Hello. I am a comp sci major and am forced to take a intro to Unix class. So far i am loving it. I was wondering is it useful to learn more off on my own? Will it have any use to me when i get a job after school is done? Same applies to Perl Sed and Awk? (5 Replies)
I have been wanting to get much deaper into the world of computers for quite some time. I know a lot of c++, and plenty of website programming, and decided that the next step should be Unix.
But here's the thing - I know nothing about Unix. I installed it and everything, but it just seemed like... (3 Replies)
I have a text file called 'tomcat_temp_out'.
I want to get only last 5 minute worth of data from this file and redirect those data into another fule.
Could you please help to work on this? (2 Replies)
I'm looking for a new internal hard drive for my desktop PC.
Having a look at some 'techie' sites I ran along some reviews of hybrid drives which supposedly combine the high capacity storage of magnetic drives with the fast performance of SSDs.
For example this 500 GB Seagate has 4 GB NAND... (4 Replies)
Recently while reading an linux magazine I understood that FOSS (Free or open source software) is gaining momentum.. And in my home town there is an reputed university which offers M.Sc online program on FOSS.
The course covers:
INTRODUCTION TO COMPUTING, PHILOSOPHY AND PRACTICE OF FOSS,... (4 Replies)
I'm new to the Linux world and whilst I've been learning the ropes, I've read some conflicting opinions regarding the creation of separate partitions for /home and other directories during OS install.
Some say that having these directories in separate partitions allows you to reinstall without... (12 Replies)
Hello guys,
I have a little question.
I think about learning c or c++ because im very interessted in low Level programming. And because i love Unix Too i thought C would be the better choice since Most it Done in c. Or should i learn c++?
Because C++ has all this nice Features like oop and... (9 Replies)
I have just been on RedHat SA 3 training course (4 days) and sat exams EX200 (RHCSA) and EX300 (RHCE)
The daft thing was that politics meant I wasn't allowed to take courses SA 1 or 2. So I learnt about stuff I would never use (SELinux; iSCSI; NFS Kerberos encrypted with user specific access... (22 Replies)
Discussion started by: rbatte1
22 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
trm
TRM(4) BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual TRM(4)NAME
trm -- Tekram TRM-S1040 ASIC based PCI SCSI host adapter driver
SYNOPSIS
To compile this driver into the kernel, place the following lines in your kernel configuration file:
device scbus
device trm
Alternatively, to load the driver as a module at boot time, place the following line in loader.conf(5):
trm_load="YES"
DESCRIPTION
The trm driver supports PCI SCSI host adapters based on the Tekram TRM-S1040 SCSI ASIC.
HARDWARE
SCSI controllers supported by the trm driver include:
o Tekram DC-315 PCI Ultra SCSI adapter without BIOS and internal SCSI connector
o Tekram DC-315U PCI Ultra SCSI adapter without BIOS
o Tekram DC-395F PCI Ultra-Wide SCSI adapter with flash BIOS and 68-pin external SCSI connector
o Tekram DC-395U PCI Ultra SCSI adapter with flash BIOS
o Tekram DC-395UW PCI Ultra-Wide SCSI adapter with flash BIOS
o Tekram DC-395U2W PCI Ultra2-Wide SCSI adapter with flash BIOS
For the Tekram DC-310/U and DC-390F/U/UW/U2B/U2W/U3W PCI SCSI host adapters, use the sym(4) driver.
SEE ALSO cd(4), ch(4), da(4), intro(4), sa(4), scsi(4), sym(4)
http://www.tekram.com/
AUTHORS
The trm driver was originally written for FreeBSD 3.0/i386 by Erich Chen of Tekram Technology, and ported to FreeBSD 5.0 by Olivier Houchard
<cognet@FreeBSD.org>.
BSD December 8, 2002 BSD