Hi,
I want to know where can I find the fault information of the system. I mean the event that the system may be occur, not the event happened on my system. Maybe there are some libraries or other website about logs collections. Thanks a lot.
Best Wishes! (0 Replies)
Hello everybody,
I've been working on a program on my Linux box, after finished the code, i compile it with gcc -Wall option, so i can see what's wrong or unused.
The Walll output shows nothing, so there are no loose ends on the program.
I run the program on my system, and it works PERFECTLY.... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I want to do some fault association analysis in red hat linux. who can tell me where I can get all of the fault information, and the detailed description about this fault information.
Thank you very much. (4 Replies)
Hi all,
I prepared a document on UNIX OS. Its an humble attempt to share my knowledge.
Please review the document attached and correct if any mistakes and any suggestions to make it more useful and any troubleshooting information if needed to add.
Please help in making the document to add... (2 Replies)
Pod::Coverage::TrustPod(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Pod::Coverage::TrustPod(3)NAME
Pod::Coverage::TrustPod - allow a module's pod to contain Pod::Coverage hints
VERSION
version 0.100002
DESCRIPTION
This is a Pod::Coverage subclass (actually, a subclass of Pod::Coverage::CountParents) that allows the POD itself to declare certain symbol
names trusted.
Here is a sample Perl module:
package Foo::Bar;
=head1 NAME
Foo::Bar - a bar at which fooes like to drink
=head1 METHODS
=head2 fee
returns the bar tab
=cut
sub fee { ... }
=head2 fie
scoffs at bar tab
=cut
sub fie { ... }
sub foo { ... }
=begin Pod::Coverage
foo
=end Pod::Coverage
=cut
This file would report full coverage, because any non-empty lines inside a block of POD targeted to Pod::Coverage are treated as "trustme"
patterns. Leading and trailing whitespace is stripped and the remainder is treated as a regular expression anchored at both ends.
Remember, anywhere you could use "=begin" and "=end" as above, you could instead write:
=for Pod::Coverage foo
AUTHOR
Ricardo SIGNES <rjbs@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Ricardo SIGNES.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
perl v5.16.3 2012-04-21 Pod::Coverage::TrustPod(3)