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  • Javascript and Twitter API rate limitation? (Changing variable values in a loop)

    - by Pablo
    Hello, I have adapted an script from an example of http://github.com/remy/twitterlib. It´s a script that makes one query each 10 seconds to my Twitter timeline, to get only the messages that begin with a musical notation. It´s already working, but I don´t know it is the better way to do this... The Twitter API has a rate limit of 150 IP access per hour (queries from the same user). At this time, my Twitter API is blocked at 25 minutes because the 10 seconds frecuency between posts. If I set up a frecuency of 25 seconds between post, I am below the rate limit per hour, but the first 10 posts are shown so slowly. I think this way I can guarantee to be below the Twitter API rate limit and show the first 10 posts at normal speed: For the first 10 posts, I would like to set a frecuency of 5 seconds between queries. For the rest of the posts, I would like to set a frecuency of 25 seconds between queries. I think if making somewhere in the code a loop with the previous sentences, setting the "frecuency" value from 5000 to 25000 after the 10th query (or after 50 seconds, it´s the same), that´s it... Can you help me on modify this code below to make it work? Thank you in advance. var Queue = function (delay, callback) { var q = [], timer = null, processed = {}, empty = null, ignoreRT = twitterlib.filter.format('-"RT @"'); function process() { var item = null; if (q.length) { callback(q.shift()); } else { this.stop(); setTimeout(empty, 5000); } return this; } return { push: function (item) { var green = [], i; if (!(item instanceof Array)) { item = [item]; } if (timer == null && q.length == 0) { this.start(); } for (i = 0; i < item.length; i++) { if (!processed[item[i].id] && twitterlib.filter.match(item[i], ignoreRT)) { processed[item[i].id] = true; q.push(item[i]); } } q = q.sort(function (a, b) { return a.id > b.id; }); return this; }, start: function () { if (timer == null) { timer = setInterval(process, delay); } return this; }, stop: function () { clearInterval(timer); timer = null; return this; }, empty: function (fn) { empty = fn; return this; }, q: q, next: process }; }; $.extend($.expr[':'], { below: function (a, i, m) { var y = m[3]; return $(a).offset().top y; } }); function renderTweet(data) { var html = ''; html += ''; html += twitterlib.ify.clean(data.text); html += ''; since_id = data.id; return html; } function passToQueue(data) { if (data.length) { twitterQueue.push(data.reverse()); } } var frecuency = 10000; // The lapse between each new Queue var since_id = 1; var run = function () { twitterlib .timeline('twitteruser', { filter : "'?'", limit: 10 }, passToQueue) }; var twitterQueue = new Queue(frecuency, function (item) { var tweet = $(renderTweet(item)); var tweetClone = tweet.clone().hide().css({ visibility: 'hidden' }).prependTo('#tweets').slideDown(1000); tweet.css({ top: -200, position: 'absolute' }).prependTo('#tweets').animate({ top: 0 }, 1000, function () { tweetClone.css({ visibility: 'visible' }); $(this).remove(); }); $('#tweets p:below(' + window.innerHeight + ')').remove(); }).empty(run); run();

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  • Will this increase my Virtual private Server failing rate ?

    - by Spencer Lim
    Will this increase my Virtual private Server failing rate if i :- install Microsoft Window Server 2008 Enterprise install SQL server enterprise 2008 install IIS 7.5 install ASP.Net Mvc 2 install Microsoft Exchange << should live inside MWS2008 ? or standalone without OS? install Team foundation server << should live inside MWS2008 ? or standalone without OS? on one mini VPS with specification of DELL Poweredge R710 shared plan DDR3 ECC RAMs 16GB and -- 1GB for this VPS using DELL PERC 6i raid controller (this thing alone about 1.5k-2k) and the SAS HDD (15K RPM) (146GB) -- 33GB to this VPS each hdd is freaking fast over 300MB read / write possible with proper tuning the motherboard is a DELL and it has twin redundant PSU (870watt 85%eff) its running on Intel Xeon 5502 (Quad Core) x2 so about 8 physical proc (fairly share) is there any ruler to measure for this about one VPS can only install what what what service ? because of my resource is limited =.@ may i know if it is install in this way,maybe it seem like defeat the way of "VPS"... what will happen ? or any guideline on this issue (fully configuring the window server 2008 R2) ? Thx for reply

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  • How can I transfer files to a Kindle Fire with a Micro-USB cable?

    - by Jeff
    I'm running Ubuntu 11.10, and when I connect my Kindle Fire to my computer via micro usb, it is not recognized automatically. Other usb devices, such as my ipod and digital camera, are recognized just fine. It does not appear to be a usb power issue, since the Kindle Fire wakes up from sleeping when it is plugged in. I never get the message on the Kindle telling me it is ready to accept files from the computer, though. Here are the last 15 lines of dmesg after plugging the kindle in: jeff@prime:~$ dmesg | tail -n 15 [45918.269671] ieee80211 phy0: wl_ops_bss_info_changed: arp filtering: enabled true, count 1 (implement) [45929.072149] wlan0: no IPv6 routers present [46743.224217] usb 1-1: new high speed USB device number 5 using ehci_hcd [46743.364623] scsi8 : usb-storage 1-1:1.0 [46744.366102] scsi 8:0:0:0: Direct-Access Amazon Kindle 0001 PQ: 0 ANSI: 2 [46744.366356] scsi: killing requests for dead queue [46744.372494] scsi: killing requests for dead queue [46744.384510] scsi: killing requests for dead queue [46744.392348] scsi: killing requests for dead queue [46744.392731] scsi: killing requests for dead queue [46744.396853] scsi: killing requests for dead queue [46744.397214] scsi: killing requests for dead queue [46744.400795] scsi: killing requests for dead queue [46744.401589] sd 8:0:0:0: Attached scsi generic sg2 type 0 [46744.407520] sd 8:0:0:0: [sdb] Attached SCSI removable disk And here are my mounted filesystems: jeff@prime:~$ df Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on /dev/sda1 298594984 174663712 108763480 62% / udev 1407684 4 1407680 1% /dev tmpfs 566924 896 566028 1% /run none 5120 0 5120 0% /run/lock none 1417308 300 1417008 1% /run/shm /home/jeff/.Private 298594984 174663712 108763480 62% /home/jeff I should note that, since I got Dropbox working on my Kindle, the usb is no longer strictly necessary, but as a matter of principle I'd love to get it working.

