how can i map a shared network drive? Is there any command to perform mapping?
For example if i want to map a shared directory named "wwwroot" in machine "dev001" to my machine's "X" drive, how can it be done??
-Thanks
Sakthi. (1 Reply)
> how the sendmsg and recvmsg calls will know which kernel module to use (SCTP, RTP etc.) internally(kernel mapping: how kernel handle socket call) (1 Reply)
This is my first post and right off the bat, I want to let you know that my experience in UNIX is 2 days only backed up with over 20 years of IT working. So, if this is a dumb question or too stupid, please bear with me.
I read somewhere on the web and also on these forums that you can map your... (7 Replies)
Hi,
I would like to copy some columns from a particular file by mapping with the string names. i am using the .csv file format.
my one file consist of 100 of columns but i want only particular 4 columns such as ( First_name, Middle_name,Last_name & Stlc). but they are listed in many files... (15 Replies)
Hi we have a situation where some printers are on a server that sometimes has to be rebooted. If this happens the Unix boxes we have that are referencing the printers in the vfstab file fail to work even when the print server is brought back up. Does anyone know if it would be possible to put... (0 Replies)
I have the following arrays with different lengths that I want to map them with the same key.
# Week numbers, 8 columns
@headers = ("2011-34", "2011-35", "2011-36", "2011-37", "2011-38", "2011-39", "2011-40", "2011-41");
%data = ("2011-34", BCE,
"2011-35", YZA,
"2011-36",... (5 Replies)
INPUT
13333--TEXT1
14444--TEXT2
13333--TEXT3
12233--TEXT5
14444--TEXT5
12233--TEXT1
12222--TEXT5
13333--TEXT09
what I'm looking for is something using awk arrays with below given output.
14444--TEXT2,TEXT5
13333--TEXT1,TEXT3,TEXT09
12233--TEXT5,TEXT1
12222--TEXT5 (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: busyboy
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
dh_perl
DH_PERL(1) Debhelper DH_PERL(1)NAME
dh_perl - calculates Perl dependencies and cleans up after MakeMaker
SYNOPSIS
dh_perl [debhelperoptions] [-d] [librarydirs...]
DESCRIPTION
dh_perl is a debhelper program that is responsible for generating the ${perl:Depends} substitutions and adding them to substvars files.
The program will look at Perl scripts and modules in your package, and will use this information to generate a dependency on perl or
perlapi. The dependency will be substituted into your package's control file wherever you place the token ${perl:Depends}.
dh_perl also cleans up empty directories that MakeMaker can generate when installing Perl modules.
OPTIONS -d In some specific cases you may want to depend on perl-base rather than the full perl package. If so, you can pass the -d option to make
dh_perl generate a dependency on the correct base package. This is only necessary for some packages that are included in the base
system.
Note that this flag may cause no dependency on perl-base to be generated at all. perl-base is Essential, so its dependency can be left
out, unless a versioned dependency is needed.
-V By default, scripts and architecture independent modules don't depend on any specific version of perl. The -V option causes the current
version of the perl (or perl-base with -d) package to be specified.
library dirs
If your package installs Perl modules in non-standard directories, you can make dh_perl check those directories by passing their names
on the command line. It will only check the vendorlib and vendorarch directories by default.
CONFORMS TO
Debian policy, version 3.8.3
Perl policy, version 1.20
SEE ALSO debhelper(7)
This program is a part of debhelper.
AUTHOR
Brendan O'Dea <bod@debian.org>
9.20120909 2011-09-12 DH_PERL(1)