I am trying to determing how long it will take to transfer 384 Gb of data across a 100 Mb full ethernet. If I am correct, I come up with 36 Gb per hour. Surely that is not correct. I assumed 100 megabit per second is 10 megabyte per second, which is 600 megabytes per minute and 36 GB per hour.... (3 Replies)
Hi again,
first of all thanks for you help on my last problem, the problem is solved now.
But I have many problem :)
This time, I transfered a big file, ~3,5 GByte, with ftp from a Sun machine to a linux box, RedHat 7.3. But the file recieved on the Linux Box is corrupt, with smaller files... (12 Replies)
Hi,
I have to transfer data from our production site to DR site(another city). I am using FTP for transfering data. But I am unable to get the same data transfer rate on AIX machines, one I am geting on windows machines. I want to know, is there any constraint on data transfer using FTP on AIX... (2 Replies)
dear sir,
pls. can you help me ? , my os is unix sco 5.0.4 and ,server dat derive (1,4gb)
not working, now i want to transfer my server data in other machine (unix/other possible) by serial port/other port comminication.
thanks
pankaj raval (2 Replies)
Hi,
I'm relatively new to shell scripting, Ive worked on a few basic scripts and used most of the unix commands in the simplest of situations. But I am now faced with a task that's seems to be beyond me.
I have a file with some data in the form of rows and columns :
123 4536 abcd4 677 bbb... (1 Reply)
Dear Friends,
I need to transfer few files from a Windows 2000 server to Sun Solaris system, connected in the same network. This copy should be done as a batch job without asking for password to be entered every time. How to make this possible ???
At present I am using cygwin in my laptop... (4 Replies)
We have a data on the disk that was copied from HP N4000 running HPUX 11.11 and it was created with vxfs version 4.
We need to transfer this data to Sun server, how might this be done? (2 Replies)
i have two excel sheets with cpu uasge and memory usage in the follwing format:
sheet 1:
22,33
sheet 2:
55,66
i need to display in the below format:
servername cpu mem
ser1 22 33
ser2 55 66
am using UNIX os.
can anyone help me... (2 Replies)
1 TB of data needs to read through 4 I/O channesl, each channels supports - 100 MB/s, What is average time taken to read the data ?
Please give the formula for my understanding (2 Replies)
Please let me know which ports are used for data transfer, as per my understaning in Linux below ports are used for data transfer from windows to Linux.
ftp 21
sftp 22 (Most secure Port)
telnet 23
any other port?
wheather we can change the port no 22 to any other port no for a... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: manoj.solaris
10 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
sdeckanji
sdeckanji(5) File Formats Manual sdeckanji(5)NAME
sdeckanji - A character encoding system (codeset) for Japanese
DESCRIPTION
The Super DEC Kanji codeset extends the DEC Kanji codeset to support the CS2 (JIS Katakana) and CS3 (JIS X0212) character sets that are
also included in the Japanese EUC codeset. Super DEC Kanji is therefore a superset of both DEC Kanji and Japanese EUC and can handle data
encoded in either DEC Kanji or Japanese EUC. The codeset was implemented to ease the transition from DEC Kanji, which is proprietary encod-
ing, to Japanese EUC, which is encoding specified by an industry standard.
In addition to supporting standard Japanese character sets, Super DEC Kanji provides three areas for defining User-Defined Characters
(UDC). The UDC areas are as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------
Area Usage Row Range Number of Char- Code Range
acters
------------------------------------------------------------
JIS X0208 85-94 940 F5A1-FEFE
JIS X0212 78-94 1598 SS3 [EEA1-FEFE]
UDC 1-94 8836 A121-FE7E
------------------------------------------------------------
The representation of ASCII/JIS Roman, JIS X0208 and User-Defined Characters (UDC) in Super DEC Kanji is the same as that in DEC Kanji. The
representation of CS2 and CS3 in Super DEC Kanji is the same as that in Japanese EUC.
Codeset Conversion
The following codeset converter pairs are available for converting Japanese characters between sdeckanji and other encoding formats. Refer
to iconv_intro(5) for an introduction to codeset conversion. For more information about the other codeset for which sdeckanji is the input
or output, see the reference page specified in the list item. deckanji_sdeckanji, sdeckanji_deckanji
Converting from and to the DEC Kanji codeset: deckanji(5). eucJP_sdeckanji, sdeckanji_eucJP
Converting from and to Japanese Extended UNIX Code: eucJP(5). ISO-2022-JP_sdeckanji, sdeckanji_ISO-2022JP
Converting from and to the ISO 2022-JP codeset: iso2022jp(5). ISO-2022-JPext_sdeckanji, sdeckanji_ISO-2022JPext
Converting from and to the ISO 2022-JP Extended codeset: iso2022jp(5). JIS7_sdeckanji or jiskanji7_sdeckanji, sdeckanji_JIS7 or
sdeckanji_jiskanji7
Converting from and to 7-bit JIS Kanji code: jiskanji(5). SJIS_sdeckanji, sdeckanji_SJIS
Converting from and to the Shift JIS codeset: SJIS(5).
Shift JIS encoding is identical to encoding used in the Microsoft Japanese code page for PC systems. Therefore, you can use these
converters to convert Japanese characters between Super DEC Kanji and PC code-page format. For information on how the operating sys-
tem supports PC code pages, see code_page(5). UCS-2_sdeckanji, sdeckanji_UCS-2
Converting from and to UCS-2 format: Unicode(5). UCS-4_sdeckanji, sdeckanji_UCS-4
Converting from and to UCS-4 format: Unicode(5). UTF-8_sdeckanji, sdeckanji_UTF-8
Converting from and to UTF--8 format: Unicode(5).
Font Support for Super DEC Kanji
For display devices, the operating system supports sdeckanji code by converting it to deckanji and using fonts available for deckanji.
Refer to i18n_printing(5) and Japanese(5) for information about supporting print jobs that contain Japanese characters.
SEE ALSO
Commands: locale(1)
Others: ascii(5), code_page(5), deckanji(5), eucJP(5), i18n_intro(5), i18n_printing(5), iconv_intro(5), iso2022jp(5), Japanese(5),
jiskanji(5), l10n_intro(5), shiftjis(5), Unicode(5)sdeckanji(5)