Where can I find UNIX training course in the United States?
Hi guys,
Can you help me please to find an appropriate course of UNIX in the United States.
Also, can you provide me some information about the schools or institutes that offer it in the U.S.
I am trying to write my own Unix compliant (SUSv4) OS - Just a hobby OS, nothing serious. While going through the standard, I couldn't find any explicit information on process states. What I could find was (excluding the real-time considerations)-
From this it can be inferred that the... (2 Replies)
I'm being asked to go and take a training course in Advanced Unix and Perl.
The main reason is the amount of information needed to get up to speed a short period of time, which is what we're limited on. Travel is fine.
Can anyone suggest a good resource for researching the where and when for... (1 Reply)
At work I have to restart applications and install upgrades to applications running on Solaris 10.
Its pretty basic stuff but I have little experience of Unix so it can be a bit hairy at times.
Work have offered to send me on some training but I have to select the course/training. I'm not... (2 Replies)
Hello all, I am probably the newest newb in here and would really appreciate some (as much as possible) help on learning UNIX. If anyone is familiar with any non boot camp schools in the NY area, preferrably instructor-led, please refer me to a link or list them in a reply. Also, any information on... (10 Replies)
APT-SPY.CONF(5) File Formats Manual APT-SPY.CONF(5)NAME
apt-spy.conf - configuration file for apt-spy(8)DESCRIPTION
apt-spy.conf is the configuration file for apt-spy(8). It consists of a series of area labels, followed by a list of countries belonging
to that label. Whitespace is ignored.
Comments may be added anywhere, and begin with the hash ('#') character. Once a hash character is encountered, the rest of the line is
ignored.
A label consists of any alphanumeric characters, and ends with a colon character (':'). The label must be on a line by itself (excluding
comments).
Following a label are a list of country codes (one per line) of countries belonging to that label.
Each country has a unique two-letter country code corresponding to its top level domain identifier. This is the same as the ISO3166 code.
You can find the country code for a specific country either by looking at /var/lib/apt-spy/mirrors.txt, or by looking at the commented
examples in the default apt-spy.conf.
Labels cannot exist within labels. The end of a label section is signaled by the start of a new one, or by the end of file.
Any valid label existing in apt-spy.conf can be specified to apt-spy using the '-a' option. apt-spy will then proceed to benchmark the
mirrors in the list of countries associated with that label.
EXAMPLES
This is an example of a valid apt-spy.conf file:
USUK:
GB # United Kingdom
US # United States
Australia:
AU
France-Germany-Netherlands:
FR
DE
NL
There is a default configuration file included with apt-spy. For further examples, and for a list of valid country codes, please refer to
this.
SEE ALSO apt-spy(8), apt(8), sources.list(5)
20th May, 2003 APT-SPY.CONF(5)