Linux makes bigger push with servers - Salt Lake Tribune
Linux makes bigger push with servers Salt Lake Tribune, United States - 50 minutes ago But other kinds of servers and operating systems - particularly the Unix system offered by many computer makers - have advantages in handling some big ...
To prevent an accidental "cd /var/yp; make all" from being executed on an NIS slave server, I found a helpful hint from an instructor in a Solaris class. Just rename the /var/yp/Makefile to Makefile.orig. You will get an error message when trying to execute the "make all" on a slave server. (0 Replies)
I created two computers with identical hardware, and run the benchmark programs in both starting at the same exact time.
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smd-loop(1) Sync Mail Dir (smd) documentation smd-loop(1)NAME
smd-loop - iterates smd-pull and smd-push
SYNOPSIS
smd-loop [-vt]
DESCRIPTION
smd-loop runs smd-push and smd-pull at regular intervals as defined by the user in the ~/.smd/loop configuration file. On errors that are
reported to be transient, it retries a second time before failing.
The configuration file is line-oriented. Each line is composed of three space separated fields: pull-frequency, push-frequency and end-
point-name. Frequencies are expressed in minutes, while endpoint name is a valid name for smd-pull(1) and smd-push(1). Lines beginning with
# are considered as comments. The following example calls the command smd-pull default every 3 minutes, and smd-push default every 10.
Example:
# pull-frequency push-frequency endpoint-name
3 10 default
OPTIONS -v Increase program verbosity (printed on stderr)
-t Just create a template configuration file if none
FILES
~/.smd/loop
SEE ALSO mddiff(1), smd-server(1), smd-client(1), smd-push(1), smd-pull(1)AUTHOR
Enrico Tassi <gares@fettunta.org>
11 June 2012 smd-loop(1)