02-21-2005
The OP is probably talking about the "line-terminating character" issue in heterogeneous computing environments.
Yes. If you use FTP to transfer a text file created on Windows to the Unix server, and that ASCII transfer mode is enabled for the transfer, the file transferred to the Unix server should have the correct end-of-line. You should not need to do any fiddling with the end-of-line as the FTP protocol takes care of this for you already.
Otherwise, if the file is transferred verbatim onto the Unix server, you can always find some third-party utilities for converting to the Unix end-of-line (such as dos2unix).
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FILELOG(5) AFS File Reference FILELOG(5)
NAME
FileLog - Traces File Server operations
DESCRIPTION
The FileLog file records a trace of File Server (fileserver process) operations on the local machine and describes any error conditions it
encounters.
If the FileLog file does not already exist in the /var/log/openafs directory when the File Server starts, the server process creates it and
writes initial start-up messages to it. If there is an existing file, the File Server renames it to FileLog.old, overwriting the existing
FileLog.old file if it exists.
The file is in ASCII format. Administrators listed in the /etc/openafs/server/UserList file can use the bos getlog command to display its
contents. Alternatively, log onto the file server machine and use a text editor or a file display command such as the UNIX cat command. By
default, the mode bits on the FileLog file grant the required "r" (read) permission to all users.
The File Server records operations only as it completes them, and cannot recover from failures by reviewing the file. The log contents are
useful for administrative evaluation of process failures and other problems.
SEE ALSO
UserList(5), bos_getlog(8), fileserver(8)
COPYRIGHT
IBM Corporation 2000. <http://www.ibm.com/> All Rights Reserved.
This documentation is covered by the IBM Public License Version 1.0. It was converted from HTML to POD by software written by Chas
Williams and Russ Allbery, based on work by Alf Wachsmann and Elizabeth Cassell.
OpenAFS 2012-03-26 FILELOG(5)