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  • File and Printer Sharing, in 10.0.0.x

    - by bubbles2
    Hi, I have a strange problem: When I assign addresses of the form 10.0.0.x to my computers, file sharing (smb) does not work. When I assign them addresse of the form 192.168.1.x it works... OS is XP SP3, for subnetmasks i tried both 255.255.255.0 and 255.0.0.0 Any ideas what I can do? [EDIT] I forgot to add: pinging doesn't work either

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  • The need for user-defined index types

    - by Greg Low
    Since the removal of the 8KB limit on serialization, the ability to define new data types using SQL CLR integration is now almost at a usable level, apart from one key omission: indexes. We have no ability to create our own types of index to support our data types. As a good example of this, consider that when Microsoft introduced the geometry and geography (spatial) data types, they did so as system CLR data types but also needed to introduce a spatial index as a new type of index. Those of us that...(read more)

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  • Shared block device file system (cluster file system without networking)

    - by fungs
    Is there any file system that can be mounted multiple times and supports concurrent file access for Linux? Basically I want something like a cluster file system but without the need to have a running network for a distributed lock manager. That can be very handy in connection with virtual machines that can share data with the host or another VM without the need to create a network link. This I want to avoid to keep the network architecture secure (virtual machine in DMZ) but share large files. No need to scale it up, just two machines that mount the same block device. Shouldn't it be possible to have file locking information right on the disk?

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  • Windows Server 08 R2 file share File locking, OSX clients

    - by Keith Loughnane
    I've spent the last two weeks banging my head against this wall. I think I'm starting to understand the problem though. I manage a design company and they have 5 macs (OSX 10.5/.6/.7) connected over SMB to a Windows 2008 R2 file server, another machine functions as Domain Controller (that might not matter). All the macs can connect ok, no issues finding the server or logging in. For the most part things are ok. The problem is files locking up. I thought it was a permissions issue at first but it seems to be file locking. The users open a file; .ind, .pdf etc the file opens, the software reads it and closes it. That's fine, but the folder above the folder locks, it can't be moved and it can't be renamed. Eg: /Working/Project01/Imagefiles/image.pdf /Finished/ The user opens image.pdf, closes it and wants to move the whole Project01 folder into Finished. It gives a username/pass dialogue and then does nothing, no error, or just does nothing. Trying to rename gives a dialogue that says you don't have permission. It looks like it's looking for permission locally, which is why I spent about a week looking at that. Eventually I found that Finder on the macs seems to be keeping the folders open. I can work around it by Killing finder, remounting the shared drive or closing the file through the server manager but this just proves the theory it's not a solution. Has anyone dealt with this problem?

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  • CMD Command to create folder for each file and move file into folder

    - by Tom
    I need a command that can be run from the command line to create a folder for each file (based on the file-name) in a directory and then move the file into the newly created folders. Example : Starting Folder: Dog.jpg Cat.jpg The following command works great at creating a folder for each filename in the current working directory. for %i in (*) do md "%~ni" Result Folder: \Dog\ \Cat\ Dog.jpg Cat.jpg I need to take this one step further and move the file into the folder. What I want to achieve is: \Dog\Dog.jpg \Cat\Cat.jpg Can someone help me with one command to do all of this?

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  • CMD file time not always matching windows explorer file time

    - by skyrail
    I have a set of file I need to set the created, modified and last access date to exif date taken value, after a copy between 2 folders (might be fat32 on memory card or ntfs on fixed or usb disk). When I copy a file, the date and time switch to the current date. Then I change all 3 dates manually, either with change attributes in windows explorer or far manager on the command line. To make it faster I wrote a batch script getting original file dates (with php and function stat), building a batch script that invoke nircmd setfiletime for each file. Then I apply this batch to the copied version. The operation is relatively fast and reliable. Unfortunately, a bunch of files have last access and created time different in cmd and windows explorer (1H difference). Very strangely, it happens with dates between november and february, which make the operation unreliable. Why is this happening, and how can I fix it?

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  • Outlook 2010 + Move IMAP PST file = Outlook data file cannot be accessed

    - by GWB
    I set up a new IMAP account in Outlook 2010. It works but creates IMAP PST file in C:\Users\User\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Outlook. I want the file on my data drive in D:\Users\User\Documents\Outlook Files (the same folder where outlook automatically creates the local Outlook PST. I followed the instructions here to move the IMAP PST. Testing the account (send/receive) works fine, but if I try to manually send an email I get error 0x8004010F Outlook data file cannot be accessed. I've tried repairing the PST using SCANPST (it always finds errors), and deleting and recreating the account but I get the same error. If I move the PST file back, it works again, but this is not ideal. Note: I don't think this is a duplicate of this question as the cause is different and the solution does not help.

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  • close file with fopen() but file still in use

    - by Marco
    Hi all, I've got a problem with deleting/overwriting a file using my program which is also being used(read) by my program. The problem seems to be that because of the fact my program is reading data from the file (output.txt) it puts the file in a 'in use' state which makes it impossible to delete or overwrite the file. I don't understand why the file stays 'in use' because I close the file after use with fclose(); this is my code: bool bBool = true while(bBool){ //Run myprogram.exe tot generate (a new) output.txt //Create file pointer and open file FILE* pInputFile = NULL; pInputFile = fopen("output.txt", "r"); // //then I do some reading using fscanf() // //And when I'm done reading I close the file using fclose() fclose(pInputFile); //The next step is deleting the output.txt if( remove( "output.txt" ) == -1 ){ //ERROR }else{ //Succesfull } } I use fclose() to close the file but the file remains in use by my program until my program is totally shut down. What is the solution to free the file so it can be deleted/overwrited? In reality my code isn't a loop without an end ; ) Thanks in advance! Marco

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  • Windows 7 ssh file server.

    - by Siriss
    Hello all- I have looked at the other posts, but have not quite found an answer I have a question about windows file sharing over SSH. I have copssh installed and it is working for Remote desktop connections. I have port 22 forwarded on my router etc. I connect from a Mac or Putty with this address: ssh -l copsshusername 3391:localhost:3389 [external ip] That works fine. I would like to configure Windows 7 to allow my ssh account that I use to login, access to certain shared folders. I have documents and videos and things that I would like to be able to download externally. I have done this before on Linux and a long time ago on XP, but I cannot figure out what I am missing on Windows 7. There is a designated SSH user that copssh uses to run the service and that I use to to login as. I have googled and googled and have not found a solution that does everything I need that is why I am turning here for ideas. I hope I am explaining this correctly. Thank you very much for your help!

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  • Android: writing a file to sdcard

    - by Sumit M Asok
    I'm trying to write a file from an Http post reply to a file on the sdcard. Everything works fine until the byte array of data is retrieved. I've tried setting WRITE_EXTERNAL_STORAGE permission in the manifest and tried many different combinations of tutorials I found on the net. All I could find was using the openFileOutput("",MODE_WORLD_READABLE) method, of the activity but how my app writes file is by using a thread. Specifically, a thread is invoked from another thread when a file has to be written, so giving an activity object didn't work even though I tried it. The app has come a long way and I cannot change how the app is currently written. Please, someone help me? CODE: File file = new File(bgdmanip.savLocation); FileOutputStream filecon = null; filecon = new FileOutputStream(file); // bgdmanip.savLocation holds the whole files path byte[] myByte; myByte = Base64Coder.decode(seReply); Log.d("myBytes", String.valueOf(myByte)); bos.write(myByte); filecon.write(myByte); myvals = x * 11024; seReply is a string reply from HttpPost response. the second set of code is looped with reference to x. the file is created but remains 0 bytes

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  • SQL SERVER – PREEMPTIVE and Non-PREEMPTIVE – Wait Type – Day 19 of 28

