On August 18, 2023 at 22:14 cygwin@cygwin.com (HECTOR MENDEZ via Cygwin) wrote:
>
> Hi there,
> I tried with an empty password and "root" word a password but no luck, so
> far.
> Thank youEl miércoles, 16 de agosto de 2023, 22:56:12 GMT-6,
> rapp...@dds.nl escribió:
MySQL's 'ro
Perhaps it's unnecessary to point out that this went to the wrong
reply address, 100% my fault, mostly harmless though.
Top posted because it seemed appropriate in this case.
On November 30, 2022 at 22:43 b...@theworld.com (b...@theworld.com) wrote:
>
> FWIW this has come up on World sin
FWIW this has come up on World since more or less the beginning and
our policy thus far has been to consider an account name permanently
in use even if the underlying account has been closed.
One big problem here is that getting someone's email is enough to, for
example, steal domains they may o
I/O to/from /dev/zero or /dev/null could be special-cased.
Benchmarking file system performance can be fraught.
--
-Barry Shein, co-author of nfsstones benchmark
Software Tool & Die| b...@theworld.com | http://www.TheWorld.com
Purveyors to the Trade | Voice: +1 617-STD
As much as I love GDB dearly and rely on it regularly you might want
to have a look at netbeans.apache.org which is also free and a more
general fancy UI IDE. If it's a web site you're developing for example
it will let you fire up a browser, put breakpoints in the php code,
and examine variables
I upgrade apache from sources all the time tho not on cygwin, we use
Linux for that, but the basic idea is the same. My advice, having
looked over other advice here, and your responses:
1. You probably don't want to go to another web server like nginx just
for what you describe.
You would have
>ls -al -- 1min 32sec
>
>find -- 4min 46sec
Probably security/anti-virus software, I had this problem for a long
time with Rapport until I'd stop it in taskmgr > services tho I
believe newer versions of Rapport improved this somewhat.
I doubt 1.5 minutes for a simple ls is just caused
On December 21, 2019 at 19:44 kstmp...@comcast.net (Ken) wrote:
> Hi Everyone,
>
> Issue: xman 1.1.5-1 fails with 'buffer overflow detected'
I wrote the original xman (see the man page) but no I'm not fixing it :-)
Probably my fault tho.
--
-Barry Shein
Software Tool & Die| b
I sometimes get in this situation where one and only one xterm
receives a paste no matter which window (X or Windows) I'm trying to
paste into.
THIS IS NOT A BUG REPORT, my cygwin is pretty old.
However I've found oddly enough if I go into the xterm receiving all
the pastes and press CTRL-mouse
Just two thoughts:
1. You probably know that 'cc -S foo.c' produces foo.s which is the
assembler output. Might be worthwhile examining how the experts who
wrote the C compiler handle all this. The output is usually quite
readable for someone prone to reading such things.
2. Rather than generati
Whether one prefers top, bottom, or inline posting often has a lot to
do with the mail program they use.
And sometimes the actual context and whether or not it might be
confusing what is being responded to exactly. For example top or
bottom posting "yes" to a bunch of questions can be confusing,
I hesitate to jump in here but what about the common compression
programs cygwin provides like bzip2 and xz?
Maybe everyone knows about them and clearly you can't do this on files
you actually need to use (e.g., executables, tho looking at /usr/bin
some are 20MB each and if you know you don't ac
A trivial little shell script I use for setting xterm title/icon via
escape sequences:
xtlabel
Description: xtlabel
--
-Barry Shein
Software Tool & Die| b...@theworld.com | http://www.TheWorld.com
Purveyors to the Trade | Voice: +1 617-STD-WRLD | 800-THE-WRLD
Th
I would also think about X11 permissions. Someone might be scanning
for activity on port 6000 (&c) and if they find something and it's not
locked down (see for example 'xhost(1)') it's trivial to just launch
X11 apps on your system which can cause all sorts of mischief.
--
-Barry Shein
I noticed almost exactly the same problem, I remember it was about 15
seconds per process, and traced it to IBM Rapport Trusteer (some
sequence of words like that) banking app which some banks require be
installed and running in order to login and view your account.
All this seems somewhat better
On September 1, 2016 at 13:52 eriksoderqu...@gmail.com (Erik Soderquist) wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 1, 2016 at 1:18 PM, wrote:
> > I've no idea what it does except in the most general terms but one of
> > my banks won't let me log in unless it's running so this has been
> > quite a nuisance as I ha
On September 1, 2016 at 11:56 ben...@gmail.com (Ben Altman) wrote:
> On 8/29/2016 3:23 PM, b...@theworld.com wrote:
> > On August 29, 2016 at 01:18 ben...@gmail.com (Ben Altman) wrote:
> > >
> > > This comes a while later but I was wrong and you were right.
> > >
> >
> > Glad to be of
On August 29, 2016 at 01:18 ben...@gmail.com (Ben Altman) wrote:
>
> This comes a while later but I was wrong and you were right.
>
Glad to be of service.
--
-Barry Shein
Software Tool & Die| b...@theworld.com | http://www.TheWorld.com
Purveyors to the Trade | Voic
Maybe someone suggested this but your major problem may be that you
need to modify your font path to use higher res fonts, see xset(1) but
I use something like (cut+paste, dejavu and misc are irrelevant but
for pedagological sake):
xset fp+
/usr/share/X11/fonts/100dpi,/usr/share/fonts/dejavu/,
As I said the slowdown was intermittant, Rapport had been running at
least a week or so before the slowdown started which didn't affect for
example cmd or power shell only cygwin that I noticed.
But when I stopped Rapport the slowdown (15+ second process
activation) disappeared instantly.
Needs
(Windows 7 pro, laptop, SSD, 2.5.1(0.297/5/3))
A few weeks ago I reported extreme slowness in cygwin process
activation after a fresh install. For example something relatively
simple like 'ls' or even 'pwd' would take 15+ seconds to start.
There was no other significant activity on the system
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