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1. What is on Your Mind?
Hello,
Long-time Unix hacker here - I've worked on four variants of the kernel prior to the introduction of Linux. In my spare time, I've written Linux (Ubuntu) device drivers, kernel modules, cross-compiled, and built the kernel.
I'd like to do Linux internals/device drivers as a day job,... (1 Reply)
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2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
When we put a breakpoint using gcc then what all things happen internally and how the gdb using break is able to pause the execution of process( instead of killing it ) and later on resume the process execution? (0 Replies)
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3. Programming
hey all, im a new programmer.
i was wondering how you would go about writing the printf function yourself? it is my understanding that when you call printf you are calling an already written function and just providing an argument? if this is the case, is it possible to write that function... (8 Replies)
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Hello Gurus,
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nwbqBdghh6E
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6. HP-UX
. (2 Replies)
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7. Filesystems, Disks and Memory
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8. New to Unix. Which books should I read?
Hi!
I have 1.5 years experience in unix environment and shell scripting. Now, I started learning UNIX internals and network programming. Can you please help in finding the same material on the net
Thanks
Srinivas. (7 Replies)
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
gnunet-arm
GNUNET-ARM(1) General Commands Manual GNUNET-ARM(1)
NAME
gnunet-arm - control GNUnet services
SYNOPSIS
gnunet-arm [options]
DESCRIPTION
gnunet-arm can be used to start or stop GNUnet services, including the ARM service itself. The ARM service is a supervisor for GNUnet's
service processes. ARM starts services on-demand or as configured and re-starts them if they crash.
OPTIONS
-c FILENAME, --config=FILENAME
Use the configuration file FILENAME.
-e, --end
Shutdown all GNUnet services (including ARM itself). Running "gnunet-arm -e" is the usual way to shutdown a GNUnet peer.
-h, --help
Print short help on options.
-L LOGLEVEL, --loglevel=LOGLEVEL
Use LOGLEVEL for logging. Valid values are DEBUG, INFO, WARNING and ERROR.
-i SERVICE, --init=SERVICE
Starts the specified SERVICE if it is not already running. More specifically, this makes the service behave as if it were in the
default services list.
-k SERVICE, --kill=SERVICE
Stop the specified SERVICE if it is running. While this will kill the service right now, the service may be restarted immediately
if other services depend on it (service is then started 'on-demand'). If the service used to be a 'default' service, its default-
service status will be revoked. If the service was not a default service, it will just be (temporarily) stopped, but could be re-
started on-demand at any time.
-s, --start
Start all GNUnet default services on this system (and also ARM). Naturally, if a service is demanded by a default service, it will
then also be started. Running "gnunet-arm -s" is the usual way to start a GNUnet peer.
-I, --info
List all running services.
-v, --version
Print GNUnet version number.
BUGS
Report bugs by using Mantis <https://gnunet.org/bugs/> or by sending electronic mail to <gnunet-developers@gnu.org>
SEE ALSO
gnunet-service-arm(1)
GNUnet Jan 4, 2012 GNUNET-ARM(1)