Mine was a little slow about 1/2 hr ago & I even had to refresh the screen once to get it back up again.
It seems OK now.
AULRO is going a bit squiggly this morning for me. It keeps hanging - but is it just me?
Mine was a little slow about 1/2 hr ago & I even had to refresh the screen once to get it back up again.
It seems OK now.
Scott
Mines gone slow again :? .Originally posted by Scouse
It seems OK now.
Damn, I'll have to do some work instead.
Scott
:roll: mine is a bit slower than usual,only running pathetic dial-up tho,seems slow across the board,not only here,maybe they have some water in the system :roll:
Mine's slow too and I'm on cable - then again what do you expect from BigPoo![]()
the place was being spammed to death again after there was some sort of outage in brisbane that affected the link into the joint.
2007 Discovery 3 SE7 TDV6 2.7
2012 SZ Territory TX 2.7 TDCi
"Make the lie big, make it simple, keep saying it, and eventually they will believe it." -- a warning from Adolf Hitler
"If you don't have a sense of humour, you probably don't have any sense at all!" -- a wise observation by someone else
'If everyone colludes in believing that war is the norm, nobody will recognize the imperative of peace." -- Anne Deveson
“What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others.” - Pericles
"We can ignore reality, but we cannot ignore the consequences of ignoring reality.” – Ayn Rand
"The happiness of your life depends upon the quality of your thoughts." Marcus Aurelius
As a Unix systems administrator and development manager - spam is one of my main issues these days. Damn I hate spam - what a waste of so much time and resources.Originally posted by incisor
the place was being spammed to death again after there was some sort of outage in brisbane that affected the link into the joint.
As a Unix systems administrator and development manager - spam is one of my main issues these days. Damn I hate spam - what a waste of so much time and resources.[/b][/quote]Originally posted by Omaroo+--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Omaroo)</div><div class='quotemain'><!--QuoteBegin-incisor
the place was being spammed to death again after there was some sort of outage in brisbane that affected the link into the joint.
tis why the "all knowing being" gave us postfix.... oh i suppose i better add Wietse Venema as well![]()
2007 Discovery 3 SE7 TDV6 2.7
2012 SZ Territory TX 2.7 TDCi
"Make the lie big, make it simple, keep saying it, and eventually they will believe it." -- a warning from Adolf Hitler
"If you don't have a sense of humour, you probably don't have any sense at all!" -- a wise observation by someone else
'If everyone colludes in believing that war is the norm, nobody will recognize the imperative of peace." -- Anne Deveson
“What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others.” - Pericles
"We can ignore reality, but we cannot ignore the consequences of ignoring reality.” – Ayn Rand
"The happiness of your life depends upon the quality of your thoughts." Marcus Aurelius
As a Unix systems administrator and development manager - spam is one of my main issues these days. Damn I hate spam - what a waste of so much time and resources.[/b][/quote]Originally posted by Omaroo+--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Omaroo)</div><div class='quotemain'><!--QuoteBegin-incisor
the place was being spammed to death again after there was some sort of outage in brisbane that affected the link into the joint.
A unix system admin ..... fantastic
Maybe you can tell me the command to grep for a file across multiple sub directories :?:
Dave![]()
Dave - have you tried rgrep (recursive grep)? It will search for strings down through a directory structure. If it's not already in your bash path, then you prolly won't have it. Just download the binary for your distro or compile from source....
man:
NAME
rgrep - a recursive, highlighting grep program
SYNOPSIS
rgrep [ options ] pattern [ file ] ...
DESCRIPTION
rgrep, unlike grep(1) and egrep(1) rgrep has the ability to recursively descend directories. The traditional way of performing this kind of search on Unix systems utilizes the find(1) command in conjunction with grep(1). However, this results in very poor performance.
COMMAND LINE OPTIONS
-?
additional help (use '-?' to avoid shell expansion on some systems)
-c
count matches
-h
highlight match (ANSI compatable terminal assumed)
-H
Output match instead of entire line containing match
-i
ignore case
-l
list filename only
-n
print line number of match
-F
follow links
-r
recursively scan through directory tree
-N
Do NOT perform a recursive search
-R 'pat'
like '-r' except that only those files matching 'pat' are checked
-v
print only lines that do NOT match the specified pattern
-x 'ext'
checks only files with extension given by 'ext'.
-D
Print all directories that would be searched. This option is for debugging purposes only. No file is grepped with this option.
-W 'len'
lines are 'len' characters long (not newline terminated).
SUPPORTED REGULAR EXPRESSIONS:
.
match any character except newline
match any digit
e
match ESC char
*
matches zero or more occurences of previous RE
+
matches one or more occurences of previous RE
?
matches zero or one occurence of previous RE
^
matches beginning of line
$
matches end of line
[ ... ]
matches any single character between brackets. For example, [-02468] matches '-' or any even digit. and [-0-9a-z] matches '-' and any digit between 0 and 9 as well as letters a through z.
{ ... }
( ... )
1, 2, ..., 9
matches match specified by nth '( ... )' expression. For example, '([ t][a-zA-Z]+)1[ t]' matches any word repeated consecutively.
EXAMPLES
Look in all files with a 'c' extension in current directory and all its subdirectories looking for matches of 'int ' at the beginning of a line, printing the line containing the match with its line number: (two methods)
rgrep -n -R '*.c' '^int ' .
rgrep -n -x c '^int ' .
Highlight all matches of repeated words in file 'paper.tex':
rgrep -h '[ t]([a-zA-Z]+)[ t]+1[ tn]' paper.tex
rgrep -h '^([a-zA-Z]+)[ t]+1[ tn]' paper.tex
(Note that this version of rgrep requires two passes for this example)
Search through all files EXCEPT .o and .a file below /usr/src/linux looking for the string 'mouse' without regard to case:
rgrep -i -R '*.[^ao]' mouse /usr/src/linux
Search a fixed record length FITS file for the keyword EXTNAME:
rgrep -W80 ^EXTNAME file.fits
(Note that the regular expression '^[A-Z]+' will dump all fits headers.)
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