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Special Forums Cybersecurity How to know when you've been hacked Post 302235121 by jedidiah on Thursday 11th of September 2008 08:00:06 AM
Old 09-11-2008
Wow, this is one good reading.

Thanks,
Vaibhav
 

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fstopgm(1)						      General Commands Manual							fstopgm(1)

NAME
fstopgm - convert a Usenix FaceSaver(tm) file into a portable graymap SYNOPSIS
fstopgm [fsfile] DESCRIPTION
Reads a Usenix FaceSaver(tm) file as input. Produces a portable graymap as output. FaceSaver(tm) files sometimes have rectangular pixels. While fstopgm won't re-scale them into square pixels for you, it will give you the precise pnmscale command that will do the job. Because of this, reading a FaceSaver(tm) image is a two-step process. First you do: fstopgm > /dev/null This will tell you whether you need to use pnmscale. Then use one of the following pipelines: fstopgm | pgmnorm fstopgm | pnmscale -whatever | pgmnorm To go to PBM, you want something more like one of these: fstopgm | pnmenlarge 3 | pgmnorm | pgmtopbm fstopgm | pnmenlarge 3 | pnmscale <whatever> | pgmnorm | pgmtopbm You want to enlarge when going to a bitmap because otherwise you lose information; but enlarging by more than 3 does not look good. FaceSaver is a registered trademark of Metron Computerware Ltd. of Oakland, CA. SEE ALSO
pgmtofs(1), pgm(5), pgmnorm(1), pnmenlarge(1), pnmscale(1), pgmtopbm(1) AUTHOR
Copyright (C) 1989 by Jef Poskanzer. 06 April 89 fstopgm(1)
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