Copying off a jukebox


 
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Old 07-05-2010
Question Copying off a jukebox

Howdy, I've got an old alphaserver ds20e (running what i believe to be Tru64 UNIX 4.0F) that i'm trying to hook up to an optical jukebox, i don't know the brand of the juke box so i'm hoping that that doesn't matter. anyways the final result i'm hoing for is to be able to remove all the info off the jukebox and put it onto the alphaserver, i've looked into a simple cp or a dupeclone but i haven't been able to test either of these theories yet. If you could sugest a better way i'm all ears, (Unix isn't exactly my fortay)

Thanks in advance for your replies
**Addition**
the juke box is aparently keeping all of its info arranged on a sybase database
and it's encrypted

Last edited by randUSR(); 07-05-2010 at 12:48 PM..
 
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pddump(1)						      General Commands Manual							 pddump(1)

NAME
pddump - Dump profiling data files SYNOPSIS
pddump file... OPERANDS
A data file generated by a profiled program. A valid file is identified as a "profiling data file" by the file(1) command. DESCRIPTION
The pddump command displays, on the standard output, the record definitions and data of the specified profiling data files. Each file's dump is prefixed by the line "File = file:". This is followed by the file's field-alignment option and a list containing the file's name/value attribute pairs and the file's record definitions. Then each record in the file is dumped, showing the name of the record and the name and value of each of its fields. Strings are printed within double quotes, unsigned integers are printed in hexadecimal, and signed integers and floating-point numbers are printed in decimal. Non-array data lines contain equal signs to assist in filtering. The content of the profiling data files produced by Tru64 UNIX may be expanded in future releases, but Tru64 UNIX tools will continue to support older formats. To write tools that process Tru64 UNIX profiling data files, use the pdtostd(1) command to convert the Tru64 UNIX formats to industry standard formats, where a standard format exists. Alternatively, use the libpdf.a utilities to read the profiling data files directly, skipping any new attributes, records, or fields that may appear. FILES
Library of routines for reading and writing profiling data files Header file for libpdf.a SEE ALSO
Commands: atom(1), cc(1), file(1), kprofile(1), pdtostd(1), uprofile(1) AtomTools: hiprof(5), pixie(5) Programmer's Guide pddump(1)