Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers FreeBSD 4.4 Uninstalling KDE or GNOME Post 19915 by auswipe on Wednesday 17th of April 2002 11:22:39 PM
Old 04-18-2002
Have you tried checking the memory with a third party memory checking program?

What about BIOS upgrade?

I had a problem with my El Cheapo Soyobox rebooting and it was fixed with a BIOS Flash.
 

5 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers

KDE & Gnome, wat is the difference?

i have been reading some atticles but i still do not understand the diferrence btw KDE & Gnome. Someone once told me he prefers Gnome to KDE 'coz of it's audio support & Redhat says ver 7.3 has KDE 3.0 & Gnome 1.4. So could someone explain? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: da_gee
2 Replies

2. BSD

FreeBSD / KDE installation woes...

Forgive the newbie question. I've been trying to install FreeBSD 5.4 on a new AMD64 based box at work today, and I started running into problems. Maybe some background is appropriate? Here goes... I've finished the first stage of development of a model in C++ which simulates airflow through a... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ForestryJim
1 Replies

3. Linux

Help:- Just clean installed OpenSUse10 with Gnome, now want KDE

I've just done a brand new full clean install of OPenSUSE 10 and thought I'd take a look at Gnome. Having spent a day playing with it I've decided I prefer the familiarity I have with KDE. How do I now install KDE? I've tried logging off to log back on with a different envionnment but KDE... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Mark Ward
1 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Actively merge kde 3.x and gnome 2.x menus

ok, here's the scoop, google has similar, but nothing that quite fits the bill. here is what I'm up against: i have a linux system that is running both kde 3.x and gnome 2.x, selectable via gdm. the kde 3.x app menu is heavily modified and i'm looking for a way to import that over to the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: macphail
0 Replies

5. Linux

[FC17 x86_64]KDE/Gnome switch

Hi, I've got a Fedora 17 x64 with KDE already running. I want to switch to Gnome, which is installed. How can I do that? Cheers, Chrisdot (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Chrisdot
0 Replies
odbcinst(1)							UnixODBC Reference						       odbcinst(1)

NAME
odbcinst - command line tool for batch ODBC configuration SYNOPSIS
odbcinst action object options action is one of -i install a driver or data source -u uninstall a driver or data source -q query a list of drivers or data sources present on the system --version shows the version number of the program object is one of -d an ODBC driver in /etc/odbcinst.ini -s an ODBC Data Source Name (DSN) in an odbc.ini file. options are zero or more of -f template file Used with -i, this option specifies a template file containing the driver or DSN to be installed. -r Read the template from standard input. -n Driver/Data Source Name Used with -u to specify a driver or DSN to remove. -v Contrary to standard practice, this turns off verbose output; there is no output, even for errors. -l The specified Data Source object is a System DSN, in /etc/odbc.ini. -h The specified Data Source object is a User DSN, in the current user's $HOME/.odbc.ini. This is the default with -s. DESCRIPTION
odbcinst updates the configuration files that control ODBC access to database servers on the current host. It also maintains in /etc/odbcinst.ini a count of the number of references to a particular driver, which can be used to determine whether it should be removed from the file (only when the reference count drops to 0). Installing Drivers and DSNs are installed using the -i option. If the object to be installed is a driver (-d), the specified driver is added to /etc/odbcinst.ini or its reference count is incremented if it is already there. If the object is a data source (-s), the data source is added either to /etc/odbc.ini (if -l is used) or to $HOME/.odbc.ini (the default, which can also be specified with -h). Uninstalling Uninstalling a driver is done with the command odbcinst -u -d -n driver name. Uninstalling a DSN is done with the command odbcinst -u -s -n data source name. Uninstalling causes the reference count on the object to be decremented. If nothing else has requested this driver or DSN (i.e., the reference count drops to zero), it is removed from the config file. The options -l and -h are used with -s to specify which odbc.ini file to configure. Queries The command odbcinst -q -d returns a list of all drivers present in /etc/odbcinst.ini. The command odbcinst -q -s returns a list of all system and user DSNs available. EXIT STATUS
0 Success non-zero Failure TEMPLATE FILES
A typical driver template looks like this: [MySQL] Description = MySQL driver Driver = /usr/lib/odbc/libmyodbc.so Setup = /usr/lib/odbc/libodbcmyS.so A DSN template looks like this: [Sample DSN] Description = Test MySQL connection Driver = MySQL Trace = Yes TraceFile = /tmp/odbc.log Database = junk Server = localhost Port = 3306 Socket = The Description and Driver fields should be present in all DSN configurations. Other options are driver-specific; consult your ODBC driver's documentation for a list of allowed options, or see ODBCConfig(1) for a graphical tool that can be used to interactively set up a DSN or driver the first time. FILES
/etc/odbcinst.ini, /etc/odbc.ini, $HOME/.odbc.ini AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Oliver Elphick <olly@lfix.co.uk> and Steve Langasek <vorlon@debian.org> for the Debian package of unixODBC. SEE ALSO
ODBCConfig(1), gODBCConfig(1) UnixODBC 2nd Mar 2002 odbcinst(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:05 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy