View
By section
As outline
Fully expanded
FAQ sections
Getting Started
Conference Registration
Contact Information
Forums and FAQs
Group Mailing Lists
Updating the Website
Publications
TRUST Newsgroups
TRUST Seminars
TRUST Blogs
Wiki
Application Forms
Questions
TRUST Newsgroups
|
How do I read the TRUST newsgroups? Christopher Brooks, 2 Dec 2005 Last updated: 18 Oct 2007
The news server is at trust.eecs.berkeley.edu
Use your TRUST username and password.
If you are unsure of your name and password, look yourself
up in the
TRUST Directory
You must configure your news reader to use SSL,
which is sometimes referred to as nntps,
which runs on port 563.
Below are instructions on setting up various news readers
Setting up Outlook Express to read news
- In Outlook Express, Tools -> Accounts -> Add -> News.
- Enter your name, hit Next, Enter your email address, hit Next.
- For News (NNTP) Server, enter
trust.eecs.berkeley.edu
- Check the "My news server requires me to log on" box, then hit Next.
- For the Account Name, enter your TRUST Website account name.
For Password, enter your TRUST Website password.
If you are unsure of your name and password, look
yourself up in the
TRUST Directory
Note: you should not check
"Log on using Secure Password Authentication"
- Important: The news server runs in a secure mode, so
you must select on trust.eecs.berkeley.edu in the "Internet Accounts"
window and click on the Properties button, select the Advanced
tab and select "This server requires a secure connection".
TRN is a threaded readnews program that does not support
SSL. To use TRN, you must install a program like stunnel.
These instructions work under Solaris. Windows and
Linux users might have a different experience.
- Download and install trn from
http://sourceforge.net/projects/trn/
We used trn 4.0 test76 released 2001-04-02.
EECS users can also use /usr/sww/bin/trn
- Download and install stunnel from
http://www.stunnel.org/
- Create a
stunnel.conf file:
client = yes
[nntp]
accept = 119
connect = trust.eecs.berkeley.edu:563
- Start up stunnel:
/usr/local/sbin/stunnel stunnel.conf
Note: we start stunnel by hand here. Installing
stunnel is left as an exercise for the reader
- Create
~/.trn/access:
[default]
NNTP Server = localhost
Auth User = Your Trust Website Login
Auth Password = Your TRUST Website Password
Force Auth = yes
Note: since your website password is in this file,
you should make sure it is readable only by you:
chmod 0600 ~/.trn/access
- Start up trn
You should see a message about connecting to localhost.
What happens is that trn connects to locahost on port
119, and stunnel redirects the traffic to trust on port 563.
If you have problems, use a program like snoop to see
what traffic is going to trust.eecs.berkeley.edu.
I used snoop -v -x 0 trust.eecs.berkeley.edu.
Also, make sure that your firewall is not blocking
outgoing traffic to trust.eecs.berkeley.edu |