03-12-2020
I think this is what I was looking for, thanks!
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1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello,
I read and search through this wonderful forum and tried different approaches but it seems I lack some knowledge and neurones ^^
Here is what I'm trying to achieve :
file1:
test filea 3495;
test fileb 4578;
test filec 7689;
test filey 9978;
test filez 12300;
file2:
test filea... (11 Replies)
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2. Ubuntu
Is it possible to use Other Distro's ( i.e Debian's or Ubuntu's ) repositories in Fedora?
If not then what should be done to make common repositories for all linux distros.
regards,
Arun Maurya (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: arun_maurya
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3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
In SUSE SLES 10 SP2 where are the software repositories located? In CENTOS they are in /etc/yum.repositories or something like that. What does SLES use? (1 Reply)
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4. Shell Programming and Scripting
I've a bunch of repository dumps that I need to include in my shell script to restore from the dump, but first I need to create the repositories first. How do I extract the names of the repository and removing the *.dump for use of the following line?
bash-3.00$ ls
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5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello All,
I am getting the following error message when trying to execute the following script.
AWK=/usr/bin/awk
TR=/usr/bin/tr
SED=/usr/bin/sed
CAT=/usr/bin/cat
MAILFILE=/home//nightly_jobs.tmp
mailto=xxx@gmail.com
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6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello everyone,
I want to schedule a job to run immediatly after a successful nightly reboot (at level 2). I have been looking at inittab file and vxvm-startup in /sbin/init.d and other files in init.d but I am still puzzled as where to actually start. I looked at the crontab to see how this... (2 Replies)
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7. Debian
I'm just interested to know how your sources.list look like. I got some repositories witch give some errors and I would like to clean it up.
and when I do apt-get update I get few lines showing errors like 404 , this is how my list look like:
# deb cdrom:/ squeeze main
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8. What is on Your Mind?
I added both jQuery and Bootstrap Javacript libs to all man page repository pages.
TODO: I need to add pagination to these repos because most are very large and load to slow on a single page.
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9. What is on Your Mind?
Should have done this 10 years ago, so better late than never:
Just added a "loading" animation to the the man page repositories when they load, especially since some are very large and take many seconds to load.
See for example:
https://www.unix.com/man-page-opensolaris-repository.php
... (1 Reply)
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10. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello.
My first time here.
What I am trying to do is this.
FileA is located on a web server
FileB is located on local storage
Both files contain a large list of information of not only SHA keys but versions, and other information.
I need a statement that can compare between FileA... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Query
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LEARN ABOUT OSX
svk::help::intro
SVK::Help::Intro(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation SVK::Help::Intro(3)
NAME
SVK::Help::Intro - Introduction to svk
DESCRIPTION
svk is an open source distributed version control system which is designed to interoperate with Subversion. Like other version control
systems, it keeps track of each change you make to a project and allows you to maintain multiple parallel tracks of development. svk also
has a number of powerful features which are rarely found in other version control systems.
svk has been designed from the ground up to support development models that are simple and intuitive for software developers. It has
advanced smart branching and merging semantics that make it easy to maintain multiple parallel lines of development and painless to merge
changes across branches. svk's built in patch manager makes it easy for non-committers to share changes among themselves and with project
maintainers
svk provides powerful support for distributed development. Every svk client is capable of fully mirroring remote Subversion repositories
so that you have full access to a project's history at any time, even when they are off the network or on the wrong side of a firewall.
You can branch a remote project at any point in that project's history, whether or not you have write access to that project's repository.
Later, you can integrate changes from the project's master server (usually with a single command) or push your branch up to another
Subversion repository.
GETTING STARTED
svk has a rich command line interface that can be somewhat daunting at first. the following few commands are all you'll need for day to day
operation.
svk mirror
First, you'll need to mirror a remote repository. This sets up a local copy of that repository for you to branch from, merge to and
otherwise poke at. The local path is sometimes called a "depot path."
svk mirror svn://svn.example.com/project_x //mirror/project_x
svk sync
When you've set up a new mirror or want to get some work done without a network connection, sync your local repository with upstream
repositories.
svk sync //mirror/project_x
svk checkout
When you want to get some work done, you can checkout a working copy to make changes.
cd ~/svk-checkouts
svk co //mirror/project_x
If you want to work offline, you can create a local branch
cd ~/svk-checkouts/project_x
svk branch --offline
svk add, svk delete and svk move
As you work on the files in your working copy, feel free to add new files, delete existing files and move files around.
cd ~/svk-checkouts/project_x
svk add Changelog
svk move badly_named_file.c well_named_file.c
svk delete .README.swp
svk commit
When you're done, just commit your changes to your local repository, whether or not you have network. If you commit to a mirrored
path, rather than a local branch, you'll need to be able to access the path's upstream subversion server, but the commit will be sent
to the server instantly.
svk commit
svk pull
Life doesn't stop when you make a local branch. From time to time, pull down changes from the upstream repository.
cd ~/svk-checkouts/project_x
svk pull
svk push
When you're ready to share your changes with the world, push them to the upstream repository.
cd ~/svk-checkouts/project_x
svk push
To see a full list of svk's commands, type "svk help commands". For help with a specific command, just type "svk help command".
The svk wiki (<http://svk.bestpractical.com>) is a great place to find the latest svk tips, tricks and updates. If you run into trouble
using svk, the wiki's the right place to start looking for help.
perl v5.10.0 2008-09-13 SVK::Help::Intro(3)