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  • How to configure Xchat and IRC server to transfer files?

    - by takeshin
    How do I configure Xchat to send files? My setup: hardware router: xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx example.com | Ubuntu Server with IRC server: 192.168.1.2 Local machines: 192.168.1.x My aim is to allow to send files between the local machines. By now, they are able to talk on the local IRC channel. which ports do I need to open on the router? what do I need to configure on the server? how to configure XChat on the clients? how to troubleshoot/debug the problems?

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  • Converting LINQ to Twitter to Twitter API v1.1

    - by Joe Mayo
    Twitter recently updated their API to v1.1 (Current status: API v1.1). Naturally, LINQ to Twitter  needed to be updated too. This blog post outlines the changes made to LINQ to Twitter during this conversion and highlights important features that LINQ to Twitter developers will want to know. Overall Impact Generally speaking, Twitter API v1.1 is semantically very much the same as it’s predecessor. The base URL changed and so did a few resource segments, but the resources themselves are still intact. The good news is that LINQ to Twitter has always shielded the developer from this plumbing, so the entities, types, and filters didn’t change much at all.  The following sections describe what did  change. Authentication In Twitter API v1.0 authentication was not required for some resources, such as user timelines and search. However, that’s all changed because *all* queries must be authenticated in Twitter API v1.1. LINQ to Twitter has various types of authorizers you can use, supporting whatever OAuth options are available via Twitter.  You can see the LINQ to Twitter documentation, Securing Your Applications, for more info on OAuth support. The New Search One of the larger changes to the API was Search. To be more specific, the Search entity now contains a List<Status>, named Statuses, to hold results.  Additionally, any meta-data associated with the search is now in a property named SearchMetaData. The change to the Search entity and responses is the big change, but the good news is that your Search query syntax doesn’t change. Different Rate Limits The issue of rate limits itself is contentious, but this discussion is focused on the coding experience and I’ll leave the politics to those who prefer to engage in that activity. What’s important here is that both headers and resources have changed. You should review Twitter’s Rate Limit documentation to understand what the changes mean.  A quick explanation is that rate limits are applied individually to each resource in 15 minute time intervals. In LINQ to Twitter these changes surface on the Help entity, via HelpType.RateLimits. The RateLimits query has a Resources filter where you can specify a comma-separated list of categories to return rate limit info for.  The results materialize in the RateLimits dictionary, keyed on category. The Help entity also has a RateLimitsAuthorizationContext, holding the Access Token for the user performing queries – and to whom the rate limits apply. In addition to the new RateLimits query, there are new RateLimit headers that appear in the query response, whose HTTP header name is of the form X-Rate-Limit… which is different from the previous header name. LINQ to Twitter surfaces these headers via the existing properties of the TwitterContext instance. For anyone who retrieved rate limit information via the Headers property of TwitterContext, you should be aware of the new header names.  I haven’t done anything with Feature rate limit properties yet, but they appear to no longer be available – this will require more follow-up. Error Handling Twitter API v1.1 has a new format for Error Codes & Responses. LINQ to Twitter wraps these messages in the TwitterQueryException, which has been updated appropriately. The Message property of TwitterQueryException now reflects the Twitter error message, when available. There’s also a new ErrorCode that’s populated with the message error code. Parameters Most parameters stayed the same, but one of interest is Include Entities (different from LINQ to Twitter data object entities). Entities are metadata hanging off tweets, that provide start/end position in the tweet and other information for mentions, urls, hash tags, and media. Entities used to not be included unless you specified you wanted them. Now, in v1.1, entities are included by default for all APIs that return a Status.  If you were always setting IncludeEntities to true, then you won’t see a change. However, be aware that you’ll now be receiving additional data in your response from Twitter, which will explain a sudden increase in bandwidth utilization. This might or might not  matter to you  depending on the requirements of your application, but you should be aware of it. Everything Else There might be small changes here and there that I haven’t mentioned, but these were the ones you should be most aware of.  Streams didn’t change, but Twitter will be deprecating username/password authentication on public streams, in favor of OAuth, so you’ll be seeing me make that change some time in the future.  Also, Twitter will continue to evolve the API and you can expect that LINQ to Twitter will change accordingly. Summary The big changes to Twitter API were Authentication, Search, Rate Limits, and Error Handling. All API calls must be authenticated. You’ll need to change your code to read Search results differently, but the query is much the same as you use now. There’s a new RateLimits API, one of the Help queries.  Also, the new error messages are integrated into TwitterQueryException. Besides these changes, I expect  most others to be small or affect a smaller percentage of developers.  You can get the latest version of LINQ to Twitter from NuGet or visit the LINQ to Twitter download page at CodePlex.com.   @JoeMayo

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  • How do I connect a Nexus 7 to transfer files?

