Thanks Corona and sea . How about viewing an image in ASCII format on the terminal? We must have a package ‘aview‘ installed, just apt (For Ubuntu) or yum (For *NIX)it. I've an image named ‘elephant.jpg‘ in my current working directory and I want view it on terminal as ASCII format
Thanks,
R. Singh
This User Gave Thanks to RavinderSingh13 For This Post:
Yeah, we all know where to find screenshots of Unix and Linux, but it would be awesome to see some of your *nix screenshots. Okay.. to explain: This is my KDE desktop on Yellow Dog Linux. I changed the background recently to a Commodore 64 theme (pretty cool) and no longer is the Konstruct Konsole... (25 Replies)
Hi,
I don't mean the client.... I mean the server - I have the client to connect to a windows citrix server already.
The next best thing I can use at present is VNC (I only want remote desktop, not application sharing specifically). The thing with VNC is that when you go on you are... (3 Replies)
Hallo everybody
I am having a shell script called auto_run.sh in that only the first line works.
the second line which has sed command is working only at the # prompt. not within the shell script. What could be the reason.
*... sed 's/ //g' KTI >abc works in another shell script without the... (6 Replies)
Hello, this is my first post and question. I have search before for this problem but didn't find anything similar.
My case: I have a string inside the variable string1 like this:
string1="lala lele lili lolo lulu"
When I do echo of it, it appears like this:
echo $string1
lala lele lili... (8 Replies)
Which is the most secure *nix for home business/ office use? Would have to be fairly well up to date browser and drivers wise.
Myself I seem to have settled on RedHat - I've trialled the Desktop, and am part-way through a server trial. I've essentially not managed to keep the browser as secure... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: GSO
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
dtc_install_centos
dtc_install_centos(8) System Manager's Manual dtc_install_centos(8)NAME
dtc_install_centos - bootstrap a CentOS install to use in a chroot or VM
SYNOPSIS
dtc_install_centos <install root> <yum environment>
DESCRIPTION
This shell script is part of the dtc-xen package, generally to be used by the dtc panel to install a new a Xen VPS server. This script is
called by dtc_reinstall_os when the user chooses to install the CentOS operating system.
How it works: it generates a temporary yum configuration in the yum environment directory, that directs yum to act inside the install root
instead of in the base system; then it kindly requests yum to install the basesystem, centos-release and yum packages onto it. Yum then
uses the configuration to download the required (usually, security-updated) packages and then perform the RPM installation process under
the install root.
It requires both RPM and yum. It does work under Debian (it was developed in Ubuntu first). It should also work on RPM-based systems
without destroying the system-wide RPM and yum configurations.
OPTION
<install root>
Target directory where CentOS will be deployed. Must exist beforehand.
<yum environment>
Directory where yum will store the repository manifests and configuration. Will be automatically created. Cached RPMs and manifests will
be left, as usual, in a directory var/cache/yum inside the install root.
EXAMPLE
dtc_install_centos /root/yum /xen/13
This will setup the operating system in /xen/13, with the CentOS configuration folder in /root/yum.
BUGS
It's limited to CentOS 5 at the moment.
It must be run as root.
Under some circumstances, the installation process itself may kill processes running on the host machine. The chroot yum does should be
sufficient to avoid this, but we haven't been able, yet, to ascertain why this fails sometimes.
SEE ALSO dtc_reinstall_os(8)VERSION
This documentation describes dtc_install_os version 0.3.1.
See http://www.gplhost.com/software-dtc-xen.html for updates.
dtc_install_centos(8)