Sponsored Content
Top Forums Programming Open Source What is your favorite Linux distro? Post 302161510 by Nilesh_lf on Thursday 24th of January 2008 08:47:13 PM
Old 01-24-2008
I was running Fedora Core 6; Now Fedora 7; After March 25 2008, Fedora 8!!

My Favourite Distro is Fedora.
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Linux distro

Hi I'm have old toshiba laptop(t1900) 486, 4mbRAM and ~120MB of hdd I'm looking for distro to suite my comp, no need for X windows but not enything that runs on FAT, just normal small Linux. Actually, *BSDs will do as well. If u know any distro that would do this I will be thankful for hint ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: wolk
4 Replies

2. What is on Your Mind?

Post Your Favorite UNIX/Linux Related RSS Feed Links

Hello, I am planning to revise the RSS News subforum areas, here: News, Links, Events and Announcements - The UNIX Forums ... maybe with a subforum for each OS specific news, like HP-UX, Solaris, RedHat, OSX, etc. RSS subforums.... Please post your favorite OS specific RSS (RSS2) link... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
0 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

New to linux. Which distro should i use?

want to know which Linux distro is 4 me. want 2 teach my self programing and problem solving. i want to learn code and write code. i have an acer aspire one 2GB memory 160 GB HDD intel Atom. look im as noobie as it gets im a MS xp, vista boy want to go beyond graphical click and do... any help... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: BizilStank
1 Replies

4. What is on Your Mind?

What's your favorite SSH client to connect to UNIX/Linux machines?

I am curious about the most popular ssh client on Windows environment. Talking about me, I use PuTTY most of the time coupled with WinSCP to transfer files. But, I like Tera Term too. It has great drag-drop feature where you can drag a file/folder and drop on the window and it will transfer the... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: admin_xor
14 Replies

5. What is on Your Mind?

What's your all time favorite UNIX/Linux book?

I can bet everyone has their one favorite book even though we have had read many books on UNIX or Linux. My all time favorite is "Unix Power Tools". This book always made me geeky and I loved the little tricks/tips in the book. I still do! The next favorite would be "Prentice Hall Unix and Linux... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: admin_xor
0 Replies

6. Linux

Best Linux Distro

Hello, I have a Compaq Presario v3000 5 year old laptop, with 1 GB RAM and currently running the (slow and stupid) Windows 7 32 bit, thus I would like to dual boot it with an appropriate distro of Linux that 1) Doesnt consume too much resources (1 GB RAM is not a lot of space) and it ll be... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ajayram
4 Replies

7. Linux

Favorite Synchronizers for Win & Linux

I'm looking for a new file/directory synchronizer. I've been using unison because it works on both windows and linux. However, it often chokes on the very long directory paths and file names I encounter when backing up eclipse and eclipse workspace directories. I suppose one could argue that I... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: siegfried
2 Replies

8. What is on Your Mind?

Video: What is Your Favorite Linux Distro? UNIX.com and Primis

Video: What is Your Favorite Linux Distro? UNIX.com and Primis https://youtu.be/doa9sA6q9Uw With so many great flavors of Linux to choose from, we asked our UNIX.com members what is their favorite Linux distro and why. Here are the results: What is your favorite Linux distro? ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
0 Replies

9. What is on Your Mind?

What is Your Favorite Editor for Linux and UNIX? | A Video in 1080 HD

We have asked UNIX.com users over the years what is their favorite editor and why. Here is the top three answers. Here is a new YT video on this question: What Editor Does Everyone Use? https://youtu.be/gqE8RTZZt9g Of course, vi was the overwhelming favorite. Credits: 1080 HD... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
3 Replies
DBIx::Class::Manual::Troubleshooting(3) 		User Contributed Perl Documentation		   DBIx::Class::Manual::Troubleshooting(3)

