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Full Discussion: RedHat 9 Questions
Operating Systems Linux Red Hat RedHat 9 Questions Post 302517928 by Michael Snowden on Friday 29th of April 2011 06:34:21 AM
Old 04-29-2011
Cairns, Australia
2011 April 28

I have several current Gnuplot scripts that work well with the latest version of Gnuplot sitting on top of recent Ubuntu. When I attempt to use these scripts with an older version of Gnuplot (version 3.7, patch level3) on RH 9, they will not work.

Can someone advise me how to get these scripts working with Gnuplot on RH9? Should I change the syntax of the scripts or try to compile a newer version of Gnuplot on RH9? Which version?

Going to a later LINUX will not be an option.

Thanks.

Michael

---------- Post updated 29-04-11 at 12:12 AM ---------- Previous update was 28-04-11 at 11:52 PM ----------

Cairns, Australia
2011 April 28

I have several scripts for a recent version of Gnuplot on top of Ubuntu, which I would like to use in an earlier version 3.7, patch level 3 that I am using with RH9. They won't work. Is there some way to get them going on this earlier version? Should I adapt the scripts to version 3.7 or try to get a later version of Gnuplot compiled and installed on RH9. Which version and where to find it?

For various reason using a later version of LINUX is not an option.

Thanks for any advice offered.

Michael

---------- Post updated at 10:34 PM ---------- Previous update was at 12:12 AM ----------

Cairns, Australia
2011 April 28

I have several scripts for a recent version of Gnuplot on top of Ubuntu, which I would like to use in an earlier version 3.7, patch level 3 that I am
using with RH9. They won't work. Is there some way to get them going on this earlier version? Should I adapt the scripts to version 3.7 or try to get a later version of Gnuplot compiled and installed on RH9. Which version and where to find it?

For various reason using a later version of LINUX is not an option.

Thanks for any advice offered.

Michael
 

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FREEBSD-VERSION(1)					    BSD General Commands Manual 					FREEBSD-VERSION(1)

NAME
freebsd-version -- print the version and patch level of the installed system SYNOPSIS
freebsd-version [-ku] DESCRIPTION
The freebsd-version utility makes a best effort to determine the version and patch level of the installed kernel and / or userland. The following options are available: -k Print the version and patch level of the installed kernel. Unlike uname(1), if a new kernel has been installed but the system has not yet rebooted, freebsd-version will print the version and patch level of the new kernel. -u Print the version and patch level of the installed userland. These are hardcoded into freebsd-version during the build. If both -k and -u are specified, freebsd-version will print the kernel version first, then the userland version, on separate lines. If nei- ther is specified, it will print the userland version only. IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
The freebsd-version utility should provide the correct answer in the vast majority of cases, including on systems kept up-to-date using freebsd-update(8), which does not update the kernel version unless the kernel itself was affected by the latest patch. To determine the name (and hence the location) of a custom kernel, the freebsd-version utility will attempt to parse /boot/defaults/loader.conf and /boot/loader.conf, looking for definitions of the kernel and bootfile variables, both with a default value of ``kernel''. It may however fail to locate the correct kernel if either or both of these variables are defined in a non-standard location, such as in /boot/loader.rc. ENVIRONMENT
ROOT Path to the root of the filesystem in which to look for loader.conf and the kernel. EXAMPLES
To determine the version of the currently running userland: /bin/freebsd-version -u To inspect a system being repaired using a live CD: mount -rt ufs /dev/ada0p2 /mnt env ROOT=/mnt /mnt/bin/freebsd-version -ku SEE ALSO
uname(1), loader.conf(5), freebsd-version(8) HISTORY
The freebsd-version command appeared in FreeBSD 10.0. AUTHORS
The freebsd-version utility and this manual page were written by Dag-Erling Smorgrav <des@FreeBSD.org>. BSD
October 5, 2013 BSD
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