    - by gotqn
    I want to move some files from my PC to Nexus 7. The tablet is connected to my PC's USB port and it is successfully charging. Unfortunately, the PC is not detecting the devices - what I expected is to be shown the Nexus 7 tablet as external devices (like my USB flash memory). As the tablet is connected to the my home internet network, I have checked if it will appear in the "Networks" section but it does not. I am using Ubuntu 12.4 LTS. Is there a easy way to connect the devices to my PC and move some information between them?

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  • How to transfer a windows disk, to another partition? (details within)

    - by TardisGuy
    So i have a new SSD... and its like... SOOO fast (but tiny, 128Gig). But it seems to be WAY faster in linux. (bonus: whats the best Filesystem?) Now, am i correct in assuming that if I Gparted copy paste the {Boot MSreserved_][__NTFS___] in to (1st Empty space, same partition) and it will be bootable right? Oh and... how do I disable "Journaling" i read that I should do that. Feel free to link any additional mods/apts/hacks/tweaks

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  • Moving two objects proportionally

    - by SSL
    I'm trying to move two objects away from each other at a proportional distance, but on different scales. I'm not quite sure how to do this. Object A can go from position 0.1 to 1. Object B has no limits. If object B is decreasing, then Object A should be decreasing at rate R. Likewise, if Object B is increasing, then Object A increases at rate R. How can I tie these two Object positions together so that in an update loop, they automatically update their positions? I tried using: ObjA.Pos += 0.001f * ObjB.VelocityY; //0.001f is the rate This works but there's an error each time it runs. ObjA starts off at its max position 1 but then the next time it will stop at 0.97, 0.94, 0.91 etc.. This is due to the 0.001f rate I put in. Is there a way to control the rate, yet not end up with the rounding error?

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  • are projects with high developer turn over rate really a bad thing?

    - by John
    I've inherited a lot of web projects that experienced high developer turn over rates. Sometimes these web projects are a horrible patchwork of band aid solutions. Other times they can be somewhat maintainable mozaics of half-done features each built with a different architectural style. Everytime I inherit these projects, I wish the previous developers could explain to me why things got so bad. What puzzles me is the reaction of the owners (either a manager, a middle man company, or a client). They seem to think, "Well, if you leave, I'll just find another developer." Or they think, "Oh, it costs that much money to refactor the system? I know another developer who can do it at half the price. I'll hire him if I can't afford you." I'm guessing that the high developer turn over rate is related to the owner's mentality of "If you think it's a bad idea to build this, I'll just find another (possibly cheaper) developer to do what I want". For the owners, the approach seems to work because their business is thriving. Unfortunately, it's no fun for the developers that go AWOL 3-4 months after working with poor code, strict timelines, and little feedback. So my question is the following: Are the following symptoms of a project really such a bad thing for business? high developer turn over rate poorly built technology - often a patchwork of different and inappropriately used architectural styles owners without a clear roadmap for their web project, and they request features on a whim I've seen numerous businesses prosper while experiencing the symptoms above. So as a programmer, even though my instincts tell me the above points are terrible, I'm forced to take a step back and ask, "are things really that bad in the grand scheme of things?" If not, I will re-evaluate my approach to these projects.

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  • ant ftp doesn't download files in subdirectories

