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Full Discussion: bare bones Debian install
Operating Systems Linux Debian bare bones Debian install Post 302577339 by cowLips on Monday 28th of November 2011 08:28:38 PM
Old 11-28-2011
bare bones Debian install

I have read into some of the complexity in the docs in Debian on the install procedure.
Is there any guiding light on what is required for a bare bones install.

I have read in maybe the wikipedia that the einstein behind Debian has put in place every thing imaginable for any particular Machine.
is that true, is the install real top heavy ?.

And i was wondering, after the install if there is any way to detect the programs that are not needed.
I do see that there is a un-install GUI be for thought put in place in other OS`s and i assume there is one in Debian.
I just like to know where i am going in the forest before i get there.

thanks
i am studying Linux and bash with YDL in a iBook G4 that is questionable as to wether it will boot the next time. graphics card is damaged and there seems to be some dependencies on the graphics card for ? i saw in a log file.
I plan to install Debian into a HP mini Notebook.
so the G4 is the learning lab.
 

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BONES-INFO(1)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					     BONES-INFO(1)

NAME
bones-info - display information about a Nethack bones file SYNOPSIS
bones-info [-a | --auto] [-b | --big-endian] [--debug] [--help] [-x | --hexadecimal] [-l | --little-endian] [-v | --verbose] [--version] file... DESCRIPTION
bones-info displays information about a Nethack bones file. By default it shows what byte sex it used to read the file and the 4 version numbers which constitute the feature set and platform for the Nethack binary which generated it. ENDIANNESS (aka BYTE SEX) Normally bones-info reads the bones file in little endian order, regardless of the byte sex of the current system, mostly because it was originally written to help with diagnosing problems with hearse and that's the most useful behavior for that purpose. You can use the --auto, --big-endian, and --little-endian switches to change this. --auto is particularly useful (and appropriate) when using --verbose. OPTIONS
-a, --auto Try to guess the right byte sex (little endian or big endian) for each input file. If there doesn't seem to be a right choice, bones- info will output a warning, set a non-zero exit status, and move on to the next file. -b, --big-endian Read the bones files in big endian order, such as is used by Macs. See also "--auto". --debug Turn debugging on. --help Show the usage message and die. -x, --hexadecimal Output numbers in hexadecimal form. -l, --little-endian Read the bones files in little endian order, such as is used by Intel hardware. This is the default, I include it so that you don't have to check what the default is if you know you want it a certain way. -v, --verbose Output more info about the bones file. This tries to decode the 4 version numbers. Its useful when you want to see what the differences are between two sets of version numbers. You'd normally want to use --auto when you use --verbose. --version Show the version number and exit. EXAMPLES
Output the values as used by the hearse server: $ bones-info * bonD0.0 sex=l v1=1 v2=2 v3=3 v4=4 bonD0.4.gz sex=l v1=50593792 v2=10357958 v3=555422078 v4=2759955912 bonD0.8.Z sex=l v1=1027 v2=3322682880 v3=2115050273 v4=3365241252 bonD0.19 sex=l v1=50528512 v2=10357830 v3=555409789 v4=2558629316 bonM0.1 sex=l v1=50593792 v2=404622406 v3=555417981 v4=2759955916 bonM0.T sex=l v1=50593792 v2=1969222 v3=555417981 v4=2759955912 Output the real values as seen on the system which wrote the file (by guessing the byte sex of the file): $ bones-info --auto * bones-info: can't intuit byte sex of bonD0.0 bonD0.4.gz sex=l v1=50593792 v2=10357958 v3=555422078 v4=2759955912 bonD0.8.Z sex=b v1=50593792 v2=1969350 v3=555422078 v4=2759955912 bonD0.19 sex=l v1=50528512 v2=10357830 v3=555409789 v4=2558629316 bonM0.1 sex=l v1=50593792 v2=404622406 v3=555417981 v4=2759955916 bonM0.T sex=l v1=50593792 v2=1969222 v3=555417981 v4=2759955912 zsh: exit 1 bones-info --auto * Decode the version numbers: $ bones-info --auto --verbose bonD0.4.gz bonD0.8.Z bonD0.4.gz: 18389 bytes read as: little endian incarnation: 50593792 (3.4.0.0) feature_set: 10357958 (REINCARNATION SINKS KOPS MAIL TOURIST STEED TEXTCOLOR INSURANCE ELBERETH EXP_ON_BOTL TIMED_DELAY) entity_count: 555422078 (33 artifacts, 433 objects, 382 monsters) struct_sizes: 2759955912 (164 flag, 64 obj, 101 monst, 456 you) bonD0.8.Z: 22296 bytes read as: big endian incarnation: 50593792 (3.4.0.0) feature_set: 1969350 (REINCARNATION SINKS KOPS MAIL TOURIST STEED TEXTCOLOR INSURANCE ELBERETH EXP_ON_BOTL) entity_count: 555422078 (33 artifacts, 433 objects, 382 monsters) struct_sizes: 2759955912 (164 flag, 64 obj, 101 monst, 456 you) $ _ BUGS
Unsigned longs are assumed to be 4 bytes. The --auto byte sex detection isn't robust. It'd be nice to be provide --verbose output for bones files from older versions. AVAILABILITY
This program is distributed with the Unix Hearse client. The code is licensed under the GNU GPL. Check http://www.argon.org/~roderick/hearse/ for updated versions. AUTHOR
Roderick Schertler <roderick@argon.org> perl v5.14.2 2012-02-11 BONES-INFO(1)
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