07-11-2008
Read and share these 5 reasons to avoid ...
Read and share these 5 reasons to avoid iPhone 3G with friends, family and coworkers. The iPhone's DRM prevents free software from being run on it at all, and gives Apple the authority to determine what can legally be installed by anyone on their own mobile computer.
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9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Solaris
What are the steps to find out the reasons it crash in the solaris machine (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sandeepkv
3 Replies
2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I've done this in the past, but I didn't save the syntax. I'm still kicking myself about that...
I am trying to mount \\server_name\share_name for read/write under CentOS 5.2 (a "generic" version of RedHat). As I recall, there was a fairly simple (maybe a oneline) command that would allow NTFS... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: shew01
2 Replies
3. IP Networking
One of my servers started getting heavily loaded a few weeks ago for a few hours, so I did some studying and wrote a script to use netstat to get the IP addresses connected and the count. I put a new chain in iptables and if an IP is using more than 40 connections, it gets added to that chain which... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: PWSwebmaster
3 Replies
4. Ubuntu
Hi.
I've used the Wubi install of Ubuntu and Kubuntu on my Windows XP machine for close to half a year now. My brother has let me know of a program where he works by which they're getting rid of (with support negated) several Lenovo laptops, on which, he also informs me, the K 'flavor' of Ubuntu... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: SilversleevesX
1 Replies
5. Solaris
Hi,
Currently I have a Samba shared configured as follows:
comment = Public fileshare
path = /u02/pub
guest ok = Yes
writeable = Yes
There is a subfolder under /u02/pub called /u02/pub/expenses/hardware that I need to make read only. How do I do this? I am new to using Samba.
... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sparcman
2 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Input data:
read1_data1
read1_data1
read2_data1
read3_data1
read4_data1
read4_data1
read4_data1
read5_data1
.
.
Desired output result:
read1_data1
read1_data2
read2_data1
read3_data1
read4_data1 (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: perl_beginner
3 Replies
7. Solaris
Dear Solaris Experts,
We are upgrading from sun4u to T4 systems and one proposal is to use LDOMs and also zones within LDOMs.
Someone advised using only zones and not LDOMs because the new machines have fewer chips and if a chip or a core fails then it doesn't impact the zones, but impacts... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: User121
3 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello,
I need to write a script to check directory size on a linux server.
I do not have access to some directories Inside the directory tree so I've got some warning in the output that say :
du : cannot read directory ....
Could you please help me. I did try Inside of my script to... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Aswex
2 Replies
9. Red Hat
Hi,
We have two servers in scenario (vmsoldot01 is Oracle VM with Linux and tldtppod15 is physical Linux server). One NAS share is mounted on both servers with similar permissions and access. But READ speed is too bad on virtual in comparison to physical server.
While trying to diagnose this, I... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: solaris_1977
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
uri::url
URI::URL(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation URI::URL(3)
NAME
URI::URL - Uniform Resource Locators
SYNOPSIS
$u1 = URI::URL->new($str, $base);
$u2 = $u1->abs;
DESCRIPTION
This module is provided for backwards compatibility with modules that depend on the interface provided by the "URI::URL" class that used to
be distributed with the libwww-perl library.
The following differences compared to the "URI" class interface exist:
o The URI::URL module exports the url() function as an alternate constructor interface.
o The constructor takes an optional $base argument. The "URI::URL" class is a subclasses of "URI::WithBase".
o The URI::URL->newlocal class method is the same as URI::file->new_abs
o URI::URL::strict(1)
o $url->print_on method
o $url->crack method
o $url->full_path; same as ($uri->abs_path || "/")
o $url->netloc; same as $uri->authority
o $url->epath, $url->equery; same as $uri->path, $uri->query
o $url->path and $url->query pass unescaped strings.
o $url->path_components; same as $uri->path_segments (if you don't consider path segment parameters).
o $url->params and $url->eparams methods.
o $url->base method. See URI::WithBase.
o $url->abs and $url->rel have an optional $base argument. See URI::WithBase.
o $url->frag; same as $uri->fragment
o $url->keywords; same as $uri->query_keywords;
o $url->localpath with friends map to $uri->file
o $url->address and $url->encoded822addr; same as $uri->to for mailto URI.
o $url->groupart method for news URI.
o $url->article; same as $uri->message
SEE ALSO
URI, URI::WithBase
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 1998-2000 Gisle Aas.
perl v5.8.0 2002-05-09 URI::URL(3)