Apache2 and webDAV: not entirely happy

Yesterday, I installed Apache 2.0.44 and it seems to work fine: it’s a little opaque when it fails to start up. There’s a little monitor app that serves the same purpose as apachectl, but it be nice if it would echo the output of the errors: as it stands, you have to look in the error log while pushing the start/restart buttons. Kind of silly . . . .

I have been trying to get WebDAV authentication working so I can work on web stuff from home, but I ended up creating an ACL based on IP address ranges. For some reason, just referencing Basic or MD5 digest authentication was enough to block Apache from restarting. I found a few references to the same problem when I was Googling, but no solutions yet.

I’ll keep looking, but or now I have a reasonably secure solution.

the threat I’m not hearing about

ELECTROMAGNETIC PULSE AND

A nuclear weapon detonated at high altitude releases some of its energy in the form of gamma rays. These gamma rays collide with air molecules and produce what are called Compton electrons. The Compton electrons, in turn, interact with the earth’s magnetic field, producing an intense electromagnetic pulse that propagates downward to the earth’s surface. The initial gamma rays and resultant EMP move with the speed of light. The effects encompass an area along the line of sight from the detonation to the earth’s horizon. Any system within view of the detonation will experience some level of EMP. For example, if a high-yield weapon were to be detonated 400 kilometers (250 miles) above the United States, nearly the entire contiguous 48 states would be within the line-of-sight. The frequency range of the pulse is enormously wide — from below one hertz to one gigahertz. Peak electric fields can reach tens of thousands of volts per meter. All types of modern electronics are potentially at risk, from Boston to Los Angeles; from Chicago to New Orleans.

One of our earliest experiences with HEMP dates back to the resumption of atmospheric nuclear testing in 1962 following a three year testing moratorium. Starfish Prime, a 1.4 megaton device, was detonated at an altitude of 400 kilometers over Johnston Island. Failures of electronic systems resulted in Hawaii, 1,300 kilometers away from the detonation. Street lights and fuzes failed on Oahu and telephone service was disrupted on the island of Kauai. Subsequent tests with lower yield devices produced electronic upsets on an instrumentation aircraft that was approximately 300 kilometers away from the detonations.

What this means is that a single well-placed nuclear detonation in the upper atmosphere could disrupt electrical service, electronic devices, pretty much our entire technological way of life for days or weeks.

Add to this, the sudden loss of unhardened satellites — navigational, meteorological, etc. — with the resulting risks to safety and commerce, and this looks like a serious threat.

When various news sources reported that North Korea had a missile program capable of reaching the west coast of the US, the threat was interpreted as being to the cities. But while destroying Los Angeles or Seattle would be a conventional tactic, that seems a remote possibility. Consider the idea of an initial HEMP blast that disrupts communications and negates a retaliatory strike or at the best limits its effectiveness while completely disrupting rescue and humanitarian efforts in the target zones.

Given that North Korea is rumored to only have one or two plutonium weapons, a HEMP blast gives them the best “bang for the buck.”

Let’s hope that while we settle old scores with Iraq, someone is keeping an eye on the other members of the “Axis of Evil.”

I like Ike

Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired
signifies in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not
fed, those who are cold and are not clothed. This world in arms is not
spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the
genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children. This is not a way
of life at all in any true sense. Under the clouds of war, it is
humanity hanging on a cross of iron.
— Dwight Eisenhower, April 16, 1953

new blogrolling

meta-douglasp

<gulp> Doug Purdy just added me to his blogroll: thanks for the compliment. Now to try and act like something other than comic relief . . . .

He just brought home his daughters for the first time: I’ve been remembering moments like that myself, from 6 years ago. There’s a telescoping effect there, where it seems like yesterday and at the same time you recall all the time in between.

As I heard said and have repeated myself, being a parent changes everything.

the pain continues

Download – The Apache HTTP Server Project

Apache 2.0.44 is the best available version

I have compared my experience trying to use Windows as being like driving nails with my hands, bloody, painful, and ineffective.

I realized I need to stage my web content on an actual web server, now that my development space on the public web server is gone. So I decided to try IIS: I already have it, so why not?

Well, one good reason is that I could never get it to serve me a web page. I kept getting prompted for authentication and after plodding through the online help (that never referenced authentication), i gave up and installed Apace 2.0.44. And in no time flat, I was able to serve content.

Granted, I’m not an experienced Windows users, but the premise of all these wizards and GUI control panels is that expertise is not necessary. The brain trust at MSFT have done all the hard work.

Bah. It’s very frustrating to have to work around the system to get the simplest things to work. If I hadn’t installed Cygwin and perl early on, I’d have jumped out the window weeks ago.

file permissions and copying

I learned today that when copying files from readonly media (ie, a CD) to a read-write device, the files are copied with the write bit turned off. So the files are just as useful for editing as they were on the CD.

chmod +w -R . worked to fix this: I gather there’s some Windows right-click property munging I could have done, but the same guys invented that as created the problem. I’d just as soon not ask them for more help.

printing: how hard?

I fixed the printer on my desktop today: I had to. I needed to do some manual feed printing and there was no reliable to do that with a printer on another floor.

So I removed the printer from my list of printers, re-cabled it, watched the “plug and pray” process happen. Of course, it wouldn’t install it, so I did it manually, or more accurately, non-automatically: I chose the port and the driver. Still no joy. The printer is still believed to be “out of paper.”

So I opened it up and found that it wasn’t out of paper, but rather, too full: it had a sheet jammed in its works. How hard would it be for the driver to report back that it couldn’t complete its self-test and perhaps clearing the paper feed path would be a useful thing to try?

vive la France, indeed

Idle Words

Idle Words
fighting francophobia since wednesday

As we get older, we learn that things are never as simple as they seem: as a case in point, Maciej Ceglowski reminds of France’s place in US and world history and the many reasons why it’s not irrelevant.

He makes no defense of French arrogance . . . . just as well.