    - by Kristof Neirynck
    Hello, I'm trying to download files in subdirectories from an ftp server with ant. The exact set of files is known. Some of them are in subdirectories. Ant only seems to download the ones in the root directory. It does work if I download all files without listing them. The first ftp action should do the exact same thing as the second. Instead it complains about "Hidden files" and seems to prefix the paths with "\\". Does anyone know what's wrong here? Is this a bug in commons-net? build.xml <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <project name="example" default="example" basedir="."> <taskdef name="ftp" classname="org.apache.tools.ant.taskdefs.optional.net.FTP" /> <target name="example"> <!-- 2 files retrieved --> <ftp action="get" verbose="true" server="localhost" userid="example" password="example"> <fileset dir="downloads" casesensitive="false" includes="root1.txt,root2.txt,a/a.txt,a/b/ab.txt,c/c.txt" /> </ftp> <!-- 5 files retrieved --> <ftp action="get" verbose="true" server="localhost" userid="example" password="example"> <fileset dir="downloads" casesensitive="false" includes="**/*" /> </ftp> </target> </project> run_ant.bat @ECHO OFF PUSHD %~dp0 SET CLASSPATH= SET ANT_HOME=C:\apache-ant-1.8.0 SET ant=%ANT_HOME%\bin\ant.bat SET antoptions=-nouserlib -noclasspath -d SET ftpjars=^ -lib lib\jakarta-oro-2.0.8.jar ^ -lib lib\commons-net-2.0.jar CALL %ant% %antoptions% %ftpjars% > output.txt POPD output.txt Unable to locate tools.jar. Expected to find it in C:\PROGRA~1\Java\jre6\lib\tools.jar Apache Ant version 1.8.0 compiled on February 1 2010 Trying the default build file: build.xml Buildfile: G:\ftp\build.xml Adding reference: ant.PropertyHelper Detected Java version: 1.6 in: C:\PROGRA~1\Java\jre6 Detected OS: Windows 7 Adding reference: ant.ComponentHelper Setting ro project property: ant.file -> G:\ftp\build.xml Setting ro project property: ant.file.type -> file Adding reference: ant.projectHelper Adding reference: ant.parsing.context Adding reference: ant.targets parsing buildfile G:\ftp\build.xml with URI = file:/G:/ftp/build.xml Setting ro project property: ant.project.name -> example Adding reference: example Setting ro project property: ant.project.default-target -> example Setting ro project property: ant.file.example -> G:\ftp\build.xml Setting ro project property: ant.file.type.example -> file Project base dir set to: G:\ftp +Target: +Target: example Adding reference: ant.LocalProperties parsing buildfile jar:file:/C:/apache-ant-1.8.0/lib/ant.jar!/org/apache/tools/ant/antlib.xml with URI = jar:file:/C:/apache-ant-1.8.0/lib/ant.jar!/org/apache/tools/ant/antlib.xml from a zip file Class org.apache.tools.ant.taskdefs.optional.net.FTP loaded from parent loader (parentFirst) Setting ro project property: ant.project.invoked-targets -> example Attempting to create object of type org.apache.tools.ant.helper.DefaultExecutor Adding reference: ant.executor Build sequence for target(s) `example' is [example] Complete build sequence is [example, ] example: [ftp] Opening FTP connection to localhost [ftp] connected [ftp] logging in to FTP server [ftp] login succeeded [ftp] getting files fileset: Setup scanner in dir G:\ftp\downloads with patternSet{ includes: [root1.txt, root2.txt, a/a.txt, a/b/ab.txt] excludes: [] } will try to cd to A where a directory called a exists testing case sensitivity, attempting to cd to A remote system is case sensitive : false [ftp] Hidden file \\a\b\ assumed to not be a symlink. filelist map used in listing files filelist map used in listing files [ftp] Hidden file \\a\b\ assumed to not be a symlink. filelist map used in listing files filelist map used in listing files filelist map used in listing files filelist map used in listing files filelist map used in listing files [ftp] Hidden file \\a\a.txt assumed to not be a symlink. filelist map used in listing files [ftp] Hidden file \\a\a.txt assumed to not be a symlink. filelist map used in listing files filelist map used in listing files filelist map used in listing files [ftp] transferring root1.txt to G:\ftp\downloads\root1.txt [ftp] File G:\ftp\downloads\root1.txt copied from localhost [ftp] transferring root2.txt to G:\ftp\downloads\root2.txt [ftp] File G:\ftp\downloads\root2.txt copied from localhost [ftp] 2 files retrieved [ftp] disconnecting [ftp] Opening FTP connection to localhost [ftp] connected [ftp] logging in to FTP server [ftp] login succeeded [ftp] getting files fileset: Setup scanner in dir G:\ftp\downloads with patternSet{ includes: [**/*] excludes: [] } will try to cd to A where a directory called a exists testing case sensitivity, attempting to cd to A remote system is case sensitive : false [ftp] transferring a\a.txt to G:\ftp\downloads\a\a.txt [ftp] File G:\ftp\downloads\a\a.txt copied from localhost [ftp] transferring a\b\ab.txt to G:\ftp\downloads\a\b\ab.txt [ftp] File G:\ftp\downloads\a\b\ab.txt copied from localhost [ftp] transferring c\c.txt to G:\ftp\downloads\c\c.txt [ftp] File G:\ftp\downloads\c\c.txt copied from localhost [ftp] transferring root1.txt to G:\ftp\downloads\root1.txt [ftp] File G:\ftp\downloads\root1.txt copied from localhost [ftp] transferring root2.txt to G:\ftp\downloads\root2.txt [ftp] File G:\ftp\downloads\root2.txt copied from localhost [ftp] 5 files retrieved [ftp] disconnecting BUILD SUCCESSFUL Total time: 0 seconds server log (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - (not logged in) (127.0.0.1)> Connected, sending welcome message... (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - (not logged in) (127.0.0.1)> 220-FileZilla Server version 0.9.34 beta (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - (not logged in) (127.0.0.1)> 220-written by Tim Kosse ([email protected]) (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - (not logged in) (127.0.0.1)> 220 Please visit http://sourceforge.net/projects/filezilla/ (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - (not logged in) (127.0.0.1)> USER example (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - (not logged in) (127.0.0.1)> 331 Password required for example (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - (not logged in) (127.0.0.1)> PASS ******* (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 230 Logged on (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> TYPE I (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 Type set to I (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> SYST (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 215 UNIX emulated by FileZilla (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PORT 127,0,0,1,207,232 (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 Port command successful (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> LIST (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 150 Opening data channel for directory list. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 226 Transfer OK (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD A (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/A" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD a (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/a" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD b (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/a/b" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD //a/b (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/a/b" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/a/b" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PORT 127,0,0,1,207,233 (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 Port command successful (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> LIST (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 150 Opening data channel for directory list. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 226 Transfer OK (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PORT 127,0,0,1,207,234 (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 Port command successful (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> LIST (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 150 Opening data channel for directory list. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 226 Transfer OK (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD //\\a\b\ (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/a/b" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/a/b" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD //\\a\b\ (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/a/b" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/a/b" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD a (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/a" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD //a (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/a" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/a" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PORT 127,0,0,1,207,235 (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 Port command successful (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> LIST (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 150 Opening data channel for directory list. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 226 Transfer OK (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PORT 127,0,0,1,207,236 (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 Port command successful (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> RETR root1.txt (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 150 Opening data channel for file transfer. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 226 Transfer OK (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PORT 127,0,0,1,207,237 (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 Port command successful (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> RETR root2.txt (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 150 Opening data channel for file transfer. (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 226 Transfer OK (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> QUIT (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 221 Goodbye (000153) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> disconnected. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - (not logged in) (127.0.0.1)> Connected, sending welcome message... (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - (not logged in) (127.0.0.1)> 220-FileZilla Server version 0.9.34 beta (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - (not logged in) (127.0.0.1)> 220-written by Tim Kosse ([email protected]) (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - (not logged in) (127.0.0.1)> 220 Please visit http://sourceforge.net/projects/filezilla/ (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - (not logged in) (127.0.0.1)> USER example (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - (not logged in) (127.0.0.1)> 331 Password required for example (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - (not logged in) (127.0.0.1)> PASS ******* (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 230 Logged on (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> TYPE I (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 Type set to I (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/" is current directory. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> SYST (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 215 UNIX emulated by FileZilla (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PORT 127,0,0,1,207,239 (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 Port command successful (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> LIST (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 150 Opening data channel for directory list. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 226 Transfer OK (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/" is current directory. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD A (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/A" is current directory. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/" is current directory. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PWD (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 257 "/" is current directory. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> PORT 127,0,0,1,207,240 (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 Port command successful (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> LIST (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 150 Opening data channel for directory list. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:12 - example (127.0.0.1)> 226 Transfer OK (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD a (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/a" is current directory. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> PORT 127,0,0,1,207,241 (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 Port command successful (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> LIST (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 150 Opening data channel for directory list. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 226 Transfer OK (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD //a/ (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/a" is current directory. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD b (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/a/b" is current directory. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> PORT 127,0,0,1,207,242 (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 Port command successful (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> LIST (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 150 Opening data channel for directory list. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 226 Transfer OK (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> CDUP (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 CDUP successful. "/a" is current directory. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> CDUP (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 CDUP successful. "/" is current directory. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD c (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/c" is current directory. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> PORT 127,0,0,1,207,243 (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 Port command successful (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> LIST (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 150 Opening data channel for directory list. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 226 Transfer OK (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> CDUP (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 CDUP successful. "/" is current directory. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> CDUP (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 CDUP successful. "/" is current directory. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> CWD / (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 250 CWD successful. "/" is current directory. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> PORT 127,0,0,1,207,244 (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 Port command successful (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> RETR a/a.txt (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 150 Opening data channel for file transfer. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 226 Transfer OK (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> PORT 127,0,0,1,207,245 (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 Port command successful (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> RETR a/b/ab.txt (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 150 Opening data channel for file transfer. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 226 Transfer OK (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> PORT 127,0,0,1,207,246 (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 Port command successful (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> RETR c/c.txt (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 150 Opening data channel for file transfer. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 226 Transfer OK (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> PORT 127,0,0,1,207,247 (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 Port command successful (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> RETR root1.txt (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 150 Opening data channel for file transfer. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 226 Transfer OK (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> PORT 127,0,0,1,207,248 (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 200 Port command successful (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> RETR root2.txt (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 150 Opening data channel for file transfer. (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 226 Transfer OK (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> QUIT (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> 221 Goodbye (000154) 7/05/2010 19:46:13 - example (127.0.0.1)> disconnected.

