Troubleshooting OpenSSO With Firefox Add-Ons: Five-Part Series
Earlier articles in this series from the Sun Developer Network include Part 3 ("Cross-Domain Single Sign-On"). Posted in October 2009 were Part 4 ("Service Provider Initiated Fedlet Single Sign-On") and Part 5 ("Identity Provider Initiated Fedlet Single Sign-On"), which also explores an OpenSSO Fedlet deployment.
Please post here if you have any questions or issues (or just want to discuss or comment) about the following browser add-ons:
The Unix and Linux Forums (unix.com)
https://www.unix.com/images/ff_addon.png (0 Replies)
In an earlier poll I was a bit surprised to learn that FireFox was so popular, over 95% have voted for FireFox to date.
So, let's take a little time and please list your favorite, most useful, FireFox add-ons (with links to the add-on) and add a few words on how often and how useful do you find... (17 Replies)
how about this: Can I mix and match add ons?
Say, If I install free bds can I use red hat add ons?
Thanks in advance!
Best Regards,
Techknow MCSE, MCDBA
http://justoneguy.com (1 Reply)
TCS(1) General Commands Manual TCS(1)NAME
tcs - translate character sets
SYNOPSIS
tcs [ -slcv ] [ -f ics ] [ -t ocs ] [ file ... ]
DESCRIPTION
Tcs interprets the named file(s) (standard input default) as a stream of characters from the ics character set or format, converts them to
runes, and then converts them into a stream of characters from the ocs character set or format on the standard output. The default value
for ics and ocs is utf, the UTF encoding described in utf(6). The -l option lists the character sets known to tcs. Processing continues
in the face of conversion errors (the -s option prevents reporting of these errors). The -c option forces the output to contain only cor-
rectly converted characters; otherwise, 0x80 characters will be substituted for UTF encoding errors and 0xFFFD characters will substituted
for unknown characters.
The -v option generates various diagnostic and summary information on standard error, or makes the -l output more verbose.
Tcs recognizes an ever changing list of character sets. In particular, it supports a variety of Russian and Japanese encodings. Some of
the supported encodings are
utf The Plan 9 UTF encoding, known by ISO as UTF-8
utf1 The deprecated original UTF encoding from ISO 10646
ascii 7-bit ASCII
8859-1 Latin-1 (Central European)
8859-2 Latin-2 (Czech .. Slovak)
8859-3 Latin-3 (Dutch .. Turkish)
8859-4 Latin-4 (Scandinavian)
8859-5 Part 5 (Cyrillic)
8859-6 Part 6 (Arabic)
8859-7 Part 7 (Greek)
8859-8 Part 8 (Hebrew)
8859-9 Latin-5 (Finnish .. Portuguese)
koi8 KOI-8 (GOST 19769-74)
jis-kanji
ISO 2022-JP
ujis EUC-JX: JIS 0208
ms-kanji
Microsoft, or Shift-JIS
jis (from only) guesses between ISO 2022-JP, EUC or Shift-Jis
gb Chinese national standard (GB2312-80)
big5 Big 5 (HKU version)
unicode
Unicode Standard 1.0
tis Thai character set plus ASCII (TIS 620-1986)
msdos IBM PC: CP 437
atari Atari-ST character set
EXAMPLES
tcs -f 8859-1
Convert 8859-1 (Latin-1) characters into UTF format.
tcs -s -f jis
Convert characters encoded in one of several shift JIS encodings into UTF format. Unknown Kanji will be converted into 0xFFFD char-
acters.
tcs -lv
Print an up to date list of the supported character sets.
SOURCE
/sys/src/cmd/tcs
SEE ALSO ascii(1), rune(2), utf(6).
TCS(1)