Currently I have a box that I am dual-booting Win98 & Linux on. I have an unformatted 3 gig slice that I would like to install Soloris 8 x86 on. Are there any issues I should be aware of? How close is the x86 install to the sparc install? The Linux partition will be going away but I need to reatain... (1 Reply)
I've been asking on IRC channels but no one answers me, I need to format my hard drive, normally it's just format c:
but c doesn't exist, how do I format when I have linux mandrake installed. Please reply to this quickly, I'm kinda in a rush :( (1 Reply)
Hi Again Guys ,
Please i installed linux RH 6.1 on Toshiba , 10G , RAM=128 , 600 MHZ .
After i installed linux i got many error messages , seems it was not installed correctly , also when i finished installation it did not ask me for the 2nd installation CD , and when i logged as root , i... (5 Replies)
OK, I have a command that is getting a result, that I am trying to format using awk.
I think it's pretty ugly, and there is probably a better way to do it, but this is sorta working for me. Anyway, the command:
cat /var/log/cups/page_log | grep testuser | grep My_office_printer | awk '{gsub... (5 Replies)
I need to ask a question on how to format the output in a csv format. Right now i am running a shell script which executes a command and the following output is append through a unix script in a .csv file.
So the output of xyz.csv is as follow :-
1. Number = 25 Amount $84,132.22
2.... (1 Reply)
I have file with different columns
for ex.
contents of file "txt"
NAME AGE MARKS
HARRY 23 89
TOM 12 67
BOB 23 11
and you see its not formatted.Now, I need the file "txt" to be formatted like
COLUMN1 COLUMN2 COLUMN3
NAME AGE ... (3 Replies)
I have the following nmap file output with the multiple IP’s listed in the format below. Is there a way that GREP can format the output to just display IP and any ports that contain 'http' for that IP on its own line?
file:
Host: 192.168.1.xxx () Ports: 80/open/tcp//http///,... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: FCoda10
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
format
FORMAT(1) General Commands Manual FORMAT(1)NAME
format - format a PC floppy diskette
SYNOPSIS
format [-v] device [media-size [drive-size]]
DESCRIPTION
Format allows a user with read-write permission to device to format a floppy. Either one of the special floppy devices must be used, see
fd(4), or an automatic device may be used with the size of the floppy specified on the command line. Two sizes must be given when format-
ting a low density diskette in a high density drive. For example:
format /dev/at1
format /dev/fd1 1200
format /dev/fd1 360 1200
The first two commands format a 1.2M diskette, the last formats a 360k diskette in a 1.2M drive. A 1.44M drive knows when it's dealing
with a low density floppy, so all these commands format a 720k diskette:
format /dev/fd0 720
format /dev/fd0 720 1440
format /dev/ps0
No sizes may be specified when using a special floppy device, a size must be specified when using an automatic device.
OPTIONS -v Verify the process by reading each track after formatting it. Formatting is normally blind, the controller has no idea whether it
succeeds or not. Use -v on a new box of cheap diskettes, or on a diskette that may have gone bad. Verifying will increase format-
ting time by 50%.
SEE ALSO mkfs(1), fd(4).
DIAGNOSTICS
Numbers will be printed on standard output to show that it is busy. The locations of bad sectors are printed on standard error when veri-
fying. The exit code is zero unless there are too many bad spots.
AUTHOR
Kees J. Bot (kjb@cs.vu.nl)
FORMAT(1)