TurnKey LAMP stack Live CD appliance 2008.10.17-hardy-x86 (Default branch)


 
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Old 10-30-2008
TurnKey LAMP stack Live CD appliance 2008.10.17-hardy-x86 (Default branch)

ImageTurnKey LAMP stack Live CD appliance is alightweight, installable live CD of the standardLAMP (Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP) stack, based onUbuntu. TurnKey Linux aims to develop high-qualitysoftware appliances that are easy to deploy, easyto use, and free.License: GNU General Public License (GPL)Changes:
Dramatic usablity improvements, including an easy to use configuration console written from scratch in Python, a beautiful Web management interface (Mac OS X themed), auto-login while in demo/live mode, and root password configuration during installation. This release also includes numerous minor tweaks and improvements, package updates, and bugfixes.Image

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STACK(9)						   BSD Kernel Developer's Manual						  STACK(9)

NAME
STACK -- stack macros SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/param.h> type STACK_ALLOC(sp, size); type STACK_MAX(sp, size); type STACK_ALIGN(sp, bytes); type STACK_GROW(sp, size); type STACK_SHRINK(sp, size); DESCRIPTION
A stack is an area of memory with a fixed origin but with a variable size. A stack pointer points to the most recently referenced location on the stack. Initially, when the stack has a size of zero, the stack pointer points to the origin of the stack. When data items are added to the stack, the stack pointer moves away from the origin. The STACK_ALLOC() macro returns a pointer to allocated stack space of some size. Given the returned pointer sp and size, STACK_MAX() returns the maximum stack address of the allocated stack space. The STACK_ALIGN() macro can be used to align the stack pointer sp by the specified amount of bytes. Two basic operations are common to all stacks: a data item is added (``push'') to the location pointed by sp or a data item is removed (``pop'') from the stack. The stack pointer must be subsequently adjusted by the size of the data item. The STACK_GROW() and STACK_SHRINK() macros adjust the stack pointer sp by given size. A stack may grow either up or down. The described macros take this into account by using the __MACHINE_STACK_GROWS_UP preprocessor define. SEE ALSO
param(3), queue(3) BSD
April 8, 2011 BSD