Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: I'm a newbie to unix
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers I'm a newbie to unix Post 302294697 by chance63 on Thursday 5th of March 2009 04:51:13 PM
Old 03-05-2009
I'm a newbie to unix

i have just installed UNIX 7.01 to replace a windows server2003 used for my family to share and remotely save photos
i need to set it up so very novice users can view, import and export photos most of the remote users will have windows machines,i use Linux, Mac and windows.
most of what i want to do should be able to be done in the browser (I can do that)
but the setup is another thing I'm not a good programmer (i will admit that) but i can somewhat
is there a book or a e-book that will help
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

unix newbie

What shellscript would I use If I wanted to list all files in the current directory which are identical to a certain filename. I am told to use binary comparison but have been unable to find out what this means. I have tried man pages and can find a file of a certian filename but cant seem to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: gavinlow1980
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

am a unix newbie

hello, first time I have posted in here....hope somebody can help. I have a sparc4 workstation loaded with solaris 8....it is asking me for a prompt and I have tried a whole bunch with no success. <actually I have this machine to mess around with linux so I would like to get rid of unix and... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: mysticalpotato
12 Replies

3. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers

Unix Newbie

Dear Any&All I am really new to this Unix stuff, having bashed away at coding with VC++ for years. What I'd like to know is, what Unix OS would be best to start on...I've had a look around and there seem to be a few. Lindows Linux Redhat ... Which is the best to learn on? Can anyone... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: u6ik
7 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

hello unix newbie

hi im new to unix i use windows on my home pc the reason i registered is because im finishing up a UNIX class this year. all i have left is the exam but i had a lot of personal problems and didnt do a lot of work; the teacher is letting me make it up but its hard for me to learn a whole unix... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Combat Form
1 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Can we call JSP file from Unix.if so how.Please help me.Im newbie to Unix

Hi Can we call a jsp page from Unix.if so please let me know how we can.. thanks for the help in advance... thanks kumar (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: mailsukumar
0 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

UNIX newbie NEWBIE question!

Hello everyone, Just started UNIX today! In our school we use solaris. I just want to know how do I setup Solaris 10 not the GUI one, the one where you have to type the commands like ECHO, ls, pwd, etc... I have windows xp and I also have vmware. I hope I am not missing anything! :p (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Hanamachi
4 Replies

7. OS X (Apple)

Unix Newbie...

I've a MacBook and I'm not that good to this Unix kind of a operating system, could you guys please suggest me some Unix Beginner type book to learn all the shell scripting and the whole UNIX environment (something for intermediate level)...there are thousands of books available and i don't know... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: VasiqMz
2 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

newbie in unix

hiii i have few questions..i hav just started using unix....i got two doubts or problems as per now, if anyone can clarify it or solve it, his/her help is highly appreciated.. 1) how to Rename all files which contain the sub-string 'foo', replacing it with 'bar' within a given folder. 2)How to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vicky1989
1 Replies

9. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers

unix newbie

Hi everyone! Thanks for taking the time. I've installed redhat and ubunto on vmware virtually. I want to try unix and I tried to look in the internet but wasn't able to accomplish my desire task. Any links for install, download links and information will be honestly appreciated. I will be... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: michaelttkk
6 Replies

10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

UNIX for newbie

i very newbie unix i already download FreeBSD-10.0-RELEASE-i386-disc1 but i don't know how to use it can anyone tell me, i use win 7 and i like to learn, i read a book teach your self unix in 24 hour but not told me how i do the first time do i need to made dual boot ? in windows system what... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: hle
4 Replies
digitaglinktree(1)						Linux User's Manual						digitaglinktree(1)

