I am planning to choose my career as Unix/Linux Admin or a DBA. But I have come to know from forums and few admins like the job will be 24/7. I have few questions on that.
Can we get "DAY" shifts in any one of the admin Job ?
Can't we have shift timings in any company ?
Eventhough the... (7 Replies)
I'm currently a Windows admin and have wanted to jump ship to the *nix side for a while now. I've been studying both through an lpic level 1 manual as I have time (focusing on debian), and a solaris 10 cert book. The problem is I only have a handful of hours a week to study, and my current job... (3 Replies)
Folks - any advice on lp commands etc..
I dont use printers on solaris servers, neither do we have any installed but I need to know as much as possible for the solaris admin course...
Any advice on good sources of information for printing commands in general? (1 Reply)
basexserver(1) The XML Database basexserver(1)NAME
basexserver - XML database system and XPath/XQuery processor (server mode)
SYNOPSIS
basexserver [-cdeipSz] [stop]
DESCRIPTION
basexserver starts the server mode of the native XML database system basex(1) on default port 1984.
OPTIONS
A short description of option can be obtained from
$ basexserver -h
or by browsing http://docs.basex.org/wiki/Startup_Options#BaseX_Server
USER MANAGEMENT
On first startup a user 'admin' with default password 'admin' exists (make sure to change this)!
Admin permissions are needed to execute one of the following processes.
o Creating user 'test' with password 'test':
> CREATE USER test test
As global permissions valid options are 'none', 'read', 'write', 'create' and 'admin'.
o Revoking all global permissions from user 'test':
> GRANT none TO test
Valid local permissions are 'none', 'read' and 'write'.
o Granting write permission on database 'factbook' to user 'test':
> GRANT write ON factbook TO test
Note: Local permissions overwrite global permissions. As a consequence, the 'test' user will only be allowed to access (i.e., read and
write) the 'factbook' database. If no local permissions are set, the global rights are inherited.
o Showing global permissions:
> SHOW USERS
o Showing local permissions on database 'factbook':
> SHOW USERS ON factbook
o Dropping of user 'test':
> DROP USER test
Further details on user management are to be found in the BaseX Documentation Wiki (http://docs.basex.org/wiki/User_Management).
DATABASE COMMANDS
A list of supported Database commands can be obtained from
$ basexserver -ic help
or by browsing http://docs.basex.org/wiki/Commands
SEE ALSO basexclient(1), basex(1), basexgui(1)
~/.basex
BaseX (standalone and server) properties
~/.basexgui
BaseX additional GUI properties
~/.basexperm
user name, passwords, and permissions
~/.basexevents
contains all existing events
~/BaseXData
Default database directory
~/BaseXData/.logs
Server logs
~/BaseXRepo
Package repository
BaseX Documentation Wiki: http://docs.basex.org
HISTORY
BaseX started as a research project of the Database and Information Systems Group (DBIS) at the University of Konstanz in 2005 and soon
turned into a feature-rich open source XML database and XPath/XQuery processor.
LICENSE
New (3-clause) BSD License
AUTHOR
BaseX is developed by a bunch of people called 'The BaseX Team' <http://basex.org/about-us/> led by Christian Gruen <cg@basex.org>.
The man page was written by Alexander Holupirek <alex@holupirek.de> while packaging BaseX for Debian GNU/Linux.
26 June 2012 basexserver(1)