I recently installed Ubuntu 17.04 Desktop. I'm some what pleased with it, primarily because it is a free distro. But now I have found myself in the same boat I was in 30 years back, when I was teaching myself DOS.
I have installed Ubuntu Server on a separate machine just to tinker with and... (10 Replies)
I'm trying to add *secondary* subnet, a /22 in Ubuntu 16 but the IPs don't ping despite proper routing at the switch level. **How do I properly bind the secondary /22 subnet (IPv4) and have these IPs ping?**
I can ping locally, but not from external. Below commands didn't work.
root@server:~#... (0 Replies)
Hello,
I 'm getting following error in my mail log for the email i 'm sending to outside domain. Not able to figure out what is the issue. Can anyone please help me
on this.
wrong answer on RCPT TO "550 5.1.1 <xxxxxxx@microsoft.com>: Recipient address rejected: User unknown in local... (3 Replies)
Hi,
Recently I got a .txt file from Mac user. when I try to open it in my Ubuntu machine using cat command it is not displaying any content of file however I can see the content using vi.
Anyone know How to see its content using cat as I have to process it in my shell script.
Thanks in... (4 Replies)
Hello,
I am new to ubuntu Server OS and so trying to setup and ntp service on couple of servers.
I see ntp rpm is not installed.
# dpkg --get-selections | grep -v deinstall | grep ntp
ntpdate install
#
so I tried to installed ntp rpm using... (5 Replies)
I am learning to compile UNIX software packages on my mac
I have demo123.tar package in home directory
when i enter
tar demo123
mkdir ~/ddemo123
./configure --prefix=$HOME/ddemo123
i get the error message -bash: ./configure: No such file or directory
I tried using sh and bash with... (3 Replies)
Well this is weird. I restarted my dual boot Win7/Ubuntu 10.10 from ubuntu to windows. Everything was working fine and windows is always connecting properly to my lan. After restarting back into Ubuntu, all of a sudden I can't connect to my network. It looks as if its trying to connect through... (15 Replies)
A month or so ago Ubuntu Dapper did its auto-update thing and installed the new kernel (intrd.img-2.6.15-28-386, upgraded from intrd.img-2.6.15-27-386). I rebooted after install and immediately the xserver would not load. I quickly figured out that I could boot the old kernel from GRUB however,... (1 Reply)
I have tried befre but nothing works out proprly.
I have Ubuntu
I try to Install Fedora Core 1.
When Fedora Cora is finished Installing It doesnt show Ubuntu on Grub.
If I re-install Ubuntu and put grub on then Fedora wont show.
I also have Windows 98 but that is always on the list as DOS or... (5 Replies)
AUTOCONF(1) General Commands Manual AUTOCONF(1)NAME
wrapper - Wrapper for distinguishing Autoconf 2.13 and 2.50
SYNOPSIS
autoconf [ options ]
autoheader [ options ]
autoreconf [ options ]
DESCRIPTION
Autoconf is an automatic configure script builder with two major version series: 2.13 and earlier, 2.50 and later. Versions within either
series are largely compatible, but the two series are largely incompatible. When both versions are installed, as they are on your system
(given that you're reading this manpage), Debian selects between the two versions simultaneously. This manpage documents how the automatic
selection works. If you are actually looking for the documentation for either version of Autoconf, then refer to the SEE ALSO section
below.
Automatic version selection works via a wrapper script installed under the names autoconf, autoheader, and autoreconf. Each of these
attempts to detect which Autoconf is needed and run the correct version of the tool.
There are no wrappers for autoupdate, autoscan, or ifnames. These are not used during a package build. Choose the proper version by hand.
The following heuristics are used to choose an Autoconf version:
* If file configure.ac exists, Autoconf 2.50 is used. Autoconf 2.13 used the name configure.in instead, but version 2.50 supports
both.
(Usually autoconf is run without nonoption arguments. If a filename is supplied on the command line, then version 2.50 is used if
the filename ends in .ac.)
* Otherwise, configure.in (or the file specified on the command line, if any) is read. It is checked for the presence of an AC_PREREQ
directive. If it specifies a minimum version higher than 2.13, Autoconf 2.50 is used. aclocal.m4, if present, is also scanned.
* Otherwise, Autoconf 2.13 is used.
To force Autoconf 2.13 to be used, name the Autoconf input file configure.in and omit the use of AC_PREREQ() or specify a minimum version
of 2.13 or earlier. To force Autoconf 2.50 to be used, name the input file configure.ac or use AC_PREREQ(2.50).
I recommend not calling the programs autoconf2.13 or autoconf2.50, etc., directly, instead of through the wrappers. When used with pro-
grams like Automake, these direct calls won't propagate through into the Makefile, so later re-autoconf'ings won't use the correct version.
It's better to use one of the methods explained above to force a particular version.
SEE ALSO autoconf2.13(1), autoheader2.13(1), autoreconf2.13(1), autoconf2.50(1), autoheader2.50(1), autoreconf2.50(1), and the Autoconf manuals
autoconf and autoconf2.13.
AUTHORS
David MacKenzie, with help from Franc,ois Pinard, Karl Berry, Richard Pixley, Ian Lance Taylor, Roland McGrath, Noah Friedman, David D.
Zuhn, and many others. This manpage written by Ben Pfaff <pfaffben@debian.org> for the Debian GNU/Linux autoconf2.13 package.
Autoconf Wrapper AUTOCONF(1)