>>>>> "Keith" == Keith Harbaugh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Keith> `what' was an old unix program which would access certain Keith> identifying lines within text files, allowing easy reading Keith> of key parts of files without having to use a pager or Keith> editor. Your description doesn't quite match what "what" does - maybe you're thinking of some other command? Like "strings"? "what" is part of SCCS, the Source Code Control System, and looks for magic strings inserted by SCCS that get compiled into a program. Debian doesn't have SCCS because the free equivalent of SCCS is RCS, which isn't quite the same thing. The RCS equivalent of the SCCS "what" command is "ident". Both of these commands will only work on executables whose source has arranged to have the magic keywords compiled in as strings, usually with something like static char sccsid[] = "something"; or static char rcsid[] = "something else"; in each source file. The general idea of both is to be able to identify what versions of source files were used to build an executable. Keith> So, two questions: 1) where (i.e., in what package) is the Keith> program `what' to be found? It isn't. Keith> 2) how could I effectively use the web pages search, or Keith> some other search capability, to have answered that Keith> question without bothering the debian mailing lists? Here's one way: (1) Get /pub/debian/dists/slink/Contents-i386.gz (or the potato or non-i386 version of the file). (2) zgrep '/what[^a-z._-]' Contents-i386.gz (3) Think "Oh, it printed nothing, there must not be any files in the distribution named 'what'." -- I get my monkeys for nothing and my chimps for free. http://www.clark.net/pub/hermit/