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  • How to rate-limit concurrent sessions with nginx or haproxy?

    - by bantic
    I'm currently using nginx to reverse-proxy requests from web clients that are doing long-polling to an upstream. Since we're doing long polling (as opposed to websockets), when a client connects it will make multiple http connections to the server in serial, re-establishing a connection every time the server sends it some data (or timing out and re-establishing if the server has nothing to say for 10 seconds). What I'd like to do is limit the number of concurrent web clients. Since the clients are constantly making new HTTP requests instead of keeping a single request open, it's a little tricky to count the total number of web clients (because it's not the same as total number of concurrently connected http clients). The method I've come up with is to track http requests by the originating IP address, and store the IP address somewhere with a TTL of 20 seconds. If a request comes in whose IP isn't recognized, then we check the total number of unexpired stored IP addresses; if that's less than the maximum then we allow this request through. And if a request comes in with an IP address that we can find in the look-up table that hasn't yet expired, then it is allowed through as well. All requests that are allowed through have their IPs added to the table (if not there before) and the TTL refreshed to 20 seconds again. I had actually whipped something together that worked correctly this way using nginx along with the Redis 2.0 Nginx Module (and the nginx lua module to simplify the conditional branching), using redis to store my IP addresses with a TTL (the SETEX command), and checking the table size with the DBSIZE command. This worked but the performance was horrible. nginx and redis ended up using lots of cpu and the machine could only handle a very small number of concurrent requests. The new stick-table and tracking counters that were added to Haproxy in version 1.5 (via a commission from serverfault) seem like they might be ideal to implement exactly this sort of rate limiting, because the stick-table can track IP addresses and automatically expire entries. However, I don't see an easy way to get a total count of the unexpired entries in the stick table, which would be necessary to know the number of connected web clients. I'm curious if anyone has any suggestions, for nginx or haproxy or even for something else not mentioned here that I haven't thought of yet.

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  • Why would HTTP transfer via wget be faster than lftp/pget?

    - by jondahl
    I'm building software that needs to do massive amounts of file transfer via both HTTP and FTP. Often times, I get faster HTTP download with a multi-connection download accelerator like axel or lftp with pget. In some cases, I've seen 2x-3x faster file transfer using something like: axel http://example.com/somefile or lftp -e 'pget -n 5 http://example.com/somefile;quit' vs. just using wget: wget http://example.com/somefile But other times, wget is significantly faster than lftp. Strangly, this is even true even when I do lftp with get, like so: lftp -e 'pget -n 1 http://example.com/somefile;quit' I understand that downloading a file via multiple connections won't always result in a speedup, depending on how bandwidth is constrained. But: why would it be slower? Especially when calling lftp/pget with -n 1?

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  • What is the largest file size we can transfer through air application?

