I just set up an ftp server with Red Hat 5.2. I am doing the work, I'm baby stepping, but it seems like every step I get stuck. Currently, I'm trying to set up a crontab job, but I'm getting the following message: /bin/sh: /usr/bin/vi: No such file or directory. I see that vi exists in /bin/vi,... (3 Replies)
I have a person running a perl script that is parsing > 2G log files and pipes to cut -d " " -f 1,6,7,8...
The script itself is in a nfs mounted home directory. It runs fine when started from a solaris 8 box but fails after about 400 lines when started from the solaris 10 box. The solaris... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
below is the problem details:
ora10g@CNORACLE1>which ld
/usr/ucb/ld
ora10g@CNORACLE1>cd /usr/ccs/bin
ora10g@CNORACLE1>ln -s /usr/ucb/ld ld
ln: cannot create ld: File exists
ora10g@CNORACLE1>
how to link it to /usr/ccs/bin? (6 Replies)
hi i have some perl scripts with shebang line as (#! /usr/bin/env perl ) instead of actual absolute path of perl ( i know why its that way ) everything works fine from command line , the problem is when i am trying to run those scripts from web ( local web tool ) it throws error as /usr/bin/env :... (6 Replies)
Hi!
All the basic linux commands, ie. echo, find, etc, are located in /bin. I have a couple of programs that have these commands pointed towards /usr/bin, ie, /usr/bin/echo (even though the actual 'echo' command is in /bin). How can I alias or redirect or link the /usr/bin to /bin just for this... (6 Replies)
Q1. I understand that /usr/local/bin means I can install/uninstall stuff in here and have any chance of messing up my original system files or effecting any other users. I created this directory myself.
But what about the directory I didn't create, namely /Users/m/bin? How is that directory... (1 Reply)
Hi Experts,
I found that the same commands(sort, du, df, find, grep etc.) exists in both dir.
What is the difference to use them?
i.e: to use xpg4/bin/grep and usr/bin/grep
My OS version is SunOS 5.10
Regards,
Saps (7 Replies)
I'm not sure if this is the default behavior for the ld command, but it does not seem to be looking in /usr/local/lib for shared libraries.
I was trying to compile the latest version of Kanatest from svn. The autorgen.sh script seems to exit without too much trouble:
$ ./autogen.sh
checking... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: AntumDeluge
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
mime::base64::urlsafe
MIME::Base64::URLSafe(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation MIME::Base64::URLSafe(3pm)NAME
MIME::Base64::URLSafe - Perl version of Python's URL-safe base64 codec
SYNOPSIS
use MIME::Base64::URLSafe;
$encoded = urlsafe_b64encode('Alladdin: open sesame');
$decoded = urlsafe_b64decode($encoded);
DESCRIPTION
This module is a perl version of python's URL-safe base64 encoder / decoder.
When embedding binary data in URL, it is preferable to use base64 encoding. However, two characters ('+' and '/') used in the standard
base64 encoding have special meanings in URLs, often leading to re-encoding with URL-encoding, or worse, interoperability problems.
To overcome the problem, the module provides a variation of base64 codec compatible with python's urlsafe_b64encode / urlsafe_b64decode.
Modification rules from base64:
use '-' and '_' instead of '+' and '/'
no line feeds
no trailing equals (=)
The following functions are provided:
urlsafe_b64encode($str)
urlsafe_b64decode($str)
If you prefer not to import these routines to your namespace, you can call them as:
use MIME::Base64::URLSafe ();
$encoded = MIME::Base64::URLSafe::encode($decoded);
$decoded = MIME::Base64::URLSafe::decode($encoded);
SEE ALSO
MIME::Base64
Fore more discussion on using base64 encoding in URL applications, see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Base64#URL_Applications
AUTHOR
Kazuho Oku <kazuho ___at___ labs.cybozu.co.jp>
Copyright (C) 2006 Cybozu Labs, Inc.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.7 or,
at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
perl v5.8.8 2006-01-05 MIME::Base64::URLSafe(3pm)