05-16-2011
A picture may speak a thousand words, but without context they are spoken in vain. What exactly is your problem, what are you trying to do?
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi Forums,
It seems to me that I can't use "su" command. When I type "su", I get the following message:
/sbin/su - Permission denied
Am I missing any thing?
By the way I am using IRIX6.5 on a SGI computer. Many thanks in advance for your help.
Cheers, Siavoush (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: siavoush
12 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Ok heres the situation
I've been studying Solaris 8 for about 6 months now and some things click in my head but others don't.
One of the things that don't click are file permissions.
For example I login at work and I use the ls -l command to get a long listing of the files w/ the permissions.... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: eloquent99
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3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Is it possible to set owner to a group? I need to have a group own a process, because there will be 3 diffrent persons that will start and stop this process. They can not use the same users cause och back logging. we need to know who end when a certian user start/stops processes. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: dozy
1 Replies
4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
What does the following permission indicate?
-rwSr----- 1 oracle dba 1536 Nov 7 17:05 orapwRTMDB
Thanks,
Rahul. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rahulrathod
1 Replies
5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
When I listed one directory in Sun, it showed that :
-rwsr-xr-x 1 root bsmbin 78004 Oct 21 2004 bsmprsm
I don't know meaning of the character "s" in "rws" above. I have searched in Sun admin documents but no result. Would you please explain it ? :)
Thank you so much. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: msg098
1 Replies
6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi all,
I created testuser. by following command.
/usr/sbin/adduser -n test -d /disk05/collections/GET/testdata/
and then set its password by following command.
passwd testuser
When I login to system by testuser, it enters everything is ok.
The problem is how to set permission to this... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: mr_bold
3 Replies
7. Ubuntu
Pictures by worthamtx - Photobucket
The URL is graphic view my present concern. Old partition working great sdb1
both appear on nautilus, both deliver icons to desk top. Based on the label handling of gparted results I tried following with success
sudo mkdir /media/disk/data
sudo chown... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: 77yrold
1 Replies
8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello
Whenever we want to oen any type of file by name, we must have execute perm. in each
dir. mentioned in the name. I changed the dir permission using chmod to test the validity of this statement.
but i still can open the file
-------
any guides would be appreciable (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: dr_mabuse
2 Replies
9. Linux
I am using korn shell
When I type in Telnet on cmd line, I get message
"cannot execute"
How can I get permission to execute command ? In which dir is telnet located ? I looked in /usr/bin dir. but its not there
Thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: paramshamnani
1 Replies
10. Ubuntu
Trying to get date into the txt file.
It says
Permission denied.
echo $(date +%I:%M:%S_%D) >> /tmp/systemd_suspend_test_err.txt
exec 2>> /tmp/systemd_suspend_test_err.txt
if ; then
# Do the thing you want before suspend here
echo "we are suspending $(date +%I:%M:%S_%D)."
elif ;... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: drew77
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
espeak
ESPEAK(1) General Commands Manual ESPEAK(1)
NAME
espeak - A multi-lingual software speech synthesizer.
SYNOPSIS
espeak [options] [<words>]
DESCRIPTION
espeak is a software speech synthesizer for English, and some other languages.
OPTIONS
-h Show summary of options.
-f <text file>
Text file to speak
--stdin
Read text input from stdin instead of a file
If neither -f nor --stdin, <words> are spoken, or if none then text is spoken from stdin, each line separately.
-q Quiet, don't produce any speech (may be useful with -x)
-a <integer>
Amplitude, 0 to 20, default is 10
-l <integer>
Line length. If not zero (which is the default), consider lines less than this length as and-of-clause
-p <integer>
Pitch adjustment, 0 to 99, default is 50
-s <integer>
Speed in words per minute, default is 160
-v <voice name>
Use voice file of this name from espeak-data/voices
-b Input text encoding, 1=UTF8, 2=8 bit, 4=16 bit
-b Input text encoding, 1=UTF8, 2=8 bit, 4=16 bit
-m Indicates that the text contains SSML (Speech Synthesis Markup Language) tags or other XML tags. Those SSML tags which are supported
are interpreted. Other tags, including HTML, are ignored, except that some HTML tags such as <hr> <h2> and <li> ensure a break in
the speech.
-w <wave file name>
Write output to this WAV file, rather than speaking it directly
-x Write phoneme mnemonics to stdout
-X Write phonemes mnemonics and translation trace to stdout. If rules files have been built with --compile=debug, line numbers will
also be displayed.
--stdout
Write speech output to stdout
--compile=<voice name>
Compile the pronunciation rules and dictionary in the current directory. =<voice name> is optional and specifies which language
--path=<path>
Specifies the directory containing the espeak-data directory
--phonout=<filename>
Write output from -x -X commands and mbrola phoneme data to this file
--punct="<characters>"
Speak the names of punctuation characters during speaking. If =<characters> is omitted, all punctuation is spoken.
-k <integer>
Indicate capital letters with: 1=sound, 2=the word "capitals", higher values = a pitch increase (try -k20).
--voices[=<language code>]
Lists the available voices. If =<language code> is present then only those voices which are suitable for that language are listed.
--compile=voicename
Compile the pronunciation rules and dictionary in the current directory. =<voice name> is optional and specifies which language
--compile=debug
Compile the pronunciation rules and dictionary in the current directory as above, but include line numbers, that get shown when -X
is used.
AUTHOR
eSpeak was written by Jonathan Duddington <jonsd@jsd.clara.co.uk>. The webpage for this package can be found at http://espeak.source-
forge.net/.
This manual page was written by Luke Yelavich <themuso@ubuntu.com>, for the Ubuntu project (but may be used by others).
August 6, 2010 ESPEAK(1)