Please post the exact lines you typed both with and without the "su" and state clearly which computer should receive the file called "ok".
Btw. Unix is not MSDOS. There is no significance in a period (.) in a filename except perhaps when transferring files to/from MSDOS. However if your "find" is only looking for filenames containing period then your script is nearly right.
how can i change the superuser password?
the admin left the company, and we want to change the password.
to gain su access, i use:
# su -
password:***** (old password)
then, using passwd command it changes my own login password, not the root??
(this is not trying to block anybody's... (4 Replies)
hi All,
In my script I want to run some drop and select statements in the same host as a different user.I am inputting password for the superuser from the user who will be executing the script.
ie ,
I would be greatfull to you experts if you could suggest me how to proceed. (4 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to find files with specific name using find / -name core -print..
this command is hanging and never completes as it is searching for all the automount filesystems ..i cant eliminate using "! -fstype nfs" as this is not a nfs filesystem
pls let me know if anyone know how to... (2 Replies)
Hi, I have written a script and placed in an application and the script can be executed manually only. But somehow one of the method in the script is being called and bringing the application down. But we are not able to find any instance of script running.
Is there a way to findout whether the... (1 Reply)
Hello every one.
I know little to nothing about AIX. Recently I have been assigned to an AIX project.
For some reason or another the find command is hanging the server.
Well it does not hand server per say, it just freezes my terminal session.
after running find, I waited up to 40 min and... (3 Replies)
Hello!
I found this on net:
This is the ``prompt''. If you entered you username, or your password incorrectly, you will be greeted by:
Login incorrect
localhost login: Don't panic, try again. Likely you either mis-typed either your login name, or your password. Try again. You're not... (2 Replies)
I have just installed Solaris 11. When I turn the computer on I don't want to see a login in screen. I want to automatically be logged in as "SUPERUSER".
My research tells me someone is going to tell me that's not wise or safe. I'm not interested in security advice. If someone I know is... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: kkeevv
10 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
gifrotat
gifrotat(1) General Commands Manual gifrotat(1)NAME
gifrotat - A program to rotate a GIF image by a specified angle.
USAGE
gifrotat -a Angle [-q] [-s Width Height] [-h] gif-file
If no gif-file is given, GifRotat will try to read a GIF file from stdin.
MEMORY REQUIRED
Screen (of source image).
OPTIONS -a Angle
Specifies the angle to rotate in degrees with respect to the X (horizontal) axis.
[-q]
Quiet mode. Defaults off on MSDOS, on under UNIX. Controls printout of running scan lines. Use -q- to invert.
[-s Width Height]
Since the rotated image will have the same image size as the original, some parts of the image will by clipped out and lost. By
specifying a (bigger) size explicitly using the `-s' option, these parts may be saved.
[-h]
Print one line of command line help, similar to Usage above.
NOTES
The image is rotated around its center. No filtering is performed on the output, which have the same color map as the input. This is
mainly since filtering would require color quantization which is very memory/time intensive and out of MSDOS memory limits even for small
images.
AUTHOR
Gershon Elber
Man page created by T.Gridel <tgridel@free.fr>, originally written by Eric S. Raymond <esr@thyrsus.com>
giflib-tools gifrotat(1)