    - by pinaldave
    In this blog post, we are going to talk about a very interesting subject. I often get questions related to SQL Server 2008 Book-Online about various Preemptive wait types. I got a few questions asking what these wait types are and how they could be interpreted. To get current wait types of the system, you can read this article and run the script: SQL SERVER – DMV – sys.dm_os_waiting_tasks and sys.dm_exec_requests – Wait Type – Day 4 of 28. Before we continue understanding them, let us study first what PREEMPTIVE and Non-PREEMPTIVE waits in SQL Server mean. PREEMPTIVE: Simply put, this wait means non-cooperative. While SQL Server is executing a task, the Operating System (OS) interrupts it. This leads to SQL Server to involuntarily give up the execution for other higher priority tasks. This is not good for SQL Server as it is a particular external process which makes SQL Server to yield. This kind of wait can reduce the performance drastically and needs to be investigated properly. Non-PREEMPTIVE: In simple terms, this wait means cooperative. SQL Server manages the scheduling of the threads. When SQL Server manages the scheduling instead of the OS, it makes sure its own priority. In this case, SQL Server decides the priority and one thread yields to another thread voluntarily. In the earlier version of SQL Server, there was no preemptive wait types mentioned and the associated task status with them was marked as suspended. In SQL Server 2005, preemptive wait types were not listed as well, but their associated task status was marked as running. In SQL Server 2008, preemptive wait types are properly listed and their associated task status is also marked as running. Now, SQL Server is in Non-Preemptive mode by default and it works fine. When CLR, extended Stored Procedures and other external components run, they run in Preemptive mode, leading to the creation of these wait types. There are a wide variety of preemptive wait types. If you see consistent high value in the Preemptive wait types, I strongly suggest that you look into the wait type and try to know the root cause. If you are still not sure, you can send me an email or leave a comment about it and I will do my best to help you reduce this wait type. Read all the post in the Wait Types and Queue series. Reference: Pinal Dave (http://blog.sqlauthority.com) Filed under: Pinal Dave, PostADay, SQL, SQL Authority, SQL Query, SQL Server, SQL Tips and Tricks, SQL Wait Stats, SQL Wait Types, T SQL, Technology

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  • PHP file_put_contents File Locking

    - by hozza
    The Senario: You have a file with a string (average sentence worth) on each line. For arguments sake lets say this file is 1Mb in size (thousands of lines). You have a script that reads the file, changes some of the strings within the document (not just appending but also removing and modifying some lines) and then overwrites all the data with the new data. The Questions: Does 'the server' PHP, OS or httpd etc. already have systems in place to stop issues like this (reading/writing half way through a write)? i. If it does, please explain how it works and give examples or links to relevant documentation. ii. If not, are there things I can enable or set-up, such as locking a file until a write is completed and making all other reads and/or writes fail until the previous script has finished writing? My Assumptions and Other Information: The server in question is running PHP and Apache or Lighttpd. If the script is called by one user and is halfway through writing to the file and another user reads the file at that exact moment. The user who reads it will not get the full document, as it hasn't been written yet. (If this assumption is wrong please correct me) I'm only concerned with PHP writing and reading to a text file, and in particular, the functions "fopen"/"fwrite" and mainly "file_put_contents". I have looked at the "file_put_contents" documentation but have not found the level of detail or a good explanation of what the "LOCK_EX" flag is or does. The senario is an EXAMPLE of a worst case senario where I would assume these issues are more likely to occur, due to the large size of the file and the way the data is edited. I want to learn more about these issues and don't want or need answers or comments such as "use mysql" or "why are you doing that" because I'm not doing that, I just want to learn about file read/writing with PHP and don't seem to be looking in the right places/documentation and yes I understand PHP is not the perfect language for working with files in this way...

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  • Custom types in OpenCL kernel

    - by Studer
    Is it possible to use custom types in OpenCL kernel like gmp types (mpz_t, mpq_t, …) ? To have something like that (this kernel doesn't build just because of #include <gmp.h>) : #include <gmp.h> __kernel square( __global mpz_t* input, __global mpz_t number, __global int* output, const unsigned int count) { int i = get_global_id(0); if(i < count) output[i] = mpz_divisible_p(number,input[i]); } Or maybe does OpenCL already have types that can handle large numbers ?

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  • Concrete Types or Interfaces for return types?

    - by SDReyes
    Today I came to a fundamental paradox of the object programming style, concrete types or interfaces. Whats the better election for a method's return type: a concrete type or an interface? In most cases, I tend to use concrete types as the return type for methods. because I believe that an concrete type is more flexible for further use and exposes more functionality. The dark side of this: Coupling. The angelic one: A concrete type contains per-se the interface you would going to return initially, and extra functionality. What's your thumb's rule? Is there any programming principle for this? BONUS: This is an example of what I mean http://stackoverflow.com/questions/491375/readonlycollection-or-ienumerable-for-exposing-member-collections

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  • Multiple file descriptors to the same file, C

    - by Gigi
    I have a multithreaded application that is opening and reading the same file (not writing). I am opening a different file descriptor for each thread (but they all point to the same file). Each thread then reads the file and may close it and open it again if EOF is reached. Is this ok? If I perform fclose() on a file descriptor does it affect the other file descritptors that point to the same file?