    - by Naveen kumar
    Hi all, I'm trying to transfer large file(1Gb+) using UDP(in packets) through air application. I'm transfering byteArray by taking chunks of packets from FileStream. But its giving 'Error #1000: The system is out of memory' at sender side after certain number of packets sent and by this time the downloaded file size at server side is 256 MB. I tried with other files but after downloading 256MB, sender is giving the same error. Is it because of the file stream size? How can I solve this problem so that I can transfer files of GB size.

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  • How to copy files from local machine to server using SSH file transfer protocol?

    - by morpheous
    I have an Ubuntu 9.10 desktop machine which I use locally. I am setting up a server on a hosting provider. The server will run a very minimal version of Ubuntu server LTS (only LAMP and email server no GUI). I want to write a script (scheduled as a cron job) that will allow me to upload local files onto the server. I want to use [SFTP][1], for security reasons. I am new to shell scripting - but I guess shell scripting is the way to do this (unless I am mistaken). Can anyone provide me with the initial pointers on how to go about writing such a script, in order to SECURELY upload local files to the server? Ideally, I would like to compress the files before the transfer (to save on bandwidth) [1]: http://SSH file transfer protocol

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  • Can I use a wireless-N laptop as an NAS for seamless and fast data transfer and access?

    - by techaddict
    I have a nice spare laptop (Dell 15R, one year old) that I was wondering if I could use as an NAS. The laptop has an E-Sata port, and I was wondering if I could set it up and plug in a few hard drives permanently (meaning I won't be unplugging it) to the eSata port and use the laptop as a wireless NAS to seamlessly and wirelessly store and access my files. To see more about what I'm looking for in the NAS to see if it's possible to use my other laptop for this purpose, see my other question: Is it possible to have a wireless in-house NAS with wireless data transfer rates of equivalent to SATA speeds? Alternatively, would it be better to sell the laptop and buy a dedicated NAS?

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  • How can I transfer a blog hosted on Community Server to WordPress?

    - by Martin Plante
    I have a blog hosted on Community Server 2.1 (old version). I want to transfer it to WordPress (.com). I have tried exporting it to the BlogML format, but it failed with an exception. I saved a copy of the full RSS feed, by setting the # of posts to show to a huge number, save, then lower it back. I have all images and do not mind having to upload and rename them one by one. There must be a way to read that RSS file and either directly import it into WordPress, or for a more complicated path, transform it with the proper XSLT into the BlogML (or other) format, to import it into WordPress?

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  • How to change Content-Transfer-Encoding for email attachments?

    - by user1837811
    I have signed up for http://eudyptula-challenge.org/ challenge and this accepts email attachments only in simple text format. The files without extension (and also .zip file) are transferred with base64 encoding. I want to send email attachment in simple text. This is how my makefile is transferred :- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; name="Makefile" Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64 Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="Makefile" b2JqLW0gKz0gaGVsbG8yLm8KCmFsbDoKCW1ha2UgLUMgL2xpYi9tb2R1bGVzLyQoc2hlbGwg dW5hbWUgLXIpL2J1aWxkIE09JChQV0QpIG1vZHVsZXMKCmNsZWFuOgoJbWFrZSAtQyAvbGli L21vZHVsZXMvJChzaGVsbCB1bmFtZSAtcikvYnVpbGQgTT0kKFBXRCkgY2xlYW4KCg== How to configure Thunderbird to send a attachment files in as simple text?? Or I should any other email server or tool to send email attachments in simple text??

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  • Ubuntu how to FTP transfer files to folder /var/www?

    - by jc.yin
    I'm new to linux and I've set up a web server with Ubuntu Desktop edition so I can practice with the GUI a bit before transitioning to Ubuntu Server. I've already set up a LAMP stack as well as FTP. Now I just need to know how to transfer my web files to the /var/www folder in Ubuntu. Previously I've worked on Mac OS and there's a central server for all the web files where I can FTP to. Now after I've managed to connect via FTP to the Ubuntu server, I see all the folders such as Desktop, Downloads, Documents etc but no web folder. Anyone able to help me understand how do I FTP to the /var/www folder in Ubuntu? Thanks

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  • Why does't rsync use delta-transfer for local files ?

    - by o_O Tync
    I have a big iso image which is currently being downloaded by a torrent client with space-reservation turned on: that means, file size is not changing while some chunks in in (4 Mib) are constantly changing because of a download. At 90% download I do the initial rsync to save time later: $ rsync -Ph DVD.iso /some/target/ sending incremental file list DVD.iso 2.60G 100% 40.23MB/s 0:01:01 (xfer#1, to-check=0/1) sent 2.60G bytes received 73 bytes 34.59M bytes/sec total size is 2.60G speedup is 1.00 Then, when the file's fully downloaded, I rsync again: total size is 2.60G speedup is 1.00 Speedup=1 says delta-transfer was not used, although 90% of the file has not changed. Why?!

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  • BackupPC - are full backups really full when using rsync?

    - by mhost
    Hi, When you run a full backup in backuppc and you use rsync as the transfer method, does it actually transfer the full backup source? Or does it only transfer the changes? The docs seem to imply that it would transfer the full thing and only an incremental would transfer the changes. If this is the case, could I simply use incrementals only, and never do a full backup? The way the backups are stored (using hard links to make each incremental appear full), I would think that this would be the best method. Incrementals will only transfer the changes, yet each backup will appear full. Thanks.

