On 6/14/10 5:25 PM, Øyvind Hvidsten wrote:
> It would seem Debian Squeeze uses that option as default.
> Without it, I get a whole ton of warnings, and errors about "free",
> "malloc" and "realloc" being defines multiple times.
>
> Have you tried to reproduce the problem outside of Valgrind? Just
It would seem Debian Squeeze uses that option as default.
Without it, I get a whole ton of warnings, and errors about "free",
"malloc" and "realloc" being defines multiple times.
Have you tried to reproduce the problem outside of Valgrind? Just
running the examples and looking at the memory us
On 06/14/2010 08:08 AM, Peng Yu wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I only want to convert symbolic links that point outside the directory
> to be archived to a file. But I still want to keep symbolic links
> point inside as symbolic links. Is there an option or a walkaround to
> do so in tar?
Perhaps, but asking o
mika.p.maki...@webinfo.fi writes:
> user needs to write command mv /home/user/a/b/c/d/e/file
> /home/user/a/b/c/d/e/fileB.
$ mv /home/user/a/b/c/d/e/{file,fileB}
Andreas.
--
Andreas Schwab, sch...@linux-m68k.org
GPG Key fingerprint = 58CA 54C7 6D53 942B 1756 01D3 44D5 214B 8276 4ED5
"And now
Hi,
I only want to convert symbolic links that point outside the directory
to be archived to a file. But I still want to keep symbolic links
point inside as symbolic links. Is there an option or a walkaround to
do so in tar?
--
Regards,
Peng
Hello,
I suppose I have found a new feature to Bash.
If user needs to rename a file and the file is in directory
/home/user/a/b/c/d/e/file,
user needs to write command mv /home/user/a/b/c/d/e/file
/home/user/a/b/c/d/e/fileB.
This command contains the directory written two times. so if Bash wou
On Sun, Jun 13, 2010 at 06:53:48PM -0700, fuzzylogic25 wrote:
> Problem is ping keeps gettin data requests nonstop from looks of it. so how
> would i go about doing this?
man ping
If you're on most GNU/Linux systems (e.g. Debian) look for the -c switch.
If you're on HP-UX 10.20, look for the -n
On Sun, Jun 13, 2010 at 06:46:56AM -0500, Peng Yu wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I frequently need do cd multiple levels up. For example,
>
> cd ../..
> cd ../../../../
>
> It would be convenient to type something like "cd 2" or "cd 4". Is
> there a command for this?
You could write a function:
cdup() {