04-23-2011
Which isn't to say you couldn't just make MIN_NUM an ordinary int and give it a number assigned from a database.
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in the header file orville.h, outside of the #ifdef #endif , there is the following
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As you can see, the JOB_CONTROL macro has no value associated with it. Here is what I go when I ran grep on the entire source code.
$ grep -iR... (6 Replies)
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Hi friends,
I am not sure if perl questions can be raised here. :rolleyes:
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Hello!!
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Hello,
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---------- Post updated at 07:37 PM ---------- Previous update was at 07:33 PM ----------
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if i do this in C
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then how come i cant print it out using
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}
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Hi,
I just define the variable in script and use those script in another script but the variable not recognize.
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LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
cap_mkdb
CAP_MKDB(1) BSD General Commands Manual CAP_MKDB(1)
NAME
cap_mkdb -- create capability database
SYNOPSIS
cap_mkdb [-v] [-f outfile] file1 [file2 ...]
DESCRIPTION
Cap_mkdb builds a hashed database out of the getcap(3) logical database constructed by the concatenation of the specified files .
The database is named by the basename of the first file argument and the string ``.db''. The getcap(3) routines can access the database in
this form much more quickly than they can the original text file(s).
The ``tc'' capabilities of the records are expanded before the record is stored into the database.
The options as as follows:
-f outfile
Specify a different database basename.
-v Print out the number of capability records in the database.
FORMAT
Each record is stored in the database using two different types of keys.
The first type is a key which consists of the first capability of the record (not including the trailing colon (``:'')) with a data field
consisting of a special byte followed by the rest of the record. The special byte is either a 0 or 1, where a 0 means that the record is
okay, and a 1 means that there was a ``tc'' capability in the record that couldn't be expanded.
The second type is a key which consists of one of the names from the first capability of the record with a data field consisting a special
byte followed by the the first capability of the record. The special byte is a 2.
In normal operation names are looked up in the database, resulting in a key/data pair of the second type. The data field of this key/data
pair is used to look up a key/data pair of the first type which has the real data associated with the name.
RETURN VALUE
The cap_mkdb utility exits 0 on success and >0 if an error occurs.
SEE ALSO
dbopen(3), getcap(3), termcap(5)
BSD
May 31, 2019 BSD