8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. IP Networking
Hello Forum Members,
I am siva ranganath from Hyderabad-India.
I have an work experince of 4.5 years as application developer and support member in open source systems.i am good basic network programing ie applications developing in TCP/IP and i have an experince of 1 year in this N/W... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: workforsiva
0 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I'm having a bit of a trouble trying to figure out how to tell which network protocol users HAVE been logging in with. I know how to find this information for currently logged in users :
maximillian.gardner@syccuxfs01:~> who
joseph.blosser pts/0 2012-01-15 14:07 (198.107.160.185)... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: maximillian.g
5 Replies
3. IP Networking
for testing network elements which of the below is TRUE
a)Thorough understanding of RFC s/ IETF standards is enough.
b)One has to know design specifications along with standards and specification.
c)Understanding customer requirements is required for acceptance test only and not for... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: venkatadilip
0 Replies
4. OS X (Apple)
by default, a mac syncs its time and date with time.apple.com (located system prefs->Date&Time). Is there a way in unix to change it to another address?
my attempts to use ntpdate and ntpd have failed. (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: CBarraford
4 Replies
5. Solaris
How do you test the physical network connection of an interface in solaris. I know that if you have an active connection and the cable gets yanked, you can look in the messages file to check for link failure messages. But is there any better way to see if you have good layer 2 connectivity? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: tjlst15
1 Replies
6. IP Networking
iam doing a research on WAN so pliz any body can give me or tell me where i would find communication protocol map..thats all 7 layers..OIS MODEL (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ravineelkumar
1 Replies
7. IP Networking
I'm planning on putting together a chart of basic information (port number, protocol number, transport layer protocol, etc) on different protocols (FTP, ICMP, DNS, IP, etc)
I found:
http://www.phys-iasi.ro/Library/RFCs/rfc1700.htm
and that tells me a little bit of information but I'm looking... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: thmnetwork
3 Replies
8. IP Networking
I have a small program written in C using winsock v1, that uses a unix host to get the time.
I have two machines networked, one windows, the other red hat 9.
The windows machine will request the time off the RH one.
How can I configure red hat to reply to the time request, i.e act as an... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jaredGalen
1 Replies
XmActivateProtocol(library call) XmActivateProtocol(library call)
NAME
XmActivateProtocol -- A VendorShell function that activates a protocol
SYNOPSIS
#include <Xm/Protocols.h>
void XmActivateProtocol(
Widget shell,
Atom property,
Atom protocol);
DESCRIPTION
XmActivateProtocol activates a protocol. It updates the handlers and the property if the shell is realized. It is sometimes useful to allow
a protocol's state information (callback lists, and so on) to persist, even though the client may choose to temporarily resign from the
interaction. This is supported by allowing a protocol to be in one of two states: active or inactive. If the protocol is active and the
shell is realized, the property contains the protocol Atom. If the protocol is inactive, the Atom is not present in the property.
XmActivateWMProtocol is a convenience interface. It calls XmActivateProtocol with the property value set to the atom returned by interning
WM_PROTOCOLS.
shell Specifies the widget with which the protocol property is associated
property Specifies the protocol property
protocol Specifies the protocol Atom
For a complete definition of VendorShell and its associated resources, see VendorShell(3).
RELATED
VendorShell(3), XmActivateWMProtocol(3), XmRemoveProtocols(3) and XmInternAtom(3).
XmActivateProtocol(library call)