Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: How Will the World End?
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? How Will the World End? Post 302457302 by verdepollo on Monday 27th of September 2010 05:15:04 PM
Old 09-27-2010
I think eventually humans will wipe each other out through war; Then the Earth would become so polluted that the few survivors will die from radiation/illness/poisoning, etc.

PS: I wish there was an option for zombies.
 

6 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need UNIX shell scripting end to end information

Hi, I would like to learn shell scripting in UNIX. Can any one please give me the support and share the information/documents with me. If any documents please post it to aswanikumar_nimmagadda@yahoo.co.in Thanks in advance...!!! (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: aswani_n
3 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Add end of char \n on end of file

Hi, I want to add \n as a EOF at the end of file if it does't exist in a single command. How to do this? when I use command echo "1\n" > a.txt and od -c a.txt 0000000 1 \n \n 0000003 How does it differentiate \n and eof in this case? Regards, Venkat (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: svenkatareddy
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Use of Begin IF ,END IF END not working in the sql script

Hi I have written a script .The script runs properly if i write sql queries .But if i use PLSQL commands of BEGIN if end if , end ,then on running the script the comamds are getting printed on the prompt . Ex :temp.sql After connecting to the databse at the sql prompt i type... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: isha_1
1 Replies

4. Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators

Comments on "How Will the World End?"

I have read the sun-expansion scenario numerous places but I've never read any suggestion that the earth's orbit would increase to avoid being scorched. What mechanism would push it out? As for creating a black hole by the LHC, the whole concept is silly so any number of reasons would rule it... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: KenJackson
9 Replies

5. War Stories

The (Mis)Information Age – The End of the World as We Know It and What Vault7 Teaches Us

I hope you will enjoy reading this essay I wrote: The (Mis)Information Age – The End of the World as We Know It and What Vault7 Teaches Us If you are a true "IT person" i.e. a software developer, code or deep system admin, I think you will resonate with the theme of my essay. I could... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
8 Replies

6. What is on Your Mind?

Mad World Remix of Moby Video (Are You Lost In The World Like Me)

This is an excellent video comment on modern society and the remix is good too: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5DU1B_XkyIk 5DU1B_XkyIk Watch the video above and post your comments. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
3 Replies
LAMGROW(1)							   LAM COMMANDS 							LAMGROW(1)

NAME
lamgrow - Extend a LAM multicomputer. SYNTAX
lamgrow [-hv] [-c <bhost>] [-u <userid>] [<node>] <hostname> OPTIONS
-h Print useful information on this command. -c <bhost> Update this boot schema. -v Be verbose. <hostname> Extend LAM with this host. <node> Assign this ID to the new node. -u <userid> Use this userid to access the new host. DESCRIPTION
An existing LAM session, initiated by lamboot(1), can be enlarged to include more nodes with lamgrow. One new node is added for each invo- cation. At a minimum, the host name that will run the new node is given on the command line. If a different userid is required to access the host, it is specified with the -u option. It can be useful to update the original boot schema used by lamboot(1) with the new node added by lamgrow. The -c option specifies a boot schema filename and causes lamgrow to append the host name. The updated boot schema is ready to be used by wipe(1) to terminate the ex- tended LAM session. New nodes added by lamgrow will not be cleaned up by wipe(1) if the original boot schema is used. They can be termi- nated individually, as always, with tkill(1). The new node can be assigned any unused, non-negative identifier. If no identifier is specified, the highest node identifier in the cur- rent LAM session plus one is used. Note that lamboot(1) always assigns node identifiers consecutively from 0. lamgrow can be run from any node. As a LAM command program it must be run from a node in the existing LAM session. It cannot be run from the intended new host. Two invocations of lamgrow should not run concurrently and the command attempts to detect this situation. There is no protection against specifying the name of host that is already part of the user's existing LAM session. This is not the proper use of lamgrow. Resource managers will be the most common user of lamgrow. When hosts become idle and a user has expressed a desire to the manager that extra cycles should be exploited, the manager could invoke lamgrow and then launch the specified application process(es) on the new node. EXAMPLES
lamgrow -v newhost Start LAM on newhost and add it to the existing LAM session. Choose the next available node identifier and report about important steps as they are done. lamgrow n30 newhost Start LAM on newhost with node ID 30 and add it to the existing LAM session. Operate silently. FILES
$LAMHOME/etc/lam-conf.lam default configuration file for LAM nodes SEE ALSO
lamboot(1), hboot(1), wipe(1), tkill(1), bhost(5), conf(5) LAM 6.5.8 November, 2002 LAMGROW(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:28 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy