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mz.cfg(1) [debian man page]

mz.cfg(1)						      General Commands Manual							 mz.cfg(1)

NAME
mz - a fast versatile packet generator SYNOPSIS
/etc/mausezahn/mz.cfg DESCRIPTION
Mausezahn is a free fast traffic generator written in C which allows you to send nearly every possible and impossible packet. Mausezahn's MOPS subsystem (Mausezahn's Own Packet System) supports an interactive mode with a Cisco-style command line interface (CLI). In order to activate this interactive mode, execute Mausezahn using the -x argument, optionally followed by an arbitrary TCP port number, such as # mz -x 99 in which case you can connect to Mausezahn via $ telnet 127.0.0.1 99 If no port number is specified, Mausezahn uses the default port number 25542 (which is the date of towel day followed by the answer to the universe and everything; however, you don't need to understand this in order to continue). Login credentials as well as other MOPS-related parameters can be specified in the Mausezahn configuration file mz.cfg located in etc/mausezahn. Currently, user-specific configuration files are not supported. If no configuration file is present Mausezahn assumes the following default login credentials: username: mz password: mz enable password: mops Currently only login credentials can be configured within the configuration file. Here is an example content of /etc/mausezahn/mz.cfg: user = herbert password = moTTe enable = T0p5ecreT Additional configuration options will be officially supported with the next releases. FILES
/etc/mausezahn/mz.cfg SEE ALSO
mz(1) AUTHOR
Herbert Haas. Visit www.perihel.at/sec/mz/ for Mausezahn news and additional information. This manual page was written by Herbert Haas <herbert AT perihel DOT at>, for the Debian project. March 7, 2010 mz.cfg(1)

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UPDATE-UPDMAP(8)					      System Manager's Manual						  UPDATE-UPDMAP(8)