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  • Bsplayer - load audio tracks from external files

    - by torran
    I have a movie file: Video ID : 1 Format : AVC Format/Info : Advanced Video Codec Format profile : [email protected] Format settings, CABAC : Yes Format settings, ReFrames : 5 frames Muxing mode : Container [email protected] Codec ID : V_MPEG4/ISO/AVC Duration : 54mn 13s Bit rate : 3 380 Kbps Nominal bit rate : 3 459 Kbps Width : 1 280 pixels Height : 720 pixels Display aspect ratio : 16:9 Frame rate : 23.976 fps Resolution : 8 bits Colorimetry : 4:2:0 Scan type : Progressive Bits/(Pixel*Frame) : 0.153 Stream size : 1.28 GiB (88%) Writing library : x264 core 88 r1471 1144615 Audio ID : 2 Format : AC-3 Format/Info : Audio Coding 3 Codec ID : A_AC3 Duration : 54mn 16s Bit rate mode : Constant Bit rate : 384 Kbps Channel(s) : 6 channels Channel positions : Front: L C R, Side: L R, LFE Sampling rate : 48.0 KHz Stream size : 149 MiB (10%) and additional audio files in same folder: .mp3 and .ac3. How can I load them with bsplayer? Right click-audio-audio streams is empty. If i open the movie with media players classic I can switch audio files.

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  • How to know which protocol is used in data transfer and inspect that data?

    - by user37880
    I've a .net application for windows. This application transfers a lot of data to and from a particular server on a fix port no 8888. I tried 'Tcpview' but couldn't figure out anything useful. I only figured that it uses 'tcp' connection. Is there a way to know which protocol is used for data transfer (I think port no 8888 is not specific port so not helpful)? How exactly my machine makes connection to this server? Is it telnet/http etc or what? How can I inspect the actual data which is being transferred? If data is encrypted, is it possible to know encryption method on client side (without reverse engineering)? Thanks.

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  • Opening Skype, Opera, OpenOffice logs me off

    - by anjanesh
    Whats common among Skype, Opera, OpenOffice in Ubuntu ? Whenever I open these applications I get logged off and shows back me the login screen. This started happening since the 10.10 upgrade. Forgot to mention : Yes, its x64.Each time I open these applications, the UI shows and then crashes. I started each app & logged the last few lines of /var/log/syslog after each crash. Looks like something to do with sound drivers ? Opera :Jan 8 09:33:20 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11532]: pid.c: Daemon already running. Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: snd_pcm_avail_delay() returned strange values: delay 0 is less than avail 8. Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: Most likely this is a bug in the ALSA driver 'snd_hda_intel'. Please report this issue to the ALSA developers. Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: snd_pcm_dump(): Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: Soft volume PCM Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: Control: PCM Playback Volume Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: min_dB: -51 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: max_dB: 0 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: resolution: 256 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: Its setup is: Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: stream : CAPTURE Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: access : MMAP_INTERLEAVED Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: format : S16_LE Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: subformat : STD Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: channels : 2 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: rate : 44100 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: exact rate : 44100 (44100/1) Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: msbits : 16 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: buffer_size : 88192 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: period_size : 44096 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: period_time : 999909 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: tstamp_mode : ENABLE Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: period_step : 1 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: avail_min : 87310 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: period_event : 0 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: start_threshold : -1 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: stop_threshold : 6205960286516543488 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: silence_threshold: 0 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: silence_size : 0 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: boundary : 6205960286516543488 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: Slave: Hardware PCM card 0 'HDA Intel' device 0 subdevice 0 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: Its setup is: Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: stream : CAPTURE Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: access : MMAP_INTERLEAVED Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: format : S16_LE Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: subformat : STD Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: channels : 2 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: rate : 44100 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: exact rate : 44100 (44100/1) Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: msbits : 16 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: buffer_size : 88192 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: period_size : 44096 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: period_time : 999909 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: tstamp_mode : ENABLE Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: period_step : 1 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: avail_min : 87310 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: period_event : 0 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: start_threshold : -1 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: stop_threshold : 6205960286516543488 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: silence_threshold: 0 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: silence_size : 0 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: boundary : 6205960286516543488 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: appl_ptr : 87320 Jan 8 09:33:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[11429]: alsa-util.c: hw_ptr : 87320 Jan 8 09:33:22 al-ubuntu kernel: [ 4962.078306] opera[11036]: segfault at 261 ip 0000000000000261 sp 00007fffed7cd9a8 error 14 in opera[400000+122b000] anjanesh@al-ubuntu:~$ SkypeJan 8 09:40:21 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12602]: pid.c: Daemon already running. Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: snd_pcm_avail_delay() returned strange values: delay 0 is less than avail 8. Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: Most likely this is a bug in the ALSA driver 'snd_hda_intel'. Please report this issue to the ALSA developers. Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: snd_pcm_dump(): Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: Soft volume PCM Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: Control: PCM Playback Volume Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: min_dB: -51 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: max_dB: 0 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: resolution: 256 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: Its setup is: Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: stream : CAPTURE Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: access : MMAP_INTERLEAVED Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: format : S16_LE Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: subformat : STD Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: channels : 2 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: rate : 44100 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: exact rate : 44100 (44100/1) Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: msbits : 16 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: buffer_size : 88192 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: period_size : 44096 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: period_time : 999909 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: tstamp_mode : ENABLE Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: period_step : 1 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: avail_min : 87310 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: period_event : 0 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: start_threshold : -1 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: stop_threshold : 6205960286516543488 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: silence_threshold: 0 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: silence_size : 0 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: boundary : 6205960286516543488 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: Slave: Hardware PCM card 0 'HDA Intel' device 0 subdevice 0 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: Its setup is: Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: stream : CAPTURE Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: access : MMAP_INTERLEAVED Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: format : S16_LE Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: subformat : STD Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: channels : 2 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: rate : 44100 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: exact rate : 44100 (44100/1) Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: msbits : 16 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: buffer_size : 88192 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: period_size : 44096 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: period_time : 999909 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: tstamp_mode : ENABLE Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: period_step : 1 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: avail_min : 87310 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: period_event : 0 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: start_threshold : -1 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: stop_threshold : 6205960286516543488 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: silence_threshold: 0 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: silence_size : 0 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: boundary : 6205960286516543488 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: appl_ptr : 87312 Jan 8 09:40:23 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[12485]: alsa-util.c: hw_ptr : 87312 anjanesh@al-ubuntu:~$ Open OfficeJan 8 09:43:46 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13157]: pid.c: Daemon already running. Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: snd_pcm_avail_delay() returned strange values: delay 0 is less than avail 16. Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: Most likely this is a bug in the ALSA driver 'snd_hda_intel'. Please report this issue to the ALSA developers. Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: snd_pcm_dump(): Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: Soft volume PCM Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: Control: PCM Playback Volume Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: min_dB: -51 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: max_dB: 0 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: resolution: 256 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: Its setup is: Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: stream : CAPTURE Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: access : MMAP_INTERLEAVED Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: format : S16_LE Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: subformat : STD Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: channels : 2 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: rate : 44100 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: exact rate : 44100 (44100/1) Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: msbits : 16 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: buffer_size : 88192 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: period_size : 44096 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: period_time : 999909 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: tstamp_mode : ENABLE Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: period_step : 1 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: avail_min : 87310 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: period_event : 0 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: start_threshold : -1 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: stop_threshold : 6205960286516543488 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: silence_threshold: 0 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: silence_size : 0 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: boundary : 6205960286516543488 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: Slave: Hardware PCM card 0 'HDA Intel' device 0 subdevice 0 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: Its setup is: Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: stream : CAPTURE Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: access : MMAP_INTERLEAVED Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: format : S16_LE Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: subformat : STD Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: channels : 2 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: rate : 44100 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: exact rate : 44100 (44100/1) Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: msbits : 16 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: buffer_size : 88192 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: period_size : 44096 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: period_time : 999909 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: tstamp_mode : ENABLE Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: period_step : 1 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: avail_min : 87310 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: period_event : 0 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: start_threshold : -1 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: stop_threshold : 6205960286516543488 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: silence_threshold: 0 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: silence_size : 0 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: boundary : 6205960286516543488 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: appl_ptr : 87320 Jan 8 09:43:48 al-ubuntu pulseaudio[13064]: alsa-util.c: hw_ptr : 87320 anjanesh@al-ubuntu:~$

