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Full Discussion: Platform decision
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Platform decision Post 31076 by Kelam_Magnus on Thursday 31st of October 2002 04:04:32 PM
Old 10-31-2002
Consider HPUX...

I am curious what you thought of HPUX. It is very comparible to SUN and has full range of support and wide variety of H/W for many size needs, from small shops to Fortune 500 enterprise systems.

I have been a DEC admin as well as my current job working with HPUX. I must say that I am very pleased with the reliability of the hardware. I sit near several SUN Admins that tell me they have had problems with hardware, but that could be anecdotal and limited to our shop.

If I had to pick one between SUN and IBM I would say IBM. Only based on reputation here at my work.

Smilie
 

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XKBEVD(1)						      General Commands Manual							 XKBEVD(1)

NAME
xkbevd - XKB event daemon SYNOPSIS
xkbevd [ options ] DESCRIPTION
This command is very raw and is therefore only partially implemented; we present it here as a rough prototype for developers, not as a general purpose tool for end users. Something like this might make a suitable replacement for xev; I'm not signing up, mind you, but it's an interesting idea. The xkbevd event daemon listens for specified XKB events and executes requested commands if they occur. The configuration file consists of a list of event specification/action pairs and/or variable definitions. An event specification consists of a short XKB event name followed by a string or identifier which serves as a qualifier in parentheses; empty parenthesis indicate no qualification and serve to specify the default command which is applied to events which do not match any of the other specifications. The interpretation of the qualifier depends on the type of the event: Bell events match using the name of the bell, message events match on the contents of the message string and slow key events accept any of press, release, accept, or reject. No other events are currently recognized. An action consists of an optional keyword followed by an optional string argument. Currently, xkbev recognizes the actions: none, ignore, echo, printEvent, sound, and shell. If the action is not specified, the string is taken as the name of a sound file to be played unless it begins with an exclamation point, in which case it is taken as a shell command. Variable definitions in the argument string are expanded with fields from the event in question before the argument string is passed to the action processor. The general syntax for a variable is either $cP or $(str), where c is a single character and str is a string of arbi- trary length. All parameters have both single-character and long names. The list of recognized parameters varies from event to event and is too long to list here right now. This is a developer release anyway, so you can be expected to look at the source code (evargs.c is of particular interest). The ignore, echo, printEvent, sound,and shell actions do what you would expect commands named ignore, echo, printEvent, sound, and shell to do, except that the sound command has only been implemented and tested for SGI machines. It launches an external program right now, so it should be pretty easy to adapt, especially if you like audio cues that arrive about a half-second after you expect them. The only currently recognized variables are soundDirectory and soundCmd. I'm sure you can figure out what they do. OPTIONS
-help Prints a usage message that is far more up-to-date than anything in this man page. -cfg file Specifies the configuration file to read. If no configuration file is specified, xkbevd looks for ~/.xkb/xkbevd.cf and $(LIB- DIR)/xkb/xkbevd.cf in that order. -sc cmd Specifies the command used to play sounds. -sd directory Specifies a top-level directory for sound files. -display display Specifies the display to use. If not present, xkbevd uses $DISPLAY. -bg Tells xkbevd to fork itself (and run in the background). -synch Forces synchronization of all X requests. Slow. -v Print more information, including debugging messages. Multiple specifications of -v cause more output, to a point. SEE ALSO
X(7) COPYRIGHT
Copyright 1995, Silicon Graphics Computer Systems Copyright 1995, 1998 The Open Group See X(7) for a full statement of rights and permissions. AUTHOR
Erik Fortune, Silicon Graphics X Version 11 xkbevd 1.1.3 XKBEVD(1)
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