Does anyone out there know of ANY specific books pertaining to SGI's flavor of Unix - IRIX?
I have been in contact with SGI directly and they have not supplied me with any usable reference material or manuals.
I realize man pages are a good source for info, but I need to go a little deeper... (6 Replies)
Using bash, I'm trying to read a .properties file (name=value pairs), assigning an indirect variable reference for each line in the file.
The trick is that a property's value string may contain the name of a property that occurred earlier in the file, and I want the name of the 1st property to... (5 Replies)
I'm looking at http://www.opengroup.org/pubs/online/7908799/xsh/pthread.h.html trying to understand mutexs and semaphores. Windows makes a distinction between the two. Is a mutex and semaphore different in unix land?
Is there a tutorial on threading in unix somewhere?
I'm also looking at... (4 Replies)
hi there
I have the following script in which i have created a PrintHash() function.
I want to pass to this function the reference to a hash (in the final code i will be passing different hashes to this print function hence the need for a function). I am getting an error
Type of arg 1 to... (1 Reply)
This log file is wacky.
the syntax puts this in the Installation line:
Installation PATCH75682.91 of PATCH75681 complete
Installation PATCH76537.91 of PATCH76537 complete
Installation PATCH92217.91 of PATCH92217 complete
So I'm looking for a sed 's///' to remove the first PATCHxxxx... (6 Replies)
Hi All
I have a doubt and want to be cleared I am using
@array = (10, 20);
$rarray = \@array;
#print "$rarray\n";
#print "@$rarray\n";
$rr= \$array;
#print $$rr;
$rr++;
print $$rr;
As you can see the $rr contains the reference to the first element of the array , now as the... (5 Replies)
Hi all,
I am new and I am very interested in Awk programming language and would like to know what references or books that really worked for you that was clear, concise with simple examples.
much appreciated in advance. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Apollo
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
net::ldap::control::sort
Net::LDAP::Control::Sort(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Net::LDAP::Control::Sort(3)NAME
Net::LDAP::Control::Sort - Server Side Sort (SSS) control object
SYNOPSIS
use Net::LDAP::Control::Sort;
use Net::LDAP::Constant qw(LDAP_CONTROL_SORTRESULT);
$sort = Net::LDAP::Control::Sort->new(
order => "cn -phone"
);
$mesg = $ldap->search( @args, control => [ $sort ]);
($resp) = $mesg->control( LDAP_CONTROL_SORTRESULT );
print "Results are sorted
" if $resp and !$resp->result;
DESCRIPTION
"Net::LDAP::Control::Sort" is a sub-class of Net::LDAP::Control. It provides a class for manipulating the LDAP Server Side Sort (SSS)
request control 1.2.840.113556.1.4.473 as defined in RFC-2891
If the server supports sorting, then the response from a search operation will include a sort result control. This control is handled by
Net::LDAP::Control::SortResult.
CONSTRUCTOR ARGUMENTS
order
A string which defines how entries may be sorted. It consists of multiple directives, spearated by whitespace. Each directive describes
how to sort entries using a single attribute. If two entries have identical attributes, then the next directive in the list is used.
Each directive specifies a sorting order as follows
-attributeType:orderingRule
The leading "-" is optional, and if present indicates that the sorting order should be reversed. "attributeType" is the attribute name
to sort by. "orderingRule" is optional and indicates the rule to use for the sort and should be valid for the given "attributeType".
Any one attributeType should only appear once in the sorting list.
Examples
"cn" sort by cn using the default ordering rule for the cn attribute
"-cn" sort by cn using the reverse of the default ordering rule
"age cn" sort by age first, then by cn using the default ordering rules
"cn:1.2.3.4" sort by cn using the ordering rule defined as 1.2.3.4
METHODS
As with Net::LDAP::Control each constructor argument described above is also available as a method on the object which will return the
current value for the attribute if called without an argument, and set a new value for the attribute if called with an argument.
SEE ALSO
Net::LDAP, Net::LDAP::Control::SortResult, Net::LDAP::Control, http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2891.txt
AUTHOR
Graham Barr <gbarr@pobox.com>
Please report any bugs, or post any suggestions, to the perl-ldap mailing list <perl-ldap@perl.org>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1999-2004 Graham Barr. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.12.1 2010-03-12 Net::LDAP::Control::Sort(3)