07-09-2014
This User Gave Thanks to hicksd8 For This Post:
6 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. AIX
Hi Guys
I am currently running AIX 5.3 technology level 6 on a 570, but want to go up to level 9.
However I am struggling to find on IBM's website the new features that it brings in, along with the commands for these new features.
Can any one help me with this?
Thanks (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: ryanbsc@gmail.c
7 Replies
2. AIX
Hello
I update one lpar from TL03 to TL06 reboot and check with lppchk -v, errpt and everything looks fine then I commit my fileset and I update to TL08-04.
The installation was ok. I reboot my machine again check with lppchk -v and errpt and its ok, but when I type oslevel -s I get this... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: lo-lp-kl
5 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Experts,
This may sound stupidity.....anyhow....let me ask the doubt, Even though shell is just a scripting language, can anyone tell me, whether web pages can be created with embedding some concepts.
In any other scripting language, whether web pages can be created. If so, suggest me in... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: kritibalu
6 Replies
4. What is on Your Mind?
Though we got surplus amount of primary memory, and big HDD when comapared to 20 or 30 years back, and cloud computing...
What other technology advancement you still need ?
Note: Feel free to add more options to this poll. (21 Replies)
Discussion started by: thegeek
21 Replies
5. Red Hat
Hello,
I'm new in this forum.
I'll have a new project to change architecture for our servers.
From one server where we found database oracle 9i and Oracle application ebs 11 installed in HPux to cluster that contain nodes in redhat.
Can you give me a detailed documentation that... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Safi1982
1 Replies
6. What is on Your Mind?
It came in a template full of techy-related stickers for laptop (like Docker, K8s, BigData, RHEL, AWS, etc) but I have no clue what it represents. Any idea?
https://i.imgur.com/7ILp105.png
Thanks. (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: verdepollo
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
ns_absoluteurl
Ns_Url(3aolserver) AOLserver Library Procedures Ns_Url(3aolserver)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
NAME
Ns_AbsoluteUrl, Ns_ParseUrl, Ns_RelativeUrl, Ns_SkipUrl - URL manipulation routines
SYNOPSIS
#include "ns.h"
int
Ns_AbsoluteUrl(Ns_DString *pds, char *url, char *baseurl)
int
Ns_ParseUrl(char *url, char **pprotocol, char **phost,
char **pport, char **ppath, char **ptail)
char *
Ns_RelativeUrl(char *url, char *location)
char *
Ns_SkipUrl(Ns_Request *request, int n)
_________________________________________________________________
DESCRIPTION
Ns_AbsoluteUrl(pds, url, baseurl)
Construct an URL based on baseurl but with as many parts of the incomplete url as possible. Return NS_OK or NS_ERROR.
Ns_ParseUrl(url, pprotocol, phost, pport, ppath, ptail)
Parse a URL into its component parts. Pointers to the protocol, host, port, path, and "tail" (last path element) will be set by ref-
erence in the passed-in pointers. The passed-in url will be modified.
Ns_RelativeUrl(url, location)
If the url passed in is for this server, then the initial part of the URL is stripped off. e.g., on a server whose location is
http://www.foo.com, Ns_RelativeUrl of "http://www.foo.com/hello" will return "/hello". Returns a pointer to the beginning of the
relative url in the passed-in url, or NULL if error. Will set errno on error.
Ns_SkipUrl(request, n)
Return a pointer n elements into the request's url.
SEE ALSO
nsd(1), info(n)
KEYWORDS
AOLserver 4.0 Ns_Url(3aolserver)