymous FTP site on a Solaris
> >2.4 machine.
> >
> >Seems like Solaris won't be able to handle this then, no?
Just a quick note: According to a friend who works for Sun, this is not
"fixed." In fact, they do not consider it a problem! And my local Sun
rep is wondering why I am steering a client toward HP machines rather
than waiting for 2.5 or the UltraSparc (HPUX 10, to be released soon,
is supposed to be fully SVR4 compatable, which is a requirement for my
client).
> Note: this doesn't fix other problems with no version of static
> libresolv library, but this should be easy enough to get with
> the bind code and linked in, and possibly be an even better resolv
> then the one on the system to begin with.
Get the BSD-based named and port the library from that. It took a day
for me to do, but it was worth it!! Not only that, you get the latest
named free from any of NIS's shackles!
I think you can get a copy from ftp.cs.berkeley.edu or it might be under
Paul Vixie's directory on gatekeeper.dec.com (my preference).
> doug@eng.auburn.edu Auburn University
scott barman
--
scott barman DISCLAIMER: I speak to anyone who will listen,
scott@disclosure.com and I speak only for myself.
barman@ix.netcom.com
"I don't know if security explains why the Win95 support Web servers run BSDI
2.0--an Intel-based Unix--rather than Windows NT, which Microsoft insists is
the ideal Web software solution. Does Redmond know something we don't know?"
-Robert X. Cringely, INFORWORLD, 9/11/95