NAME
DBIx::Class::Manual::Troubleshooting - Got a problem? Shoot it. "Can't locate storage blabla" You're trying to make a query on a non-connected schema. Make sure you got the current resultset from $schema->resultset('Artist') on a schema object you got back from connect(). Tracing SQL The "DBIC_TRACE" environment variable controls SQL tracing, so to see what is happening try export DBIC_TRACE=1 Alternatively use the "storage->debug" class method:- $schema->storage->debug(1); To send the output somewhere else set debugfh:- $schema->storage->debugfh(IO::File->new('/tmp/trace.out', 'w'); Alternatively you can do this with the environment variable, too:- export DBIC_TRACE="1=/tmp/trace.out" Can't locate method result_source_instance For some reason the table class in question didn't load fully, so the ResultSource object for it hasn't been created. Debug this class in isolation, then try loading the full schema again. Can't get last insert ID under Postgres with serial primary keys Older DBI and DBD::Pg versions do not handle "last_insert_id" correctly, causing code that uses auto-incrementing primary key columns to fail with a message such as: Can't get last insert id at /.../DBIx/Class/Row.pm line 95 In particular the RHEL 4 and FC3 Linux distributions both ship with combinations of DBI and DBD::Pg modules that do not work correctly. DBI version 1.50 and DBD::Pg 1.43 are known to work. Can't locate object method "source_name" via package There's likely a syntax error in the table class referred to elsewhere in this error message. In particular make sure that the package declaration is correct. For example, for a schema " MySchema " you need to specify a fully qualified namespace: " package MySchema::MyTable; ". syntax error at or near "<something>" ... This can happen if you have a relation whose name is a word reserved by your database, e.g. "user": package My::Schema::User; ... __PACKAGE__->table('users'); __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/ id name /); __PACKAGE__->set_primary_key('id'); ... 1; package My::Schema::ACL; ... __PACKAGE__->table('acl'); __PACKAGE__->add_columns(qw/ user_id /); __PACKAGE__->belongs_to( 'user' => 'My::Schema::User', 'user_id' ); ... 1; $schema->resultset('ACL')->search( {}, { join => [qw/ user /], '+select' => [ 'user.name' ] } ); The SQL generated would resemble something like: SELECT me.user_id, user.name FROM acl me JOIN users user ON me.user_id = user.id If, as is likely, your database treats "user" as a reserved word, you'd end up with the following errors: 1) syntax error at or near "." - due to "user.name" in the SELECT clause 2) syntax error at or near "user" - due to "user" in the JOIN clause The solution is to enable quoting - see "Setting quoting for the generated SQL" in DBIx::Class::Manual::Cookbook for details. column "foo DESC" does not exist ... This can happen if you are still using the obsolete order hack, and also happen to turn on SQL-quoting. $rs->search( {}, { order_by => [ 'name DESC' ] } ); Since DBIx::Class >= 0.08100 and SQL::Abstract >= 1.50 the above should be written as: $rs->search( {}, { order_by => { -desc => 'name' } } ); For more ways to express order clauses refer to "ORDER BY CLAUSES" in SQL::Abstract Perl Performance Issues on Red Hat Systems There is a problem with slow performance of certain DBIx::Class operations using the system perl on some Fedora and Red Hat Enterprise Linux system (as well as their derivative distributions such as Centos, White Box and Scientific Linux). Distributions affected include Fedora 5 through to Fedora 8 and RHEL5 upto and including RHEL5 Update 2. Fedora 9 (which uses perl 5.10) has never been affected - this is purely a perl 5.8.8 issue. As of September 2008 the following packages are known to be fixed and so free of this performance issue (this means all Fedora and RHEL5 systems with full current updates will not be subject to this problem):- Fedora 8 - perl-5.8.8-41.fc8 RHEL5 - perl-5.8.8-15.el5_2.1 This issue is due to perl doing an exhaustive search of blessed objects under certain circumstances. The problem shows up as performance degradation exponential to the number of DBIx::Class result objects in memory, so can be unnoticeable with certain data sets, but with huge performance impacts on other datasets. A pair of tests for susceptibility to the issue and performance effects of the bless/overload problem can be found in the DBIx::Class test suite, in the "t/99rh_perl_perf_bug.t" file. Further information on this issue can be found in <https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=379791>, <https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=460308> and <http://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHBA-2008-0876.html> Excessive Memory Allocation with TEXT/BLOB/etc. Columns and Large LongReadLen It has been observed, using DBD::ODBC, that creating a DBIx::Class::Row object which includes a column of data type TEXT/BLOB/etc. will allocate LongReadLen bytes. This allocation does not leak, but if LongReadLen is large in size, and many such result objects are created, e.g. as the output of a ResultSet query, the memory footprint of the Perl interpreter can grow very large. The solution is to use the smallest practical value for LongReadLen. perl v5.18.2 2013-12-16 DBIx::Class::Manual::Troubleshooting(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:43 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy