06-10-2014
Is C worth the effort?
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 stuff that makes programming easyer.
What i want to do.later is Programm.on the.Nintendo ds and.such things. And perhaps some day a little OS Kernel
For arm or such thing well just for fun ofcause
Sry for.typos and so on. Writing from.Phone
Greets dryPants
5 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
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)
Discussion started by: GuyWithAPen
3 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
So my family is cleaning out our house and my dad stumbled on a Unix system with Unigraphix installed on it, and he remembers that it was 1 of 6 computers in a set that he used at a tool and dye machine shop where he worked. He said that the computer by itself with the monitor was $20,000! I was... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: NVOtosReborn
8 Replies
3. What is on Your Mind?
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)
Discussion started by: Arun_Linux
4 Replies
4. Linux
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)
Discussion started by: maerlyngb
12 Replies
5. What is on Your Mind?
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
arm(1) General Commands Manual arm(1)
NAME
arm - Terminal Tor status monitor
SYNOPSIS
arm [OPTION]
DESCRIPTION
The anonymizing relay monitor (arm) is a terminal status monitor for Tor relays, intended for command-line aficionados, ssh connections,
and anyone stuck with a tty terminal. This works much like top does for system usage, providing real time statistics for:
* bandwidth, cpu, and memory usage
* relay's current configuration
* logged events
* connection details (ip, hostname, fingerprint, and consensus data)
* etc
Defaults and interface properties are configurable via a user provided configuration file (for an example see the provided armrc.sample).
Releases and information are available at http://www.atagar.com/arm.
OPTIONS
-i, --interface [ADDRESS:]PORT
tor control port arm should attach to (default is 127.0.0.1:9051)
-c, --config CONFIG_PATH
user provided configuration file (default is ~/.arm/armrc)
-d, --debug
writes all arm logs to ~/.arm/log
-b, --blind
disable connection lookups (netstat, lsof, and ss), dropping the parts of the interface that rely on this information
-e, --event EVENT_FLAGS
flags for tor, arm, and torctl events to be logged (default is N3)
d DEBUG a ADDRMAP k DESCCHANGED s STREAM
i INFO f AUTHDIR_NEWDESCS g GUARD r STREAM_BW
n NOTICE h BUILDTIMEOUT_SET l NEWCONSENSUS t STATUS_CLIENT
w WARN b BW m NEWDESC u STATUS_GENERAL
e ERR c CIRC p NS v STATUS_SERVER
j CLIENTS_SEEN q ORCONN
DINWE tor runlevel+ A All Events
12345 arm runlevel+ X No Events
67890 torctl runlevel+ U Unknown Events
-v, --version
provides version information
-h, --help
provides usage information
FILES
~/.arm/armrc
Your personal arm configuration file
/usr/share/doc/arm/armrc.sample
Sample armrc configuration file that documents all options
AUTHOR
Written by Damian Johnson (atagar@torproject.org)
27 August 2010 arm(1)