If you get one of these two messages it means you either have a bad connection or you forgot to turn off the screen that you used last (the second one only happens in my experience when use multiple types of screens).
The easiest and quickest thing to do is to turn off the previous screen that you used like this.
Then turn it back on like this.
If that doesn't work you need to check connections. Running the xrandr command you should have an output like this. If you don't then it is confirmed you have a connection problem.
I have a find command that finds all files in a folder older than 6 days
i.e
find . -name "hourly.*" -mtime + 6
This gives me an output
/oralogs/.snapshot/hourly.0
/oralogs/.snapshot/hourly.1
/oralogs/.snapshot/hourly.2
I would like the output to be
hourly.0
hourly.1... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I am confused about the output of find command.
Please see the two find commands below.
When i put "*.c" i get lots of files. But when i put *c only i get only one file.
Any answer??
$ find . -name "*c"
./clarify/cheval/hp_server/rulemanager/rulemansvc... (3 Replies)
Below script complains about remove, because the find that pipes into it has no results. It's okay operationally, but a bad error message.
I would like to first check whether find had any output, and only if it had output do the rm with xargs.
How can I check whether find had output?
... (1 Reply)
Hi all, why does one version of this command work but not the other?
- This file already exists with 644 mod permissions
- I am logged in as d269836, no su rights.
- Box is 'SunOS' running bash I think; but runs ksh scripts OK.
This one works:
find /users/d269836 -type f -name "*.txt"... (6 Replies)
Greetings,
I need to find few patterns related to password (pwsd, pwd, password etc) in a directory includig sub -directories.
I need to redirect the output of find (in combination with grep) to a file which will be later used to verify the files.
OS is Sun Solaris 5.10.
The out put file format... (3 Replies)
Why is my xrandr imagining things? I have disconnected VGA1 power. How is the VGA1 still coming up?
$ xrandr
Screen 0: minimum 320 x 200, current 1024 x 768, maximum 4096 x 4096
LVDS1 connected 1024x768+0+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 304mm x 228mm
1024x768 60.0*+
... (2 Replies)
Hi
I'm trying to write a shell script which finds all the .zip files in a given directory then lists them on the screen and prompts the user to select one by entering a number e.g.
The available files are:
1. HaveANiceDay.zip
2. LinuxHelp.zip
3. Arrays.zip
Please enter the... (4 Replies)
How can I prevent find from outputting the directory name /home/xxxxxxxx/Backup/.system (which isn't even "other writable"?
I am trying to search for files that are "world writable" on a shared web host using the find statement, and I want to prevent find from creating an error (because the of... (4 Replies)
I've tried following multiple procedures from various sites but can't seem to get this figured out. There was another thread on here about the same thing but I couldn't figure out how to apply it to my situation. This is my first time on Linux so I'm just learning.
I am running Fedora 19,... (1 Reply)
I have prepared a script with ls -t to fetch latest file and compare with duplicates i use below
ls -t *xml |awk 'BEGIN{FS="_"}{if (++dup >= 2) print}'
However for large size folder ls command not working. so i tried with
find ./ -type f \( -iname "*.xml" \) | sort |awk 'BEGIN{FS="_"}{if... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: gold2k8
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT XFREE86
xrandr
XRANDR(1) General Commands Manual XRANDR(1)NAME
xrandr - primitive command line interface to RandR extension
SYNOPSIS
xrandr [-help] [-display display] [-o orientation] [-q] [-v] [-s size] [-x] [-y] [--screen snum] [--verbose]
DESCRIPTION
Xrandr is used to set the screen size, orientation and/or reflection. The -s option is a small integer index used to specify which size
the screen should be set to. To find out what sizes are available, use the -q option, which reports the sizes available, the current rota-
tion, and the possible rotations and reflections. The default size is the first size specified in the list. The -o option is used to
specify the orientation of the screen, and can be one of "normal inverted left right 0 1 2 3".
The -x option instructs the server to reflect the screen on the X axis. The -y option instructs the server to reflect the screen on the Y
axis. Reflection is applied after rotation.
The -help option prints out a usage summary. The --verbose option tells you what xrandr is doing, selects for events, and tells you when
events are received to enable debugging.
SEE ALSO Xrandr(3)AUTHORS
Keith Packard, XFree86 Core Team and Cambridge Research Laboratory, HP Labs, HP. and Jim Gettys, Cambridge Research Laboratory, HP Labs,
HP.
XFree86 Version 1.0 XRANDR(1)