You can use your MobileMe iDisk to share files with anyone on the Internet.Important: Do not give your MobileMe account password to anyone. Other people only need to know your member name and Public folder password (if you use one) to access your shared files.
hi all,
Thanks to all for your great help...
I have a scenario that I have two files (file1 & file2). I need to compare two files entire row by row and share the output if any discrepancies within two files.
File1:
DB1|TB1|C1,C3
DB2|TB2|C1,C2
DB3|TB3|C1,C2,C3,C4
File2:
... (2 Replies)
Hi, I am fairly new to Linux. I have a Win XP host machine where I am running a Redhat virtual machine using VMplayer. I have a tool in the VM that I need to run using some input data located on the host machine. How can I share files between the host and the VM? I need to be able to read/write... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I'm new to AIX 5.3 and CSM, but am familiar with other UNIX flavours.
I've been asked to compile a list of files we should manage using CSM.
Could someone suggest a starting list?
/etc/hosts
/etc/passwd
what else?
I'm not looking for a comprehensive list, just a starting... (0 Replies)
Sorry if the is in the wrong section, but would like to know if anyone can help with the following
I am on a network using Windows XP and am having problems viewing/manipulating files on one of the shared drives, which happens to be a snap server. I have no other problems with any of the other... (1 Reply)
woof(1) General Commands Manual woof(1)NAME
woof - A small, simple, stupid webserver to share files
SYNOPSIS
woof [options] file
DESCRIPTION
woof is a tool to copy files between hosts. It can serve a specified file on HTTP,just for a given number of times, and then shutdown. It
can be easily used to share files across the computers on a net, and given that the other ends should have just a browser, it can share
stuff between different operating system, or different devices (e.g.: a smartphone). It can also show a simple html form in order to upload
a file. commands.
OPTIONS
A summary of options is included below.
-h Show summary of options.
-i <ip_addr>
IP address to share the file
-p <port>
Port to be used to share the file
-c <count>
Number of times to share the file
-z <dir>
Used on a directory, it creates a tarball with gzip compression
-j <dir>
Used on a directory, it creates a tarball with bzip2 compression
-Z <dir>
Used on a directory, it creates a tarball with ZIP compression
-u <dir>
Used on a directory, it creates a tarball with no compression
-s Used to distribute woof itself
-U woof provides an upload form and allows uploading files
AUTHOR
woof was written by Simon Budig <simon@budig.de>
This manual page was written by Andrea Colangelo <warp10@ubuntu.com>, for the Debian project (and may be used by others).
Last Modified: September 12, 2010 woof(1)