NAME
digitaglinktree - Export tag structure of photos in digikam to the filesystem. SYNOPSIS
digitaglinktree -l taglinkdir | -A archivedir -d database [-r rootdir] [-H|-f|-a|-v|-C] DESCRIPTION
digitaglinktree will create a linktree for all photos in a digikam database that have tags set on them. Tags (like eg. "family", "events", ...) are used in digikam to create virtual folders containing images that all have one or more tags assigned. Please note: Photos that have no tags at all assigned are silently ignored by this script. The program will not modify or even touch your original photos managed by digikam. The script can be used in two ways: If you call it using Option -l taglinkdir the script will create the user specified directory taglinkdir and inside this directory it will create sub directories for digikam tags set on the photos. Inside these subdirectories it will finally place symbolic or hard links (see -H) to photos having the tags in question. As a result you will see the tags of your pho- tos as folders and in these folders you will find links to your original photos. In this way you can access the collection of all images that share a certain tag by changing directory to the folder with the tags name created by this script. This allows you e.g. to run JAlbum a photo album software that needs to find the pictures to be put into a web album in the filesystem because JAlbum cannot access digikams virtual folders directly. The second way of calling this script is the so called archive-mode by setting option -A archiveDir. Archive mode is thought for people who want to archive tagged photos independently of digikams root directories and the photos therein. This way you can put your photos and their tag structure in eg. a tar archive and send it to a friend, who can look at the photos via their tag structure. In this mode the script creates the directory given as parameter to -A and in this directory two more subdirectories. One named Photos and a second named Tags. The Photos directory contains hard links to your original photos, and the Tags directory con- tains a subdirectory for each Tag used by any of your photos. Inside this subdirectory there are links (either symbolic or hard links) to the files in the Photos directory. This way the archive directory needs nearly no additional space on your harddisk and you have an ar- chive that allows you or a friend to easily look at the photos tag structure. Another benefit from using this script is that you have kind of a backup of your tag settings for all of your photos. The backup is simply the directory structure containing links to the original images that wear the tags. This could become important if for whatever reason the digikam.db file gets corrupted or even lost. COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS -l taglinkdir Parameter taglinkdir denotes a directory in which the tag structure of all your photos stored in rootdir will be exported to by creating subdirectories for each tag and placing symbolic links in these subdirectories that point to the original photo wearing the tags. If calling the script with option -l taglinkDir you also have to specify options -r rootdir as well as -d database. -A archivedirectory archivedirectory denotes a directory into which the script will export the photos and their tag structure. -A has to be used together with option -r rootdir if using digikam version < 0.10, as well as -d database else the script will terminate. Inside the archive directory the script will create a Photos and a Tags directory. It will put hard links in the Photos directory that point to your original photos. By using hard links you are independent of changes in your digikam root directory but on the other hand you are limited to one filesystem. So the directory given by -r rootdir and the directory specified for -A archivedir have to be one the same filesystem. If using digikam in version >= 0.10 you cannot specify -r rootdir . Instead the root paths of all albums are taken from digikams database directly. However still the requirement holds, that archivedir has to be on the same filesystem like all the root directories containing photos you defined in digikam. If one of digikams root directories is on another filesystem this one will not be processed, since hardlinking the photos inside the Photos directory would not work in this case! The Tags subdirectory will contain links to the files in the Photos directory. This way you have one archive directory that is completely self contained. You can tar it, send it to a friend or just put it somewhere for archivel or backup purposes. Usually only those photos will be archived that have a digikam tag set on them. By using option -C however you can perform a complete ar- chive. See -C for more infos. -d database database is the complete path including the filename to digikams photo database which usually can be found in digikams root direc- tory. The files name is usually digikam.db . -r rootdir rootdir denotes the digikam base directory containing all your photos if you are using digikam in a version before 0.10. If you are using digikam 0.10 or newer you must not use this option. If you do it anyway you will see a hint that the option given will be ignored because digikams version 0.10 database contains the root directories of all albums defined in digikam. -C When the script is called with option -A archivedir only those photos will be archived (by placing links) in the Photos subdirectory of archivedir that have at least one digikam tag set. By setting option -C all photos will be archived to archivedir no matter if they have a tag set or not. Note: This only changes the contents of the Photos subdirectory not of the Tags subdirectory in the archivedir directory. -a By default the script will try to create relative symbolic links from the directory taglinkdir set by option -l to the photo files under rootdir given by option -r. Using this option will result in absolute symbolic links beeing created instead of relative ones. -H By default the script will create soft (symbolic) links from the Tag-Tree to the photos. By setting option -H the script will use hard links instead. Please note that hard links can only be created inside one filesystem. So your photos and the Tag tree have to be one the same filesystem. If not you will see a warning about this problem and the script will not run. -f In digikam photos can have hierachical tags (tags that have subtags). In this case digitaglinktree would by default add a directory for the tag and a subdirectory for each of the subtags of this tag. By setting -f a subtag is treated like a regular tag just as its parent tag so digitaglinktree will create all subdirectories for tags and subtags at the same level independent of the tag - subtag hierarchy. -v Prints the scripts version number and exits. CONFIGURATION
By default this script will run with all photo databases created by digikam version 0.10 as well as older version like 0.9 and 0.8. If you still have digikam version 0.7 then you have to reconfigure the script itself. You have to reconfigure the script by setting the path to the sqlite binary that is used by the script to query the digikam database digikam.db. Since very old digikam version use sqlite in version 2, but later digikam versions need sqlite version 3 you have to take care to install the correct version of sqlite for the installed digikam version and to set the path to the correct sqlite executable in the scripts head: Choose $SQLITE="/usr/bin/sqlite3"; for digikam version 0.8x and 0.9x and 0.10x $SQLITE="/usr/bin/sqlite"; for digikam version 0.7x. EXAMPLE
A call to digitaglinktree is shown below: digiTagLinktree -l /home/user/tags -d /home/user/photos/digikam.db In this example we assume that you are running digikam version 0.10 or higher so that no option -r was used to specify the photo root dir. Instead this information will automatically be fetched from digikams database. In case you want to run the script on a digikam database that was created by digikam version 0.9 or earlier you have to use -r to specify the root directory where you keep all your photos that are managed by digikam: digiTagLinktree -r /home/user/photos -l /home/user/tags -d /home/user/photos/digikam.db In this example digikams photo root denoted by -r is /home/user/photos. Option -l /home/user/tags tells the script that all the subdirectories and symbolic links will be placed in the directory /home/user/tags. The folder was chosen so that the tags-directory is not under digikams photo root. You may put the tags folder inside digikams photoroot but this is not the preferred method. Because the link directory contains only links this tag structure does hardly need any additional space on your harddisk. AUTHORS
digitaglinktree was written by Rainer Krienke <krienke at uni-koblenz.de> 16 Aug 2006 digitaglinktree(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:16 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy