Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Any URL'S for free Unix Download Post 30476 by yelamarthi on Tuesday 22nd of October 2002 05:32:48 PM
Old 10-22-2002
Question Any URL'S for free Unix Download

Hi,
Can anyone please suggest me a URL where I can download some unix OS free of cost??
Thanks,
Kumar
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Programming

I have not c compile environment ,i can download it but it ends with *.gz,so i can't

I need for help . (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: dsun5
1 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Clearify what it means under 'WHAT' when hit the 'w'-command

I wonder how I shall read the result below, especially 'what' shown below. The result was shown when I entered 'w'. E.g what is TOP? What is gosh ( what does selmgr mean?)? login@ idle JCPU PCPU what 6:15am 7:04 39 39 TOP 6:34am 6:45 45 45 TOP 6:41am ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Aelgen
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Unix ISO's for FTP, I've searched the other Posts

Where Do I download Unix ISO's for free? I have searched this database for other related posts, but to no avail. All I need is this info, and I don't want Linux; just a Unix site. Please and thank you for your help. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: killrazor
3 Replies

4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

memory free up using 'find'

Hi, I am facing an interesting aspect of find command... to be clear, we are running a small web server with oracle 8i database and Oralce9iAS on Sun E250 with Solaris 2.6 Over a period of time, the free memory ( displayed in 'top' utility ) drops down.. we could relate this to dedicated... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: shibz
6 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

it's free ????????

is solirs free or lindows and were to download it? i have a x86 p500 (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: amicrawler2000
3 Replies

6. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Coomand to download from HTTP(URL)

Hi, What is the UNIX command to download a file or data from HTTP location. CURL(Linux) did not work. Thank You (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: skm123
4 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Where to download this free Unix database

Hi Folks, I was looking around some web sites and found out that there is/was this free databse for Unix called RDB by Walter Hobbs, which uses ASCII text files for its databases and uses Unix commands to manipulate them. Unfortunately, I can no longer access the ftp site mentioned on the web... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: rooseter
0 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

URL download checking

Hi all, I have a url and i am using wget to load files from the url. but i requirement is if need to validate whether that downloading process done properly not. if that has any expcetion i need to seed mails. otherwise i will processed please help me on this. Thanks, Baski (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: baskivs
1 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Download and Untar any URL

Hi, I am trying to make a flexible bash script which does the following: Downloads a URL from a variable Unzips it Deletes the original archive The problem is, the format could be .tar, .tar.gz etc, it wont be constant. This is what I have currently: #!/bin/bash dl_dir="/opt" ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Spadez
1 Replies
zsyncmake(1)							   File Transfer						      zsyncmake(1)

