9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Solaris
Hello, I am looking for some assistance in mounting an nfs drive on boot, on a Solaris 11 machine.
On my Solaris 9/10 machines, I have an entry for my nfs mount in /etc/vfstab, however when I add the same entry to my vfstab on Solaris 11, the drive will not mount on boot. After booting up, I... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: bstring
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2. Solaris
I am trying to install Solaris x86 using the Jumpstart server. I run the add_install_client command with appropriate options, and reboot my x86 Target box. The installation starts fine and unattended. After the installation completes and the target goes for a re-boot, it does not boot from the HDD... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: hemalsid
9 Replies
3. Boot Loaders
Hello,
I have kubuntu on my laptop and now I decided to switch to Windows 7. I made the bios settings properly (first choice is boot from cd\vd) but I see the error
" reboot and select proper Boot device or insert Boot media in select Boot device and press a key "
I have tried CD and... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: rpf
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4. SCO
hi
SCO Unix 5.0.6 doesn't boot due to this problem:
not a directory
boot not found
cannot open
stage 1 boot failure: error loading hd (40)/boot
Knows someone howto solve it? (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: ccc
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5. Ubuntu
Hi All
Everytime a reboot my machine "hostB" I have to mount a shared (with machine "hostA" ) NFS folder giving this command
sudo mount hostA:/sharedFolder /sharedFolder
How to use fstab in order to do this automatically?
I should say
hostA:/sharedFolder /sharedFolder ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: manustone
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6. Solaris
Hi once more :p
Yesterday I reinstalled Solaris OS and now I can not mount pcfs HDD
SunOS unknown 5.10 Generic_142901-03 i86pc i386 i86pc
and what has been added in /etc/vfstab is
/dev/dsk/c1t0d0p1:c - /podaci - pcfs - yes rw
But as I said , my disk is... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: solaris_user
4 Replies
7. Solaris
I'm running solaris 2.5.1. My main development server is DEAD, i can't even boot off the cdrom, it powers up, acts like it is starting the boot process but then says cannot find boot device. I've done the search here on this site and saw the other posts, but at the ok prompt it won't even let me... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: kymberm
3 Replies
8. Solaris
When I installed the SOLARIS 10 OS first time, the desktop would not start up, this was because of network setup. Reinstalled worked. After a week due to some problem I had to reinstall OS, installation went fine and but when i reboot I get this error.
cannot find mis/krtld
boot error loading... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: johncy_j
0 Replies
9. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hey !
I am running EWS-UX/V (Rel 4.2) on NEC EWS/4800/330 station and I am having problems rebooting my station : I am getting the following message on display : BOOT : PANIC : File size out of range.
According to user guide, this error is occuring when a file exceeding the limit and/or... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: fredo
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
clmmate
clm mate(1) USER COMMANDS clm mate(1)
NAME
clm mate - compute best matches between two clusterings
clmmate is not in actual fact a program. This manual page documents the behaviour and options of the clm program when invoked in mode mate.
The options -h, --apropos, --version, -set, --nop are accessible in all clm modes. They are described in the clm manual page.
SYNOPSIS
clm mate [-o fname (output file name)] [-b (omit headers)] [--one-to-many (require multiple hits in <clfile1>)] [-h (print synopsis, exit)]
[--apropos (print synopsis, exit)] [--version (print version, exit)] <clfile1> <clfile2>
DESCRIPTION
clm mate computes for each cluster X in clfile1 all clusters Y in clfile2 that have non-empty intersection and outputs a line with the data
points listed below.
overlap(X,Y) # 2 * size(meet(X,Y)) / (size(X)+size(Y))
index(X) # name of cluster
index(Y) # name of cluster
size(meet(X,Y))
size(X-Y) # size of left difference
size(Y-X) # size of right difference
size(X)
size(Y)
projection(X, clfile2) # see below
projection(Y, clfile1) # see below
The projected size of a cluster X relative to a clustering K is simply the sum of all the nodes shared between any cluster Y in K and X,
duplications allowed. For example, the projected size of (0,1) relative to {(0,2,4), (1,4,9), (1,3,5)} equals 3.
The overlap between X and Y is exactly 1.0 if the two clusters are identical, and for nearly identical clusterings the score will be close
to 1.0.
All of this information can also be obtained from the contingency matrix defined for two clusterings. The [i,j] row-column entry in a con-
tigency matrix between to clusterings gives the number of entries in the intersection between cluster i and cluster j from the respective
clusterings. The other information is implicitly present; the total number of nodes in clusters i and j for example can be obtained as the
sum of entries in row i and column j respectively, and the difference counts can then be obtained by substracting the intersection count.
The contingency matrix can easily be computed using mcx; e.g.
mcx /clfile2 lm /clfile1 lm tp mul /ting wm
will create the contingency matrix in mcl matrix format in the file ting, where columns range over the clusters in clfile1.
The output can be put to good use by sorting it numerically on that first score field. It is advisable to use a stable sort routine (use the
-s option for UNIX sort) From this information one can quickly extract the closest clusters between two clusterings.
OPTIONS
-o fname (output file name)
Specify the name of the output file.
-b (omit headers)
Batch mode, omit column names.
--one-to-many (require multiple hits in <clfile1>)
Do not output information for clusters in the first file that are subset of a cluster in the second file.
AUTHOR
Stijn van Dongen.
SEE ALSO
mclfamily(7) for an overview of all the documentation and the utilities in the mcl family.
clm mate 12-068 8 Mar 2012 clm mate(1)