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cwnnstat(1) [debian man page]

CWNNSTAT(1)						      General Commands Manual						       CWNNSTAT(1)

NAME
cwnnstat - To show the current status of cserver. SYNOPSIS
cwnnstat [-w] [-e] [-E] [-f] [-F] [-d] [-D] [-L lang ] [ hostname ] DEFAULT PATH
/usr/local/bin/cWnn4/cwnnstat DESCRIPTION
To request for the current execution status of the cserver for the current host. If hostname is specified, the status of the that specified host will be given. OPTIONS
-w To list the username, hostname, socket number and the environment number. -e To list the environment number, environment name and reference count. -E To list the environment number, environment name, reference count, grammar file number, number of dictionary used, (list of dictio- nary numbers) and the numbers of the files used in the current environment. -f To list the file ID of each cWnn file in the cserver, the file type, the location of file, reference count and the filename. -F Same as -f option -d To list the dictionary number of dictionaries managed by the host, the dictionary type, dictionary file number, dictionary filename, usage frequency filename and usage frequency file number. -D To list the dictionary number, type, conversion method, number of entries, static/dynamic, current usage status, priority, alias, filename, [(alias:usage frequency filename)], [password (frequency password)] of the dictionaries. -L To specify the language name which is referred during selection of cserver. If no lang is specified, the one specified by the envi- ronment variable LANG will be used. The default is "zh_CN". NOTE
1. The command options inside [ ] shown in the Command Format indicates that they are optional. If they are not required, "cwnnstat" alone is sufficient to obtain the status of cserver. 2. Dictionary number is different from file number. - File number refers to the standardized number among all cWnn files. - Dictionary number refers to the logical dictionary number in the server. 3. One dictionary file may consist of different usage frequency files, and each will form an individual dictionary. 4. One dictionary file with different conversion methods (forward/reverse) will form different dictionaries. 13 May 1992 CWNNSTAT(1)

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CATOD(1)						      General Commands Manual							  CATOD(1)

NAME
catod - To convert the text format of a dictionary to binary format. SYNOPSIS
catod [-s maxword ] [-R] [-r] [-e] [-S] [-U] [-P dicpasswd ] [-p frepasswd ] [-h cixingfile ] outfilename DEFAULT PATH
/usr/local/bin/cWnn4/catod DESCRIPTION
This command converts a dictionary from text format into binary format. outfilename is the name of the binary format dictionary. If outfilename is not given, the output will be passed to the standard output device(stdout). The input file may be piped in by using the "<" command. For example, catod basic.dic < basic.u "basic.dic" here is the output binary format dictionary, while the "basic.u" is the input text format dictionary. If the input text dictionary is not given, the input will be taken from the standard input(stdin). To end the input via standard input, press ^D. OPTIONS
-s maxword To specify the maximum number of words. Default is 70000. -R To create a dictionary for both forward and reverse conversion. (Default). -r To create a reverse format dictionary only for reverse conversion. -e If the Hanzi inside the text dictionary contains characters such as space and tab, they will be compacted to special format. (Default). -S To create a static dictionary. -U To create a dynamic dictionary. -P dicpasswd To specify the password for the dictionary. If "-N" is used instead, the password of the dictionary will be set to "*". -p frepasswd To specify the password for the usage frequency file. If "-n" is used instead, the password of the frequency file will be set to "*". -h cixingfile To specify the Cixing definition file. NOTE
1. The parts in [ ] are options. They may be omitted. 2. The Pinyin and Zhuyin dictionary has the same format. 3. For details of the dictionary structure, refer to cWnn manual. 13 May 1992 CATOD(1)
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