NAME
zsyncmake - Build control file for zsync(1) SYNTAX
zsyncmake [ { -z | -Z } ] [ -e ] [ -C ] [ -u url ] [ -U url ] [ -b blocksize ] [ -o outfile ] [ -f targetfilename ] [ -v ] filename zsync -V DESCRIPTION
Constructs a metafile for the zsync client program to use to perform partial file downloads. filename is the file that users wish to down- loads; zsyncmake constructs the appropriate metafile and writes filename.zsync in the current directory. zsync will need at least one URL from which to download the file content. If the .zsync will be in the same directory as the file to down- load, you can accept the default - zsync includes a relative URL in the control file. If not, use the -u option to specify the URL. You should also specify a URL for the uncompressed content with -U if available, as zsync can make use of this for more efficient downloads sometimes. (You can edit the .zsync file and add these afterwards - it has a simple key: value format in the header - but I suggest you only do this once you are familiar with the tool.) Note that zsyncmake itself does not (currently) verify the URLs or download any data, you must provide the file data locally and check the URLs yourself. OPTIONS
-b blocksize Specify the blocksize to the underlying rsync algorithm. A smaller blocksize may be more efficient for files where there are likely to be lots of small, scattered changes between downloads; a larger blocksize is more efficient for files with fewer or less scat- tered changes. This blocksize must be a power of two. If not specified, zsyncmake chooses one which it thinks is best for this file (currently either 2048 or 4096 depending on file size) - so normally tyou should not need to override the default. -C Tells zsyncmake not to generate any instructions in the .zsync telling the client to compress the data it receives. This is implied by -z, but this option is here in case you compress a file yourself only for the transfer, but want the client to end up with the uncompressed file (e.g. you are transferring an ISO, which is held compressed on the server, but which the client cannot use unless it is uncompressed). Without -C, zsyncmake will produce directions for the client to compress the file it receives where appropri- ate; -C is here so you can stop it telling the client to do that. -e Tells zsyncmake that the client must be able to receive the exact file that was supplied. Without this option, zsyncmake only gives a weaker guarantee - that the client will receive the data it contains (e.g. it might transfer the uncompressed version of a .gz to the client). Note that this still doesn't guarantee that the client will get it - the client could ignore the directives in the zsync file, or might be incapable of exactly reproducing the compression used. But with -e you know that zsyncmake has made it pos- sible to get the exact data - it will exit with an error if it cannot. -f filename Set the filename to include in the output file (this is what the file will be called when a user finished downloading it). -o outputfile Override the default output file name. -u url Specifies the URL from which users can download the content of the supplied file. Users need the control file in order to find out what parts of the file they already have, and they need the URLs to retrieve the parts of the file that they don't already have. You can specify multiple URLs by specifying -u multiple times. If not specified, zsync assumes that the file and the .zsync will reside in the same public directory, and includes a single relative URL. -U url Specifies a URL corresponding to the decompressed content of the file (only applicable if it is a gzip file). zsync can sometimes download more efficiently from the uncompressed data than from the compressed data - it will take advantage of this if available. If no URLs are specifies, zsync looks for a file without the .gz extension and assumes that this will be in the same public dir as the .zsync, and includes a relative URL to it. -v Enable verbose messages. -V Prints the version of zsync. -z Compress the file to transfer. Note that this overwrites any file called filename.gz without warning (if you don't give a filename, e.g. because you are reading from stdin, then zsync will use the name supplied with -f, or as a last fallback, zsync-target.gz). zsync can work with compressed data, and, in most cases where the data is not already compressed, it is more efficient to compress it first. While you can just compress the file to transfer with gzip, if you use this option then zsyncmake will compress the file for you, producing a .gz file which is optimised for zsync. This can be 30% more efficient at download time than compressing with gzip --best - but the compressed file will not be as small at that produced by gzip. -Z zsyncmake automatically looks inside gzip compressed files and exports the underlying, uncompressed data to the zsyncmake file. In testing this has proved to provide greater download efficiency. -Z overrides the default behaviour and treats gzip files as just binary data. Use this if it is essential that the user receives the compressed data (for instance because a cryptographic signature is available only for the compressed data). zsync is typically no use if you specify -Z, unless the gzip file was compressed with the special --rsync option to make it friendly to differential transfers. EXAMPLES
zsyncmake -C -u http://ftp.uk.debian.org/debian/dists/sarge/main/binary-i386/Packages.gz Packages.gz Note use of -C to save the client compressing the file on receipt; the Debian package system uses the file uncompressed. zsyncmake -z my-subversion-dump In this case there is a large, compressible file to transfer. This creates a gzipped version of the file (optimised for zsync), and a .zsync file. A URL is automatically added assuming that the two files will be served from the same directory on the web server. zsyncmake -e -u http://www.mirrorservice.org/sites/ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/ports/distfiles/zsync-0.2.2.tar.gz zsync-0.2.2.tar.gz This creates a zsync referring to the named source tarball, which the client should download from the given URL. This example is for down- loading a source tarball for a FreeBSD port, hence -e is specified so the client will be able to match its md5sum. AUTHORS
Colin Phipps <cph@moria.org.uk> SEE ALSO
zsync(1) Colin Phipps 0.6.2 zsyncmake(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:39 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy