Absolute OS 12.2.0 (Default branch)


 
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Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements Software Releases - RSS News Absolute OS 12.2.0 (Default branch)
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Old 12-19-2008
Absolute OS 12.2.0 (Default branch)

ImageAbsolute Linux is a lightweight Slackwarederivative that uses an Icewm, pcmanfm, ROX-Filer,ivman, and others to create a lightweight yet easyto use distribution. Installation is text-basedbut simplified, and all packages are installed atonce. It can run on a Pentium II and above,including SMP systems. A minimum 128MB RAM isrecommended. It features ease of browsing anyconnected device in pcmanfm and an auto-popup menufor inserted playable media. "Restricted" codecsare available to those eligible via a root-userinstaller. There is a large range of softwareavailable, including OpenOffice, Mplayer, GIMP,and K3B.License: GNU General Public License (GPL)Changes:
This version is current with the Slack 12.2 release. There are no base installer changes since rc1, but absolute-current in the repository is updated to 3.0.5. Absolute now has a new homepage, an additional repository, and a new forum. FTP on absolutelinux.org also has an /incoming folder to allow user uploads of packages.Image

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lwresd(1M)																lwresd(1M)

NAME
lwresd - lightweight resolver daemon SYNOPSIS
config-file] debuglevel] pid-file] ncpus] query-port] port] directory] user-id] DESCRIPTION
The daemon provides name lookup services for clients that use the BIND 9 lightweight resolver library. It is essentially a stripped-down, caching-only name server that answers queries using the BIND 9 lightweight resolver protocol rather than the DNS protocol. listens for resolver queries on a UDP port on the IPv4 loopback interface, 127.0.0.1. This means that can only be used by processes run- ning on the local machine. By default, UDP port number 921 is used for lightweight resolver requests and responses. Incoming lightweight resolver requests are decoded by which then resolves them using the DNS protocol. When the DNS lookup completes, encodes the answers from the name servers in the lightweight resolver format and returns them to the client that made the original request. If the configuration file contains any entries, sends recursive DNS queries to those servers. This is similar to the use of forwarders in a caching name server. If no entries are present, or if forwarding fails, resolves the queries autonomously starting at the root name servers, using a compiled-in list of root-server hints. Options Use config-file as the configuration file. The default is Set the debug level to debuglevel. Debugging traces from become more verbose as the debug level increases. Run in the foreground. Run in the foreground and force all logging to standard error. Write the daemon's process ID to pid-file. The default is Create ncpus worker threads to take advantage of multiple CPUs. By default, tries to determine the number of CPUs present and creates one thread per CPU. If it cannot determine the number of CPUs, it creates a single worker thread. Send DNS lookups to port number query-port when querying name servers. This provides a way of testing the lightweight resolver daemon with a name server that listens for queries on a nonstandard port number. Listen for lightweight resolver queries on the loopback interface using UDP port number port. The default is port 921. Write memory usage statistics to standard output on exit. This option is only of interest to BIND 9 developers and may be removed or changed in a future release. Change root to directory immediately after reading the configuration file (see chroot(2)). Run as user-id, which is a user name or numeric ID that must be present in the password file. changes its user-id after it has carried out any privileged operations, such as writing the process-ID file or binding a socket to a privileged port (typically any port less than 1024). Note is a daemon for lightweight resolvers, not a lightweight daemon for resolvers. AUTHOR
was developed by the Internet Systems Consortium (ISC). FILES
Default resolver configuration file Default process-id file SEE ALSO
named(1M), chroot(2). available online at available from the Internet Systems Consortium at BIND 9.3 lwresd(1M)