When discussing inodes and data blocks, I know Solaris creates these data blocks with a total size of 8192b, divided into eight 1024b "fragments." It stores data in "contiguous" fragments and solaris doesn't allow a file to use portions of two different fragments. If the file size permits, then the... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: manderson19
4 Replies
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Hi guys!
I was wondering what the outcome was of your survey of a few months ago? One of the questions was if people were willing to pay for additional services like an own account, like username@unix.com with mail box, etc.
Sorry if I missed the results if you had already posted them.
Ivo (1 Reply)
For some reason ipfilter is blocking inbound fragmented ip packets (the packets are larger than the interface's MTU) that are encapsulating UDP segments. The connection works, so I know ipfilter is letting some traffic through, it is just a lot slower than it should be.
Rules that allow the... (3 Replies)
Upon replacing my linux router/server with a Solaris one I've noticed very poor network performance. The server itself has no issues connecting to the net, but clients using the server as a router are getting a lot of IP fragments as indicated from some packet sniffing I conducted.
Here was my... (3 Replies)
Hello ,
When using vim, can ctag and cscope support recording search results and displaying the history results ? Once I jump to one tag, I can use :tnext to jump to next tag, but how can I display the preview search result? (0 Replies)
I have a .xml file that looks something like this :
<measInfo>
.........
string1
.........
</measInfo>
<measInfo>
......
string2
........
</measInfo>
I want to extract only the 'chunk of file' from '<measInfo>' to '</measInfo>' containing string1 (or a certain string that I... (13 Replies)
Good morning all,
This is the file name in question OD_Orders_2019-02-19.csv
I am trying to create a bash script to read into files with yesterdays date on the file name while retaining the rest of the files name. I would like for $y to equal, the name of the file with a formula output with... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Ibrahim A
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
env::ps1
Env::PS1(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Env::PS1(3pm)NAME
Env::PS1 - prompt string formatter
SYNOPSIS
# use the import function
use Env::PS1 qw/$PS1/;
$ENV{PS1} = 'u@h $ ';
print $PS1;
$readline = <STDIN>;
# or tie it yourself
tie $prompt, 'Env::PS1', 'PS1';
# you can also tie a scalar ref
$format = 'u@h$ ';
tie $prompt, 'Env::PS1', $format;
DESCRIPTION
This package supplies variables that are "tied" to environment variables like 'PS1' and 'PS2', if read it takes the contents of the
variable as a format string like the ones bash(1) uses to format the prompt.
It is intended to be used in combination with the various ReadLine packages.
EXPORT
You can request for arbitrary variables to be exported, they will be tied to the environment variables of the same name.
TIE
When you "tie" a variable you can supply one argument which can either be the name of an environement variable or a SCALAR reference. This
argument defaults to 'PS1'.
METHODS
"sprintf($format)"
Returns the formatted string.
Using this method all the time is a lot less efficient then using the tied variable, because the tied variable caches parts of the
format that remain the same anyway.
FORMAT
The format is copied mostly from bash(1) because that's what it is supposed to be compatible with. We made some private extensions which
obviously are not portable.
Note that this is not the prompt format as specified by the posix specification, that would only know "!" for the history number and "!!"
for a literal "!".
Apart from the escape sequences you can also use environment variables in the format string; use $VAR or "${VAR}".
The following escape sequences are recognized:
a The bell character, identical to "