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  • Convert mkv to mp4 with ffmpeg

    - by JohnS
    When I try converting mkv to mp4 using ffmpeg, the following error occurs: [ipod @ 0x16fa0a0] Application provided invalid, non monotonically increasing dts to muxer in stream 0: -2 = -2 av_interleaved_write_frame(): Invalid argument I used this command to convert the file: ffmpeg -i input.mkv -vcodec copy -acodec copy -absf aac_adtstoasc output.m4v The input file has the following characteristics: mediainfo input.mkv General Unique ID : 200459305952356554213392832683163418790 (0x96CF0ED8DB5914CBB9E18163689280A6) Complete name : input.mkv Format : Matroska Format version : Version 2 File size : 1.46 GiB Duration : 1h 5mn Overall bit rate : 3 168 Kbps Encoded date : UTC 2010-09-26 21:44:02 Writing application : mkvmerge v2.9.5 ('Tu es le seul') built on Jun 17 2009 16:28:30 Writing library : libebml v0.7.8 + libmatroska v0.8.1 Video ID : 1 Format : AVC Format/Info : Advanced Video Codec Format profile : [email protected] Format settings, CABAC : Yes Format settings, ReFrames : 4 frames Codec ID : V_MPEG4/ISO/AVC Duration : 1h 5mn Bit rate : 2 910 Kbps Width : 1 280 pixels Height : 720 pixels Display aspect ratio : 16:9 Frame rate : 25.000 fps Color space : YUV Chroma subsampling : 4:2:0 Bit depth : 8 bits Scan type : Progressive Bits/(Pixel*Frame) : 0.126 Stream size : 1.31 GiB (90%) Writing library : x264 core 105 r1724 b02df7b Encoding settings : cabac=1 / ref=3 / deblock=1:0:0 / analyse=0x3:0x113 / me=hex / subme=6 / psy=1 / psy_rd=1.00:0.00 / mixed_ref=0 / me_range=16 / chroma_me=1 / trellis=1 / 8x8dct=1 / cqm=0 / deadzone=21,11 / fast_pskip=0 / chroma_qp_offset=-2 / threads=18 / sliced_threads=0 / nr=0 / decimate=1 / interlaced=0 / constrained_intra=0 / bframes=3 / b_pyramid=2 / b_adapt=1 / b_bias=0 / direct=3 / weightb=1 / open_gop=0 / weightp=0 / keyint=250 / keyint_min=25 / scenecut=40 / intra_refresh=0 / rc=2pass / mbtree=0 / bitrate=2910 / ratetol=1.0 / qcomp=0.60 / qpmin=10 / qpmax=51 / qpstep=4 / cplxblur=20.0 / qblur=0.5 / ip_ratio=1.40 / pb_ratio=1.30 / aq=1:1.00 Default : Yes Forced : No Audio ID : 2 Format : AC-3 Format/Info : Audio Coding 3 Mode extension : CM (complete main) Codec ID : A_AC3 Duration : 1h 5mn Bit rate mode : Constant Bit rate : 256 Kbps Channel(s) : 2 channels Channel positions : Front: L R Sampling rate : 48.0 KHz Bit depth : 16 bits Compression mode : Lossy Stream size : 121 MiB (8%) Language : English Default : Yes Forced : No Being new to ffmpeg, I'm not sure what the error means or how to correct it. Thanks!

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