Hi All,
I have a file of the following format.
<?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>
<tomcat-users>
<role rolename="tomcat"/>
<role rolename="role1"/>
<role rolename="manager"/>
<role rolename="admin"/>
<user username="tomcat" password="tomcat" roles="tomcat"/>
<user... (5 Replies)
Here's my work of testing whether a number input is perfect or not..
echo Enter a number
read no
i=1
ans=0
while
do
if
then
ans='expr $ans + $i'
fi
i='expr $i + 1'
done
if
then
echo $no is perfect
else
echo $no is NOT perfect
fi (12 Replies)
I've got an aix-box somewhere on the network and a PC on my desk. Nothing fancy so far.
The PC is made dual-boot:
- windowsXP with putty & winSCP
or
- slackware 13 with xfce4 installed.
The aix-box runs DB2 v8.2 and I've installed db2top to monitor the database.
db2top is a character... (0 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a text file which looks like this:
computer programming
systems engineering
I want to get rid of these square brackets and also the text that is inside these brackets. So that my final text file looks like this:
computer programming
systems engineering
I am using... (3 Replies)
I want to print only the lines that meet the criteria : "worde:" and "wordo;"
I got this far:
sed -n '/\(*\)\1e:\1o;/p;'
But it doesn't quite work.
Can someone please perfect it and tell me exactly how its a fixed version/what was wrong with mine?
Thanks heaps, (1 Reply)
I have to find last delimiter in each line of a file and store the value after the last '/' in a variable in ksh script...Pls Pls help me:(The file is as shown below:
/opt/apps/cobqa/apps/abadv/bind/advc0007.bnd
/opt/apps/cobqa/apps/abbrio/bind/naac6115.bnd... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: bhavanabahety
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
fm
FM(1) General Commands Manual FM(1)NAME
fm - control frequency, volume, mute/unmute of FM radio card
SYNOPSIS
fm [ -h ] [ -o ] [ -q ] [ -d device ] [ -t tuner ] [ -T none | forever | time ] on | off | + | - | freq [ volume ]
DESCRIPTION
fm is a program to control the frequency, volume, and mute/unmute state of an FM radio card, using the video4linux interface introduced in
2.1.x series Linux kernels.
OPTIONS
-h Print a usage message to standard output, and exit.
-o Ignore frequency range limits of card. Use if you suspect that the card supports a wider frequency range than its driver believes.
-q Quiet mode. Keeps information on station and volume from being printed on standard output.
-d device
Sets device as the device to tune. The default is /dev/radio0.
-t tuner
Sets tuner as the tuner on the selected device to adjust. The default is tuner 0. Most radio devices have only a single tuner.
-T none | forever | time
After tuning, sleep for the time specified or forever. Time is specified in seconds by default. A suffix of m indicates minutes, h
indicates hours, or d indicates days.
The -T option is useful with radio card drivers that only maintain the tuner settings while the tuner's file descriptor remains
open. Try using this option if running fm ordinarily produces only a single "pop" from your speakers.
freq Frequency to tune the radio to, in MHz. For instance, 88.9 specifies a frequency of 88.9 MHz. AM tuner values are also specified
in MHz; for instance, 530 kHz would be specified as .530.
on Turn the radio on (unmute).
off Turn the radio off (mute).
volume Specify the desired volume, in percent. Not all radio devices support volume control.
+ Increase the current volume.
- Decrease the current volume.
CONFIGURATION
fm reads $HOME/.fmrc, if it exists, to obtain default settings. Each line may take one of the following forms:
VOL percent
Specifies default volume (default: 12.5%).
INCR percent
Volume increment used for + and - options (default: 10%).
TIME Default sleep time (default: none).
All other lines are ignored.
SEE ALSO
Additional documentation:
/usr/share/doc/fmtools/README
The fmtools homepage:
http://benpfaff.org/fmtools
AUTHORS
Russell Kroll <rkroll@exploits.org>, now maintained by Ben Pfaff <blp@cs.stanford.edu>. Sleep time feature contributed by Dave Ulrick <d-
ulrick@insightbb.com>. This manpage written by Ben Pfaff.
fm 1.0.2 FM(1)