Search Results

Search found 24933 results on 998 pages for 'arch linux'.

Page 103/998 | < Previous Page | 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110  | Next Page >

  • What do .# file names mean in Linux?

    - by Martin Wiboe
    Hi all, This is probably trivial, but I'm quite to Linux and I was unable to find any info online. In a folder, I can execute the command find . -regex '.*py' and get the following result: ./.#netMHC3.2.py Is this a file in the current directory? What can I do to display its contents? Thank you, Martin

    Read the article

  • SVN explorer for linux

    - by confiq
    Hi Guys, I'm looking for GUI explorer for linux. Like Kafana: http://kafana.org/SvnExplorer/ CLI is fine but i would like to know if there is something GUI for as :) regards

    Read the article

  • Pervasive & Linux

    - by Omega
    I'm interested in quering a Pervasive DB server running on a Windows platform from Linux. Would anyone happen to know if this is possible, what's required and what resources there are for me to read up on it? Thanks!

    Read the article

  • Processor affinity settings for Linux kernel modules?

    - by Stephen Pape
    In Windows, I can set the processor affinity of driver code using KeSetSystemAffinityThread, and check which processor my code is running on using KeGetCurrentProcessorNumber. I'm trying to do something similar in a Linux kernel module, but the only affinity calls I can see are for userland processes. Is there any way to do this, so that I can run assembly code on a specific processor? (i.e. sgdt)

    Read the article

  • how to pass parameters to a linux bash shell

    - by chun
    hi i have a linux bash shell 'myshell' i want it to read two date as parameters, ex: myshell date1 date2 i am a Java programer, but don't know how to write a shell to get this done the rest of the shell is like this sed "s/$date1/$date2/g" wlacd_stat.xml tmp.xml mv tmp.xml wlacd_stat.xml thanks

    Read the article

  • Mint Linux - Downgrade Java to 1.5

    - by Chrisc
    Hello, Currently, I am running Mint Linux (Release 9). I need to downgrade Java from version 1.6 to 1.5, and have been trying to figure out how to go about this. So far, I've had no luck. The package manager doesn't seem to have it. Does anyone have any suggestions? Thanks, - Chris

    Read the article

  • Automatically authenticating windows users on an apache/Linux server

    - by Peter Carrero
    If I wanna authenticate windows accounts to AD when a user browses to an apache-running site on a Linux server, here are the usual suspects:   * mod_ntlm (which I used in a distant past) - last update on 2003 * mod_auth_ntlm_winbind - last update on 04/2007 * mod_auth_kerb - last update on 12/2008 No luck getting any of those to work with a recent, fully patched, windows 2000 AD server. Do you have any clues as to a recipe that does work?  -Peter -- UPDATE my current build environment is this: OS: Ubuntu Lucid Apache 2.2.14 (from repos) the auth modules I recompiled from source.

    Read the article

  • Linux: shell builtin string matching

    - by gmatt
    I am trying to become more familiar with using the builtin string matching stuff available in shells in linux. I came across this guys posting, and he showed an example a="abc|def" echo ${a#*|} # will yield "def" echo ${a%|*} # will yield "abc" I tried it out and it does what its advertised to do, but I don't understand what the $,{},#,*,| are doing, I tried looking for some reference online or in the manuals but I couldn't find anything. Can anyone explain to me what's going on here?

    Read the article

  • Developing installation packages in Linux

    - by Alex Farber
    I need information about making installation packages for Linux. I want to make simple package, containing executable + shared libraries, and SDK package for programmers, with executables and h-files. How can this be done? Articles, books, samples - everything that can help to learn this issue.

    Read the article

  • Linux distro structure

    - by A.Rashad
    It seems either I am not looking in the right places or documentation is scarce. Where to find an illustration of a typical Linux distro? Something to say that this is a kernel, these are the components, this is X11, GNOME, these are the components, etc. I have been deciphering documents assuming you know what all these things are, and it seems I am missing something.

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110  | Next Page >