I have some sco xenix object, bin and archive files that operate in sco unix 5.0.7.
I know that sco unix kernel can support sco xenix binary. I want to know how can I link xenix and unix archives together?
I have a Dell 1850 and trying to load OS and my applications using PXE. How can I stage new servers using Network drive.
Want to move away from Tape and go towards network load.
Thx
Sean. (0 Replies)
Here is what I did . . . . I FTP'd several *.dbf zipped files from a SCO 5.0.5 server to winXP machine, and did not set the transfer mode to BIN, now when i was uncompressing these files in SCO 5.0.5 , it was giving "Bad Decode Table error. Is there a way to convert the *.dbf.Z files to Binary so... (1 Reply)
I am taking an old xenix drive and installing it in a recent SCO Build Server. I have gone through the process of running mkdev hd twice since the drive is a SCSI then proceed to run mkdev fs and when I attempt to add one of the shown partitions I get the following:
fsck: cannot determine... (1 Reply)
Randomly receive the following message:
"Can not open line tty1a device busy error 16"
and
"/etc/getty/t60 tty1a"
What is causing this error message ? (1 Reply)
Hi everyone i have a question for all of you. It may be basic or it may be a good one. I recently aquired a copy of "SCO TCP/IP runtime System for SCO Unix" (thats what the disks say) and for the life of me i can not get it to load. i have tried opening the disk in linux and it can not determine... (0 Replies)
Mail::SpamAssassin::Plugin::TextCat(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Mail::SpamAssassin::Plugin::TextCat(3)NAME
Mail::SpamAssassin::Plugin::TextCat - TextCat language guesser
SYNOPSIS
loadplugin Mail::SpamAssassin::Plugin::TextCat
DESCRIPTION
This plugin will try to guess the language used in the message body text.
You can use the "ok_languages" directive to set which languages are considered okay for incoming mail and if the guessed language is not
okay, "UNWANTED_LANGUAGE_BODY" is triggered.
It will always add the results to a "X-Language" name-value pair in the message metadata data structure. This may be useful as Bayes tokens
and can also be used in rules for scoring. The results can also be added to marked-up messages using "add_header", with the _LANGUAGES_
tag. See Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf for details.
Note: the language cannot always be recognized with sufficient confidence. In that case, no action is taken.
USER OPTIONS
ok_languages xx [ yy zz ... ] (default: all)
This option is used to specify which languages are considered okay for incoming mail. SpamAssassin will try to detect the language
used in the message body text.
Note that the language cannot always be recognized with sufficient confidence. In that case, no action is taken.
The rule "UNWANTED_LANGUAGE_BODY" is triggered if none of the languages detected are in the "ok" list. Note that this is the only
effect of the "ok" list. It does not act as a whitelist against any other form of spam scanning.
In your configuration, you must use the two or three letter language specifier in lowercase, not the English name for the language.
You may also specify "all" if a desired language is not listed, or if you want to allow any language. The default setting is "all".
Examples:
ok_languages all (allow all languages)
ok_languages en (only allow English)
ok_languages en ja zh (allow English, Japanese, and Chinese)
Note: if there are multiple ok_languages lines, only the last one is used.
Select the languages to allow from the list below:
af - Afrikaans
am - Amharic
ar - Arabic
be - Byelorussian
bg - Bulgarian
bs - Bosnian
ca - Catalan
cs - Czech
cy - Welsh
da - Danish
de - German
el - Greek
en - English
eo - Esperanto
es - Spanish
et - Estonian
eu - Basque
fa - Persian
fi - Finnish
fr - French
fy - Frisian
ga - Irish Gaelic
gd - Scottish Gaelic
he - Hebrew
hi - Hindi
hr - Croatian
hu - Hungarian
hy - Armenian
id - Indonesian
is - Icelandic
it - Italian
ja - Japanese
ka - Georgian
ko - Korean
la - Latin
lt - Lithuanian
lv - Latvian
mr - Marathi
ms - Malay
ne - Nepali
nl - Dutch
no - Norwegian
pl - Polish
pt - Portuguese
qu - Quechua
rm - Rhaeto-Romance
ro - Romanian
ru - Russian
sa - Sanskrit
sco - Scots
sk - Slovak
sl - Slovenian
sq - Albanian
sr - Serbian
sv - Swedish
sw - Swahili
ta - Tamil
th - Thai
tl - Tagalog
tr - Turkish
uk - Ukrainian
vi - Vietnamese
yi - Yiddish
zh - Chinese (both Traditional and Simplified)
zh.big5 - Chinese (Traditional only)
zh.gb2312 - Chinese (Simplified only)
inactive_languages xx [ yy zz ... ] (default: see below)
This option is used to specify which languages will not be considered when trying to guess the language. For performance reasons,
supported languages that have fewer than about 5 million speakers are disabled by default. Note that listing a language in
"ok_languages" automatically enables it for that user.
The default setting is:
bs cy eo et eu fy ga gd is la lt lv rm sa sco sl yi
That list is Bosnian, Welsh, Esperanto, Estonian, Basque, Frisian, Irish Gaelic, Scottish Gaelic, Icelandic, Latin, Lithuanian,
Latvian, Rhaeto-Romance, Sanskrit, Scots, Slovenian, and Yiddish.
textcat_max_languages N (default: 3)
The maximum number of languages before the classification is considered unknown.
textcat_optimal_ngrams N (default: 0)
If the number of ngrams is lower than this number then they will be removed. This can be used to speed up the program for longer
inputs. For shorter inputs, this should be set to 0.
textcat_max_ngrams N (default: 400)
The maximum number of ngrams that should be compared with each of the languages models (note that each of those models is used
completely).
textcat_acceptable_score N (default: 1.02)
Include any language that scores at least "textcat_acceptable_score" in the returned list of languages.
perl v5.16.3 2011-06-06 Mail::SpamAssassin::Plugin::TextCat(3)