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  • What C# data types can be nullable types?

    - by Randy Minder
    Can someone give me a list, or point me to where I can find a list of C# data types that can be a nullable type? For example: I know that Nullable<int> is ok I know that Nullable<byte[]> is not. I'd like to know which types are nullable and which are not. BTW, I know I can test for this at runtime. However, this is for a code generator we're writing, so I don't have an actual type. I just know that a column is "string" or "int32" etc. Thanks.

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  • Java vs c++ types

    - by folone
    I've recently had a question about coledatetime java implementation, and Chris said, that the problem might lay in type conversions: cpp-float vs java-float (Or maybe cpp-date vs java-date. Not types, but..). Now I have several questions on this: Is there a table of comparison for java vs c++ types? If type conversions is the problem, in my situation (I have a db with OLEDate records, already created with some c++ program. I need to read and write to that db, so that the OLEDate field compatibility remained: my java code reads proper dates, and c++ program is not affected with what the java program wrote to the db.), what would you do: Use COleDateTime to retrieve the date with JNI? Create your own implementation at all costs (using broader types, or anything else)? Is there anything, I'm missing here?

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  • mapping list of different types implementing same function?

    - by sisif
    I want to apply a function to every element in a list (map) but the elements may have different types but all implement the same function (here "putOut") like an interface. However I cannot create a list of this "interface" type (here "Outputable"). How do I map a list of different types implementing the same function? main :: IO () main = do map putOut lst putStrLn "end" where lst :: [Outputable] -- ERROR: Class "Outputable" used as a type lst = [(Out1 1),(Out2 1 2)] class Outputable a where putOut :: a -> IO () -- user defined: data Out1 = Out1 Int deriving (Show) data Out2 = Out2 Int deriving (Show) instance Outputable Out1 where putOut out1 = putStrLn $ show out1 instance Outputable Out2 where putOut out2 = putStrLn $ show out2 I cannot define it this way: data Out = Out1 Int | Out2 Int Int putOut Out1 = ... putOut Out2 = ... because this is a library and users should be able to extend Out with their own types

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  • .Net Round-trip Types

    - by Fujiy
    I making a method that generate a unique string key for some parameters. But the same key if call with same values. I just accept primitive types, string, DateTime, Guid, and Nullable(since I append types together, I can distinguish who is int and who is int?), because I can convert all to string without lost values or precision.(for float and double a use ToString("R"), to DateTime ToString("O")). Exists a easy way to know which types I can transform in strings without conflict? And how do this transform(how I said before, float, double and datetime have specific ways) Thanks

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  • C++ : Swapping template class elements of different types?

    - by metamemetics
    template< class T1, class T2 > class Pair { T1 first; T2 second; }; I'm being asked to write a swap() method so that the first element becomes the second and the second the first. I have: Pair<T2,T1> swap() { return Pair<T2,T1>(second, first); } But this returns a new object rather than swapping, where I think it needs to be a void method that changes its own data members. Is this possible to do since T1 and T2 are potentially different class types? In other words I can't simply set temp=first, first=second, second=temp because it would try to convert them to different types. I'm not sure why you would potentially want to have a template object that changes order of its types as it seems that would cause confusion but that appears to be what I'm being asked to do.

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  • File system implementation in MongoDB with GridFS

    - by Ralph
    I am working on two projects that will both implement a Webdav server backed by a MongoDB GridFS. In each case, there is the potential for the system to store tens of millions of files spread across thousands of hierarchical directories. I can come up with two different ways of storing the directory structure: As a "true" hierarchical file system, with directories containing the IDs (_id) of subdirectories and regular files. The paths will be separated by slashes (/) as in a POSIX-compliant file system. The path /a/b/c will be represented as a directory a containing a directory b containing a file c. As a flat file system, where file names include the slashes. The path /a/b/c will be stored as a single file with the name /a/b/c What are the advantages and disadvantages of each, with respect to a "real" folder-based file system?

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  • How to install PHP-FPM and PHP on Ubuntu?

