I was wondering is there something out there for Solaris 7 for screen capture?
Also it would really help if there was some software out there that can record whats happens on the screen for like 10 seconds or how ever long I need it to.
I did a search but doesn't seem to be alot out there. (10 Replies)
We are using Solaris 10 for our Radiation Treatment Planning and need to create a simulation for our service engineers. I need a screen capture tool that can not only capture screens, but create movies of mouse movements (similar to Captivate). I have contacted Oracle and talked to several people... (2 Replies)
This site is the first to get this snippet.
It will capture an audio recording of any time length within the limits of OSX's QuickTime Player's capablility...
A shell script derivative of this will be used as a further capture for CygWin's AudioScope.sh.
Thoroughly read ALL the comments in... (0 Replies)
Hello everyone!
I'm developing a MacOs Application in python and I'm having some issues trying to find information related to the power button pressed event. I know that in Ubuntu 14.04 you can find information about it on the acpi folders, but I realized that here in Mac that process is... (0 Replies)
Interestingly Apple has decided to switch the default shell for new users from bash to zsh in MacOS Catalina (10.15)
Use zsh as the default shell on your Mac - Apple Support
Another interesting fact is that Catalina also comes with /bin/dash (5 Replies)
Sadly, I have turned off my access to the Apple Developers Beta program after installing macOS 10.15 Catalina a few days ago.
After the install, I rebooted by MacBook Air and it "hard froze" and we were heading out of town so I grabbed a backup MBA running Mojave.
Then, after getting back at... (10 Replies)
Just a quick note for macOS users.
I just installed (and removed) Parallels Desktop 15 Edition on my MacPro (2013) with 64GB memory and 12-cores, which is running the latest version of macOS Catalina as of this post. The reason for this install was to test some RIGOL test gear software which... (6 Replies)
Currently have two ESP8266 modules testing some Blynk apps, whereI'm not so happy with the Blynk business model for developers, but that's another story.
So, with two of my ESP8266s currently "busy", I decided to work on the ESP32, and in particular the ESPWROOM32.
I installed the... (0 Replies)
MacPro (2013) 12-Core, 64GB RAM (today's crash):
panic(cpu 2 caller 0xffffff7f8b333ad5): userspace watchdog timeout: no successful checkins from com.apple.WindowServer in 120 seconds
service: com.apple.logd, total successful checkins since load (318824 seconds ago): 31883, last successful... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
rlm_ippool_tool
RLM_IPPOOL_TOOL(8) System Manager's Manual RLM_IPPOOL_TOOL(8)NAME
rlm_ippool_tool - dump the contents of the FreeRadius ippool database files
SYNOPSIS
If an ipaddress is specified then that address is used to limit the actions or output.
rlm_ippool_tool [-a] [-c] [-o] [-v] session-db index-db [ipaddress]
Mark the entry nasIP/nasPort as having ipaddress
rlm_ippool_tool -n session-db index-db ipaddress nasIP nasPort
Update old format database to new.
rlm_ippool_tool -u session-db new-session-db
DESCRIPTION
rlm_ippool_tool dumps the contents of the FreeRADIUS ippool databases for analyses or for removal of active (stuck?) entries.
Or with the -n argument adds a usage entry to the FreeRADIUS ippool databases.
OPTIONS -a Print all active entries.
-c Report number of active entries.
-r Remove active entries.
-v Verbose report of all entries.
-o Assume old database format (nas/port pair, not md5 output).
-n Mark the entry nasIP/nasPort as having ipaddress.
-u Update old format database to new.
EXAMPLES
Given the syntax in the FreeRadius radiusd.conf:
ippool myippool {
range-start = 192.168.1.0
range-stop = 192.168.1.255
[...]
session-db = ${raddbdir}/ip-pool.db
ip-index = ${raddbdir}/ip-index.db
}
To see the number of active entries in this pool, use:
$ rlm_ippool_tool -c ip-pool.db ip-index.db
13
To see all active entries in this pool, use:
$ rlm_ippool_tool -a ip-pool.db ip-index.db
192.168.1.5
192.168.1.82
192.168.1.244
192.168.1.57
192.168.1.120
192.168.1.27
[...]
To see all information about the active entries in the use, use:
$ rlm_ippool_tool -av ip-pool.db ip-index.db
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x2e8 - ipaddr:192.168.1.5 active:1 cli:0 num:1
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x17c - ipaddr:192.168.1.82 active:1 cli:0 num:1
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x106 - ipaddr:192.168.1.244 active:1 cli:0 num:1
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x157 - ipaddr:192.168.1.57 active:1 cli:0 num:1
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x2d8 - ipaddr:192.168.1.120 active:1 cli:0 num:1
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x162 - ipaddr:192.168.1.27 active:1 cli:0 num:1
[...]
To see only information of one entry, use:
$ rlm_ippool_tool -v ip-pool.db ip-index.db 192.168.1.1
NAS:172.16.1.1 port:0x90 - ipaddr:192.168.1.1 active:0 cli:0 num:0
To add an IP address usage entry, use:
$ rlm_ippool_tool -n ip-pool.db ip-index.db 192.168.1.1 172.16.1.1 0x90
rlm_ippool_tool: Allocating ip to nas/port: 172.16.1.1/144
rlm_ippool_tool: num: 1
rlm_ippool_tool: Allocated ip 192.168.1.1 to client on nas 172.16.1.1,port 144
SEE ALSO radiusd(8)AUTHORS
Currently part of the FreeRADIUS Project (http://www.freeradius.org) Originally by Edwin Groothuis, edwin@mavetju.org
(http://www.mavetju.org)
Mailing list details are at http://www.freeradius.org/
RLM_IPPOOL_TOOL(8)