My problem is as follows:
I have to write a korn shell script which will run mutiple java applications one after one. For example,
I will execute the java application A first, after it is done I will run application B.
My question is how do I do this? How does my korn shell script know that... (1 Reply)
ok i decided to go with Mandrake so i went to the site to download it and that took me to a mirror site. ok. so once i get there were can i find the install file(s) that i need? i only see a series of folder and files. the ones that say intall are instructions but i don't see the files themselves.... (3 Replies)
Does anyone have detailed info on how to download the files. I go to www.freebsd.com and then i dont know what to do. I dont know why i dont know but im drawing a complete blank so is there anyone that can provide a step by step procedure for downloading/installing Linux? :confused: :confused: (3 Replies)
Guys, ive been looking about , but obviously not hard enough, Where do i get AIX 5.3 from ?
DO i need to purchase it or is it free to download on a single user license ?:confused:
Thanks (2 Replies)
Probably a really easy one for you guru's out there...:rolleyes:
I need to make sure the reverse address lookup daemon in rarpd, is running. How do I do so? :confused:
Did a grep for the process but couldnt find it, also looked in all the normal places, /bin etc...
Cheers (1 Reply)
When getting a listing of files using "ls -l", my output shows the permissions, #oflinks???, owner, group, size, month-day-time, and file.
In the example below, how would I know what year the file was last modified?
-rw-rw-r--, 28, root, root, 2048, Oct 28 15:10, somefile.txt (2 Replies)
hi,
when we do an "ls -l" on a directory, we get the listing of the contents of that dir...
what is the meaning of some numbers...example in ;
-rw-r--r-- 1 idr supp 0 Feb 18 19:41 dmesg
drwxrwsrwx 2 root sys 96 Dec 27 15:31 test09
drwxr-xr-x 3 bin ... (1 Reply)
can anyone please suggest what is wrong with this command:
for i in ;
do
cat ~/Downloads/Project/p0s0n15.tcl>>~/Downloads/Project/p0s0n15_$i.tcl;
./setdest -n 15 -p 0 -M 5 -t 100 -x 500 -y 500 >>~/Downloads/Project/p0s0n15_$i.tcl;
cat... (3 Replies)
Hi,
Im trying to do move a file like this as mart of my script on Solaris
mv /path/to/file/file.txt ..
mv: cannot rename /path/to/file/file.txt to ../file.txt: Permission denied.
Im just trying to move it up one level using the following command on a bunch of directories:
find... (4 Replies)
Hi Folks -
I have a dumb question.
Why does this work:
pushd "/apps/scripts"
./script.sh
popd
But this doesn't:
./apps/scripts/script.shIs it that obvious where I'm overlooking it? (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: SIMMS7400
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
servefile
SERVEFILE(1) User Commands SERVEFILE(1)NAME
servefile - small HTTP-Server for temporary file transfer
SYNOPSIS
servefile [-h] [--version] [-p PORT] [-u] [-s MAX_UPLOAD_SIZE] [-l]
[--ssl] [--key KEY] [--cert CERT] [-a user:password] file/directory
DISCLAIMER
Do not use this as a normal web server. This server is optimized for running a short time and to send files to other people, not for doing
high-performance static file serving.
DESCRIPTION
Servefile is a small HTTP-server intended for temporary file transfer mostly in the local network. It aims to make transferring single
files as painless as possible and to replace tar/netcat solutions.
With just a file as argument servefile serves just that one file and redirects all HTTP requests to that file.
Uploads can be done with curl, wget (see EXAMPLES) or a normal browser. In upload mode with -u servefile creates a directory and saves all
uploaded files into that directory. When uploading with curl or wget the filename is extracted from the path part of the url used for the
upload.
For SSL support python-openssl (pyssl) needs to be installed. If no key and cert is given, servefile will generate a key pair for you and
display its fingerprint.
In --tar mode the given file or directory will be packed on (each) request and piped to the client through the HTTP connection, thus serv-
ing always the latest content of the directory and preventing temporary file creaton. Tar files will be created containing only the lowest
directory name from the full path, so using /path/to/dir/ as file/directory argument will create a tar file starting with the dir/ direc-
tory. When giving a file as argument, only the file without any path will be in the tarfile. Symlinks will not be dereferenced.
COMMAND SUMMARY
positional arguments:
file/directory
file or directory (with -l or -u) which should be served or uploaded to
optional arguments:
-h, --help
Show a help message and exit
--version
Show program's version number and exit
-p PORT, --port PORT
Port to listen on
-u, --upload
Enable uploads to a given directory
-s MAX_UPLOAD_SIZE, --max-upload-size MAX_UPLOAD_SIZE
Limit upload size in kB. Size modifiers are allowed, e.g. 2G, 12MB, 1B.
-l, --list-dir
Show directory indexes and allow access to all subdirectories
--ssl Enable SSL. If no key/cert is specified one will be generated.
--key KEY
Key file to use for SSL. If no cert is given with --cert the key file will also be searched for a cert
--cert CERT
Certfile to use for SSL
-a user:password, --auth user:password
Set user and password for HTTP basic authentication
--realm REALM
Set a realm for HTTP basic authentication. This is an arbitrary string which is displayed when doing HTTP basic authentication
-t, --tar
Enable on the fly tar creation for given file or directory. Note: Download continuation will not be available.
-c method, --compression method
Set compression method, only in combination with --tar. Can be one of none, gzip, bzip2.
-4, --ipv4-only
Listen on IPv4 only
-6, --ipv6-only
Listen on IPv6 only
EXAMPLES
Serving a single file with SSL and HTTP Basic auth:
servefile --ssl --auth foo:bar the_file
Enabling uploads to a directory:
servefile -u dir/
Uploading file foo as bar to servefile via command line:
curl -X PUT http://ip:port/bar --data-binary @foo
curl -X POST http://ip:port/bar --data-binary @foo
wget http://ip:port/bar --post-file=foo
Serving a on the fly generated tar.gz file of a directory:
servefile --tar -c gzip path/to/dir
AUTHOR
servefile is developed by Sebastian Lohff <seba@someserver.de>
servefile 0.4.2 April 2012 SERVEFILE(1)