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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Update to Navbar - Member Info and Avatars Post 303020412 by Neo on Thursday 19th of July 2018 12:05:08 AM
Old 07-19-2018
Update:

I am about done with this phase and I'm feeling good about the results of what has been accomplished so far.

There is still a long long way to go to modernize this site and to get rid of most of the table tags, make the site more responsive across devices and clean up the legacy code in general.

I was going to change the login to use jQuery and AJAX, but because there are so many PHP permissions for every step of the process that is dependent on if a user is logged in or not, and this requires all the PHP pages to refresh, I'm removing this small task off the current TODO list.

Now, I need to think what pages, tables and other things I will tackle in the next phase.

So far so good.

Thanks for all the feedback. I really appreciate it and I could not do this "site upgrading" job without all of your feedback and help, watching the site every step and giving me feedback when things look odd and I have not corrected it within a few seconds or even minutes.

I'm pretty confident in my CSS and Javascript / jQuery skills these days, and I guess I should apologize for being busy on my "cyberspace situational awareness" game-engine project for two years and not modernizing the site years before. I wish there were two or three of me, but one is more than enough to drive people crazy, LOL.

I am sorry if I have let you down in not modernizing this site earlier. Actually, it's much easier to work on this site (CSS, JS, jQuery, and HTML) versus programming a parallel, multithreaded cybersecurity visualization app using C# and the Unity 3D game engine; so updating the site is not technically difficult, but it does require a lot of time on screen and keyboard.

Thanks again for all your patience with me.

I'M BACK Smilie
These 2 Users Gave Thanks to Neo For This Post:
 

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lockd(8c)																 lockd(8c)

Name
       lockd - network lock daemon

Syntax
       /usr/etc/lockd [ -t timeout ] [ -g graceperiod ]

Description
       The  daemon processes lock requests that are either sent locally by the kernel or remotely by another lock daemon.  The NFS locking service
       makes this advisory locking support possible by using the system call and the subroutine.  The daemon forwards  lock  requests  for  remote
       data  to  the  server  site's lock daemon.  The daemon then requests the status monitor daemon, for monitor service.  The reply to the lock
       request is not sent to the kernel until the status daemon and the server site's lock daemon have replied.

       If either the status monitor or server site's lock daemon is unavailable, the reply to a lock request for remote data is delayed until  all
       daemons become available.

       When  a server recovers, it waits for a grace period for all client site daemons to submit reclaim requests.  Client site daemons are noti-
       fied by of the server recovery and promptly resubmit previously granted lock requests.  If a client site's daemon fails	to  secure  previ-
       ously  granted  locks  at  the server site, the daemon sends the signal SIGLOST to all the processes that were previously holding locks and
       cannot reclaim them.

Options
       -t timeout      The daemon uses timeout (in seconds) as the interval instead of the default value  of  15  seconds  to  retransmit  a  lock
		       request to the remote server.

       -g graceperiod  The daemon uses graceperiod (in seconds) as the grace period duration instead of the default value of 45 seconds.

See Also
       fcntl(2), lockf(3), signal(3), statd(8c)

																	 lockd(8c)
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