    - by Sanoj
    I have problems with installing PHP and in Ubuntu. I followed the instructions on the PHP-FPM site, PHP FastCGI Process Manager but when doing ../configure && make to compile PHP I got a lot of not found messages (listed below), and I don't know how to fix them. I tried both the Integrated compilation and Separate compilation but both compilations ends up with the same messages. Is there a solution or workaround? An alternativ way to install PHP with PHP-FPM? ../configure: 11986: ac_fn_c_check_func: not found ../configure: 11997: ac_fn_c_check_func: not found ../configure: 12147: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12147: :: checking for socket in -lsocket: not found ../configure: 12147: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12147: checking for socket in -lsocket... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 12147: ac_fn_c_try_link: not found ../configure: 12147: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12147: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 12147: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12147: no: not found ../configure: 12147: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12147: :: checking for __socket in -lsocket: not found ../configure: 12147: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12147: checking for __socket in -lsocket... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 12147: ac_fn_c_try_link: not found ../configure: 12147: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12147: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 12147: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12147: no: not found ../configure: 12154: ac_fn_c_check_func: not found ../configure: 12165: ac_fn_c_check_func: not found ../configure: 12315: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12315: :: checking for socketpair in -lsocket: not found ../configure: 12315: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12315: checking for socketpair in -lsocket... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 12315: ac_fn_c_try_link: not found ../configure: 12315: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12315: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 12315: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12315: no: not found ../configure: 12315: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12315: :: checking for __socketpair in -lsocket: not found ../configure: 12315: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12315: checking for __socketpair in -lsocket... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 12315: ac_fn_c_try_link: not found ../configure: 12315: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12315: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 12315: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12315: no: not found ../configure: 12322: ac_fn_c_check_func: not found ../configure: 12333: ac_fn_c_check_func: not found ../configure: 12483: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12483: :: checking for htonl in -lsocket: not found ../configure: 12483: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12483: checking for htonl in -lsocket... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 12483: ac_fn_c_try_link: not found ../configure: 12483: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12483: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 12483: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12483: no: not found ../configure: 12483: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12483: :: checking for __htonl in -lsocket: not found ../configure: 12483: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12483: checking for __htonl in -lsocket... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 12483: ac_fn_c_try_link: not found ../configure: 12483: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12483: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 12483: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12483: no: not found ../configure: 12490: ac_fn_c_check_func: not found ../configure: 12501: ac_fn_c_check_func: not found ../configure: 12651: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12651: :: checking for gethostname in -lnsl: not found ../configure: 12651: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12651: checking for gethostname in -lnsl... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 12651: ac_fn_c_try_link: not found ../configure: 12651: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12651: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 12651: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12651: no: not found ../configure: 12651: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12651: :: checking for __gethostname in -lnsl: not found ../configure: 12651: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12651: checking for __gethostname in -lnsl... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 12651: ac_fn_c_try_link: not found ../configure: 12651: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12651: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 12651: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12651: no: not found ../configure: 12658: ac_fn_c_check_func: not found ../configure: 12669: ac_fn_c_check_func: not found ../configure: 12819: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12819: :: checking for gethostbyaddr in -lnsl: not found ../configure: 12819: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12819: checking for gethostbyaddr in -lnsl... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 12819: ac_fn_c_try_link: not found ../configure: 12819: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12819: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 12819: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12819: no: not found ../configure: 12819: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12819: :: checking for __gethostbyaddr in -lnsl: not found ../configure: 12819: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12819: checking for __gethostbyaddr in -lnsl... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 12819: ac_fn_c_try_link: not found ../configure: 12819: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12819: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 12819: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12819: no: not found ../configure: 12826: ac_fn_c_check_func: not found ../configure: 12837: ac_fn_c_check_func: not found ../configure: 12987: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12987: :: checking for yp_get_default_domain in -lnsl: not found ../configure: 12987: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12987: checking for yp_get_default_domain in -lnsl... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 12987: ac_fn_c_try_link: not found ../configure: 12987: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12987: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 12987: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12987: no: not found ../configure: 12987: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12987: :: checking for __yp_get_default_domain in -lnsl: not found ../configure: 12987: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12987: checking for __yp_get_default_domain in -lnsl... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 12987: ac_fn_c_try_link: not found ../configure: 12987: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12987: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 12987: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 12987: no: not found ../configure: 12995: ac_fn_c_check_func: not found ../configure: 13006: ac_fn_c_check_func: not found ../configure: 13156: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13156: :: checking for dlopen in -ldl: not found ../configure: 13156: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13156: checking for dlopen in -ldl... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 13156: ac_fn_c_try_link: not found ../configure: 13156: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13156: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 13156: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13156: no: not found ../configure: 13156: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13156: :: checking for __dlopen in -ldl: not found ../configure: 13156: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13156: checking for __dlopen in -ldl... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 13156: ac_fn_c_try_link: not found ../configure: 13156: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13156: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 13156: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13156: no: not found ../configure: 13164: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13164: :: checking for sin in -lm: not found ../configure: 13164: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13164: checking for sin in -lm... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 13196: ac_fn_c_try_link: not found ../configure: 13198: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13198: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 13198: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13198: no: not found ../configure: 13214: ac_fn_c_check_func: not found ../configure: 13225: ac_fn_c_check_func: not found ../configure: 13510: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13510: :: checking for inet_aton in -lresolv: not found ../configure: 13510: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13510: checking for inet_aton in -lresolv... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 13510: ac_fn_c_try_link: not found ../configure: 13510: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13510: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 13510: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13510: no: not found ../configure: 13510: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13510: :: checking for __inet_aton in -lresolv: not found ../configure: 13510: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13510: checking for __inet_aton in -lresolv... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 13510: ac_fn_c_try_link: not found ../configure: 13510: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13510: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 13510: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13510: no: not found ../configure: 13510: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13510: :: checking for inet_aton in -lbind: not found ../configure: 13510: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13510: checking for inet_aton in -lbind... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 13510: ac_fn_c_try_link: not found ../configure: 13510: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13510: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 13510: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13510: no: not found ../configure: 13510: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13510: :: checking for __inet_aton in -lbind: not found ../configure: 13510: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13510: checking for __inet_aton in -lbind... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 13510: ac_fn_c_try_link: not found ../configure: 13510: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13510: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 13510: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13510: no: not found ../configure: 13516: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13516: :: checking for ANSI C header files: not found ../configure: 13516: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13516: checking for ANSI C header files... : not found cat: confdefs.h: No such file or directory ../configure: 13615: ac_fn_c_try_compile: not found ../configure: 13617: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13617: :: result: no: not found ../configure: 13617: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13617: no: not found ../configure: 13665: ac_cv_header_dirent_dirent.h: not found ../configure: 13665: 5: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13665: :: checking for dirent.h that defines DIR: not found ../configure: 13665: 6: Bad file descriptor ../configure: 13665: checking for dirent.h that defines DIR... : not found eval: 1: Bad substitution