NAME
update-updmap -- generate updmap.cfg from files in /etc/texmf/updmap.d/ SYNOPSIS
update-updmap [option ...] DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents update-updmap, a program that was written for the Debian distribution. Overview update-updmap is used to generate updmap(1)'s and updmap-sys(8)'s site-wide configuration file, /var/lib/texmf/web2c/updmap.cfg, or the per- user configuration file, TEXMFCONFIG/web2c/updmap.cfg, from the files with names ending in '.cfg' located in /etc/texmf/updmap.d/. The base TeX packages (texlive-) provide files in /etc/texmf/updmap.d/, which define the base contents of the to-be-generated /var/lib/texmf/web2c/updmap.cfg (general settings and base fonts), or the per-user file TEXMFCONFIG/web2c/updmap.cfg. With the underlying mechanism, system administrators can disable the map files they want by commenting their entries in the appropriate files under /etc/texmf/updmap.d/. Such changes will be preserved if the package in question is removed (not purged) and then reinstalled. Users without local administration rights can use update-updmap to merge their local configuration and an updated site-wide configuration (see User-specific configuration below). The local configuration files, unless specified otherwise, are expected in $TEXMFCONFIG/updmap.d, (that is ~/.texmf-config/updmap.d ), and the default output file is $TEXMFVAR/web2c/updmap.cfg (in other words, ~/.texmf-var/web2c/updmap.cfg ). Thanks to update-updmap, TeX-related font packages can have their own font map files referenced in /var/lib/texmf/web2c/updmap.cfg without having to edit that file. The packages simply have to ship their map files (e.g., foo.map) in /etc/texmf/map/dvips/ and one or more '.cfg' file(s) under /etc/texmf/updmap.d/ (e.g., 10foo.cfg) referencing the map files. Mode of operation update-updmap concatenates all the '.cfg' files under /etc/texmf/updmap.d/ provided that: - they do not contain the following pseudo-comment: # -_- DebPkgProvidedMaps -_- or; - they have this pseudo-comment, are up-to-date (i.e., the same file with suffix '.dpkg-new' doesn't exist) and are listed in a '.list' file under /var/lib/tex-common/fontmap-cfg/, meaning that the package shipping the '.cfg' file is installed. The name of the '.list' file is ignored (but should be the name of the package that installed it). The file should contain the names of the '.cfg' files in /etc/texmf/updmap.d/ that should be enabled, without the '.cfg' suffix, e.g. 10foo 12bar The first case is for configuration files added by the local system administrator. Files that contain the magic pseudo-comment should be used by Debian packages. In this case, only the base name should appear in the '.list' file: for instance, '10foo' for /etc/texmf/updmap.d/10foo.cfg; please refer to the Debian TeX Policy for details. Names for configuration files Filenames should begin with two digits and must have the extension '.cfg'. The order used to process the files is obtained by running sort(1) with the 'C' locale (for ordinary alphanumeric characters, it corresponds to the ASCII order). The result obtained by concatenating them is stored as the new updmap.cfg. Note that updmap(1)and updmap-sys(8)don't care about the order of entries, the sorting is just for the user's convenience. If you want to be able to use updmap(1)'s or updmap-sys(8)'s option --enable and --setoption, some further Restrictions apply to the file- names used and the way entries are distributed among these files. For --setoption to work, the options (like dvipsPreferOutline) must be kept in a file named 00updmap.cfg, either in /etc/texmf/updmap.d/ as installed by the tex-common package, or in the conf-dir you specified. If you use --enable Map some.map and there is no mention of some.map in any file in /etc/texmf/updmap.d/ (and in conf-dir, if specified), then the Map line will be introduced in a file whose name matches *local*.cfg if it exists, or 99local.cfg will be created (in conf-dir if specified). For this to work, you cannot have more than one file that matches that name, except that you can use conf-dir/*local.cfg to supersede the site-wide file in /etc/texmf/updmap.d/. In order to enable a Map file that already is listed in your configuration files, it must be commented with the string '#! '. This is the sort of lines that updmap --disable some.map will produce - see also updmap.cfg(5). If such a line occurs in more than one file, updmap(1) will fail. Again the exception is a file in conf-dir that shadows entries in a site-wide file. Although not strictly mandatory, it is wise to keep corresponding Map entries in files with the same name in conf-dir and the site-wide dir. Otherwise, the results may seem unpredictable. User-specific configuration If you want a different configuration for updmap(1) than the setup at your site provides, you can place changed copies of the configuration files from /etc/texmf/updmap.d/ in a directory below $TEXMFCONFIG, or create additional files there. Per default, files are looked for in $TEXMFCONFIG/updmap.d, where $TEXMFCONFIG is ~/.texmf-config unless the configuration has been changed. When you call update-updmap as a user, it will produce a user-specific updmap.cfg file as follows: if files with the same name exist in both directories, the version in ~/.texmf-config/updmap.d/ will be used; files with unique names will be used from either directory. If you want to keep your files elsewhere, specify their location with options (see OPTIONS below). OPTIONS
-c, --conf-dir conf-dir in user-specific mode, use configuration files from conf-dir instead of $TEXMFCONFIG/updmap.d/ -o, --output-file outputfile in user-specific mode, generate outputfile instead of $TEXMFVAR/web2c/updmap.cfg --check Executes additional checks that all necessary files are present in the kpathsea database. Don't use this in maintainer scripts. --quiet don't write anything to the standard output during normal operation --help print a summary of the command-line usage of update-updmap and exit --version output version information and exit Note that the -v option, which turns on verbose mode, is deprecated. We are currently in a transition phase where quiet mode is still the default (therefore, --quiet has no effect), but update-updmap will be verbose by default as soon as enough packages use --quiet in their maintainer scripts. SYNTAX FOR THE .CFG FILES The '.cfg' files under /etc/texmf/updmap.d/ should contain valid configuration lines for updmap(1). Usually, they will consist of lines of following one of these forms: Map <foo.map> MixedMap <bar.map> The MixedMap form should only be used if the font is available in both bitmap and scalable formats (this way, it won't be declared in the default map file for Dvips that is used when dvipsPreferOutline is set to 'false' in updmap.cfg). The following comment (from updmap(1)'s point of view): # -_- DebPkgProvidedMaps -_- is treated in a particular way by update-updmap (see section Mode of operation above) and should be used in every '.cfg' file provided by a Debian package. This ensures that the corresponding map files are disabled when the package is removed and reenabled when the package is reinstalled. FILES
/etc/texmf/updmap.d/00updmap.cfg /etc/texmf/updmap.d/*.cfg /var/lib/texmf/web2c/updmap.cfg /var/lib/tex-common/fontmap-cfg/*.list DIAGNOSTICS
update-updmap returns 0 on success, or a strictly positive integer on error. SEE ALSO
updmap(1) /usr/share/doc/tex-common/README.Debian.{txt,pdf,html} /usr/share/doc/tex-common/Debian-TeX-Policy.{txt,pdf,html} /usr/share/doc/tex-common/TeX-on-Debian.{txt,pdf,html} AUTHORS
This manual page was written by Atsuhito Kohda <kohda@debian.org> and updated by Florent Rougon <f.rougon@free.fr> and Frank Kuester <frank@debian.org> for the Debian distribution (and may be used by others). Debian Jul 19, 2005 Debian
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