I have a problem viewing text files in NT(Samba) with files stored on a Unix Box. The unix box is actually my FTP server where various OS's FTP to it. The text file is ftp'd from IBM to the Unix Box and viewed in NT. The problem is that the return carriage does not register in the text file. I... (1 Reply)
I have backed up a job ona ait tape from unix. i would like to retrieve the data from that tape from a windows pc. i am aware that there may be software available that will allow windows to recognise .tar files. does anyone know where i can source this software or is there any other options (1 Reply)
I have a file (called CORE) that is a dump created by a crashing process. This file, I believe, is in "binary" form, so when I try to use cat, more, or vi on it, it has a bunch of garbage. Is there anything I can use to "read" or view this file just like I might a non-binary file? I am running... (2 Replies)
I think that's what I'm trying to do. This is the problem:
I log onto my comp, Comp1. Then, from the terminal, since my web server is on another comp, I type: xrlogin Comp2, so I log on to that computer. I then navigate to my directory by typing: cd /domain/myDir, so I am in my directory, on the... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
Is there a way of viewing a binary file through a UNIX session? Or perhaps viewing information of a binary file through a session?
thanks (2 Replies)
I am having trouble viewing these files from my unix session. vi comes back with line too long. Also an m_dump with the relevant dml comes back with problems.
How can I view this as a text file? Also is there an easy way to view specific records within. Eg I have a policy id (4 Replies)
Is there any way we can view the *.msg files in unix / linux ?
Example cat aa.msg
Or Do we need to do any decryption ?
Kindly provide the solution? (0 Replies)
Hi guys
Done a bit of research online but can't seem to figure it out, is there anyway of grepping or using sed to view a specific time period of a log file.
I am trying to view a log file for Saturday 22nd April between 08:00 - 12:00
I saw this command online and tried but doesn't seem to... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: simpsa27
10 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
bf_tar
BF_TAR(1)BF_TAR(1)NAME
bf_tar - shell script to write a tar file of a bogofilter directory to stdout
SYNOPSIS
bf_tar [-r] [-R] bogofilter_directory
DESCRIPTION
bf_tar bundles a bogofilter working directory in tar format and copies it to standard output (your console, or where you redirect it, see
EXAMPLES below).
OPTIONS
The -r option causes bf_tar to remove inactive log files after the archive has been written successfully. The default is to leave log
files.
The -R option causes bf_tar to remove inactive log files before the archive is written. This may reduce chances that the resulting archive
is recoverable should it become damaged. The archive may be smaller though. The default is to leave log files.
EXIT STATUS
The script exits with status code 0 if everything went well, and nonzero if it encountered trouble.
EXAMPLES
o bf_tar ~/.bogofilter > outfile.tar
Writes a standard .tar file containing the essential files from ~/.bogofilter to outfile.tar.
o bf_tar ~/.bogofilter | gzip -9 -c > outfile.tar.gz
Writes a gzipped .tar.gz file containing the essential files from ~/.bogofilter to outfile.tar.gz.
o bf_tar `pwd`/mydirectory > outfile.tar
Prepend $(pwd)/ or `pwd`/ if you want to specify an absolute path instead of a relative path.
NOTES
This script is meant for use with Berkeley DB based bogofilter versions.
This script requires a SUSv2 compliant pax utility.
This script expects a SUSv2 compliant shell. Solaris systems should have the SUNWxcu4 package installed (when bogofilter is configured) so
that /usr/xpg4/bin/sh can be used.
07/23/2007 BF_TAR(1)