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Managing internet information services / Cjricket Liu . . . [et al.]

Contributor(s): Publication details: Sebastopol, CA : O'Reilly & Associates, 1994.Description: xxxvi, 630 p. : ill. ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 1565920627
  • 9781565920620
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 22 004.678 MAN
Online resources:
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Book Open Access Book Open Access Engineering Library 004.678 MAN 1 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 0014419

CONTENTS

1: Internet Service Concepts
1.1 What is the Internet?
1.2 How are Internet Services Structured?
1.3 What is TCP/IP?
1.4 How Information Clients Talk to Information Servers

2: Introduction to Information Services
2.1 An Overview of Internet Information Services
2.2 What to do With Internet Services
2.3 System and Network Requirements
2.4 Human Requirements

3: Finger-, Inetd-, and Telnet-based Services
3.1 Finger-Based Information Services
3.2 Inetd-Based Information Services
3.3 Telnet and other Login-Based Information Services
3.4 Other Possibilities

4: Setting up an FTP Archive
4.1 What is FTP Good for?
4.2 The FTP Server
4.3 The Filesystem
4.4 Testing and Debugging your Archive

5: The WU Archive FTP Daemon
5.1 Compiling the WU Archive ftpd
5.2 New ftpd Command-Line Options
5.3 The ftpconversions File
5.4 The ftpaccess File
5.5 The ftphosts File
Etc.

6: Maintaining an FTP Archive
6.1 Populating your Archive
6.2 Making Access Easier
6.3 Denying and Limiting User Access
6.4 Monitoring Log Files
6.5 Reading Mail

7: Creating an Internet Database Server with WAIS
7.1 What is WAIS?
7.2 Building WAIS
7.3 Testing and Installing WAIS
7.4 Configuring WAISserver

8: Creating WAIS Sources with waisindex
8.1 Index Files
8.2 Relevance Ranking
8.3 A Table for the Impatient
8.4 Document Formats
8.5 Other Command-Line Options
Etc.

9: Gopher: Introduction
9.1 How Gopher Works: the Gopher Protocol
9.2 What is Gopher+?
9.3 Selection of Server Software
9.4 Variety of Client Software
9.5 The Gopher FAQ

10: Gopher: Compiling the Server
10.1 Getting the Source Code
10.2 Precompilation Configuration
10.3 Compiling the Client and Server
10.4 Installing the Client and Server

11: Gopher: Managing the Server
11.1 Configuring the Server
11.2 Running the Server
11.3 Testing Your Server
11.4 Running Gopherd as Gopherls and Gindexd
11.5 Making Sense of Gopher Logs
Etc.

12: Gopher: Preparing Information
12.1 The Easy Stuff-Text Files and Directions
12.2 Menu Item Naming, Ordering, and Attributes
12.3 Data Architecture
12.4 File Types
12.5 Chroot and Symbolic Links
Etc.

13: Gopher: Linking Services Together
13.1 .Links Files
13.2 Linking to Data on other Gopher Services
13.3 Links to CSO pHONE Book Server
13.4 Links to FTP, WAIS, AND sCRIPTS

14: Gopher: Incorporating Databases
14.1 Using WAIS Indexes
14.2 Using NeXT Indexes
14.3 Serving WAIS and NeXT Indexes with gindexd
14.4 Grep Indexes
14.5 Script Queries
Etc.

15: Gopher: Veronica and Jughead
15.1 Registering your Gopher Server with Veronica
15.2 Avoiding Veronica Registration
15.3 Running a Veronica Server
15.4 Local Links to Veronica Servers Using Maltshop
15.5 Making a Local Veronica Using Jughead

16: Gopher+ Forms and Other New Features
16.1 Gopher+ Forms
16.2 Other Features of Gopher 2.0.16
16.3 New Features in Gopher 2.1

17: Introduction to the World Wide Web
17.1 What is the Web Good for?
17.2 Basic Web Concepts
17.3 World Wide Web Srevers and Browser
17.4 Future Directions

18: Setting Up a Web Server
18.1 Setting Up Basic Services
18.2 Web Server Maintenance
18.3 Ebabling More Features
18.4 Installing Summary

19: Authoring for the Web
19.1 HTML Overview
19.2 Information Design Issues
19.3 HTML Authoring Tools
19.4 Clikable Image Maps

20: Web: Gateways and Forms
20.1 Gateways
20.2 Forms Processing
20.3 WAIS Access from the Web

21: Web: Access Control and Security
21.1 Access Control and User Authentication
21.2 Security

22: Introduction to Email Services
22.1 A Simple File Server: canned_reply
22.2 Ways to Manage Mailing Lists
22.3 What's It Like to Use List Server Software?
22.4 Choosing a Mailing List System: A Feature Comparison
22.5 Email Ethics
Etc.

23: Simple Mailing Lists
23.1 Setting Up the List
23.2 Using a List Members File
23.3 Aliases and your Local Network
23.4 Handling Bounces
23.5 Mail from Local Users
Etc.

24: Automating Mailing Lists with Majordomo
24.1 AN Overview of Majordomo
24.2 Installing Majordomo
24.3 Setting Up Lists
24.4 Day-to-day Administration
24.5 The Majordomo Mailing List

25: The Majordomo List Owner and Moderator
25.1 List Owner Aliases
25.2 Majordomo Commands for List Owners
25.3 Changing a List's Configuration
25.4 Making a Moderated List
25.5 Approving Subscriptions and Moderating

26: Ftpmail
26.1 Ftpmail for Users
26.2 Installing Ftpmail
26.3 Testing your Installation
26.4 Managing Ftpmail
26.5 The Ftpmail Developer's Mailing List

27: Firewalls and Information Services
27.1 What is a Firewall?
27.2 Types of Firewalls
27.3 Hurdles for Information Providers
27.4 Firewall Software
27.5 Locating Servers
Etc.

28: xinetd
28.1 What Xinetd Does
28.2 How to Get xinetd
28.3 Building Xinetd
28.4 Installing Xinetd
28.5 Configuring Xinetd with xinetd.conf
Etc.

29: Legal Issues
29.1 What's Allowed on the Internet
29.2 Intellectual Property Rights and Responsibilities
29.3 Other Publishing Pitfalls

30: Protecting Intellectual Property
30.1 Non-Cryptographic Approaches
30.2 Cryptographic Approaches
30.3 Export Controls on Encryption

Includes: Index: p. 597-630


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