Phil Brutsche wrote: > Use a regular expression: > > find <path> -name "[Ss]yncpp"
The one Ethan Benson suggested is actually what I looked for, unfortunaty the man page on my system ('98) does not contain this option. > > can I generaly launch "startx" out of 3 terminals and keep them all up > > at the same time? > > When loading X on terminal 1 and switching out of the X-session by > > "ctrl+meta+Fx" to the next terminal where X has not been yet launched > > - the first X11 session dies. > > Is this a common behaviour? > > No > > Typically after you switch to a character console with ctrl+alt+Fx the X11 > session is put in the background. It's still living on VT7 (you can get > there is Alt+F7 from character mode) Sorry, no, I tried that in previous times. After reading your message and thinking of 'background' - I tried "startx &". This time when switching to the terminal back and entering "fg" - reaction: startx >/dev/console 2>%1 - only using crtl+Z gave out: [1]+ Stopped startx >/dev/console 2>%1 <systemprompt> > > Then, has someone included java kernel support when compiling the > > kernel? Is this a reliable feature? It seems to be a great thing > > because clients do not have to install a jre or jdk when running Java > > apps? > > You're misunderstanding what the java module does. It's not a kernel-mode > virtual machine - all it really does is load a pre-existing jre/jdk when > the .jar/.java file is "executed". It's use is depreciated as there is a > more general way of doing that with the binfmt_misc module. The java > module has been removed in the upcoming 2.4 kernel release. Oh, thats a pity. I thought it may be a sort of java acceleration - does it mean that using this kernel option only avoids using the binfmt_misc module when loading java apps? > > Last one - how can I save all in- and outputs (eq. sum of all text) > > out of the current session in the bash to a file? > > I'm not sure what you're asking - can you elaborate? Quite the one Ethan Benson suggested (script <filename>), only without triggering. I guess there's nothing more useful than this command. Robert