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  • File Sharing: User-created folders are read-only to others on Mac 10.6 Server

    - by Anriëtte Combrink
    Hi there We recently got a new Mac Mini Server with 10.6 Server on it. It has two 500GB volumes, one of which [Macintosh HD2 the extra one other than the boot disk] we are using to share our work files. I have added a user account for each user in the Users pane on Server Preferences, and all our staff (users added to the system) are added to a new group, called toolboxstaff. Now, when a user creates a new folder on this volume, folders are created with read-only access for everyone else besides the owner. How do I set it that when a user creates a folder, it creates it with RW access for the toolboxstaff group? Thanks in advance.

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  • fcgiwrap listening to a unix socket file: how to change file permissions

    - by user36520
    I have a web server (nginx) and a CGI application (gitweb) that is ran with fcgiwrap to enable Fast CGI access to it. I want the Fast CGI protocol to take place over a unix socket file. To start the fcgiwrap daemon, I run: setuidgid git fcgiwrap -s "unix:$PWD/fastcgi.sock" (this is a daemontools daemon) The problem is that my web server runs as the user www-data and not the user git. And fcgiwrap creates the socket fastcgi.sock with user git, group git and read only fort the non owner. Thus, nginc with the user www-data can't access the socket. Apparently, fcgiwrap is not able to select permissions of unix socket files. And this is quite annoying. Moreover, if I manage to have the socket file exists before I run fcgiwrap (which is quite difficult given I did not find any shell command to create a socket file), it quits with the following error: Failed to bind: Address already in use The only solution I found is to start the server the following way: rm -f fastcgi.sock # Ensure that the socket doesn't already exists (sleep 5; chgrp www-data fastcgi.sock; chmod g+w fastcgi.sock) & exec setuidgid git fcgiwrap -s "unix:$PWD/fastcgi.sock" Which is far from the most elegant solution. Can you think of anything better ? Thanks

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