I wanted to let you know in honor of Systems Administrator Appreciation Day (which is next Friday, as you probably know), I'm organizing a meetup in New York City to celebrate.
If you're going to be in NYC next Friday evening, drop me a line and come on by. It would be great to meet you. I've got a good response from everywhere else that I've posted this, so I'm sure unix.com will be no different.
Please i searching a book
which covering system administration of aix7 or 6
:lvm,virtualization,fs,etc
Ebook and amazon ok.
Do you know something good?
Thanks (1 Reply)
A big
Thank You to the admins of unix.com, for keeping the platform of a great community running smoothly and error-free.
In case you don't know what I'm talking about: SysAdmin Appreciation Day (5 Replies)
As a beginner, I am having an impossible time trying to correctly install Solaris 10 on Intel64.
Might there be someone in NYC with whom i can F2F install? (1 Reply)
What's the latest talk about instant messaging services in teh workplace, regarding blocking it, shutting off ports, etc? Is there a forum somewhere for this? Can't you shut down ports on linux or unix for IM services? (1 Reply)
We have Labour day, Secretary Day Etc. But there is another day upcoming, which is System Administrator Day. (System Administrator Appreciation Day Friday - July 26th, 2002)
http://www.sysadminday.com/
" Nice to hear that all our hardworks are getting noticed "
:cool: (2 Replies)
DDATE(1) Emperor Norton Utilities DDATE(1)NAME
ddate - converts Gregorian dates to Discordian dates
SYNOPSIS
ddate [+format] [date]
DESCRIPTION
ddate prints the date in Discordian date format.
If called with no arguments, ddate will get the current system date, convert this to the Discordian date format and print this on the stan-
dard output. Alternatively, a Gregorian date may be specified on the command line, in the form of a numerical day, month and year.
If a format string is specified, the Discordian date will be printed in a format specified by the string. This mechanism works similarly to
the format string mechanism of date(1), only almost completely differently. The fields are:
%A Full name of the day of the week (i.e., Sweetmorn)
%a Abbreviated name of the day of the week (i.e., SM)
%B Full name of the season (i.e., Chaos)
%b Abbreviated name of the season (i.e., Chs)
%d Ordinal number of day in season (i.e., 23)
%e Cardinal number of day in season (i.e., 23rd)
%H Name of current Holyday, if any
%N Magic code to prevent rest of format from being printed unless today is a Holyday.
%n Newline
%t Tab
%X Number of days remaining until X-Day. (Not valid if the SubGenius options are not compiled in.)
%{
%} Used to enclose the part of the string which is to be replaced with the words "St. Tib's Day" if the current day is St. Tib's Day.
%. Try it and see.
EXAMPLES
% ddate
Sweetmorn, Bureaucracy 42, 3161 YOLD
% ddate +'Today is %{%A, the %e of %B%}, %Y. %N%nCelebrate %H'
Today is Sweetmorn, the 42nd of Bureaucracy, 3161.
% ddate +"It's %{%A, the %e of %B%}, %Y. %N%nCelebrate %H" 26 9 1995
It's Prickle-Prickle, the 50th of Bureaucracy, 3161.
Celebrate Bureflux
% ddate +'Today's %{%A, the %e of %B%}, %Y. %N%nCelebrate %H' 29 2 1996
Today's St. Tib's Day, 3162.
BUGS ddate(1) will produce undefined behaviour if asked to produce the date for St. Tib's day and its format string does not contain the St.
Tib's Day delimiters %{ and %}.
NOTE
After `X-Day' passed without incident, the Church of the SubGenius declared that it had got the year upside down - X-Day is actually in
8661 AD rather than 1998 AD. Thus, the True X-Day is Cfn 40, 9827.
AUTHOR
Original program by Druel the Chaotic aka Jeremy Johnson (mpython@gnu.ai.mit.edu)
Major rewrite by Lee H:. O:. Smith, KYTP, aka Andrew Bulhak (acb@dev.null.org)
Five tons of flax.
DISTRIBUTION POLICY
Public domain. All rites reversed.
SEE ALSO date(1),
http://www.subgenius.com/
Malaclypse the Younger, Principia Discordia, Or How I Found Goddess And What I Did To Her When I Found Her
59 Bureaucracy 3161 DDATE(1)