[Ilugc] Directory Tree Utility
- From: arun@xxxxxxxxxxxx (V.Arun (PPE))
- Date: Thu, 15 Apr 2004 17:55:39 +0530
Besides, there already exists a program called tree.
Oh! I did not know that.
My system (Fedora core 1) does not have that program. Is there any
standard list of programs which are supposed to be present in a
distribution? Where can i get it from?
Regards,
V.Arun
On Thu, 2004-04-15 at 12:18, Arvind Narayanan wrote:
On Wed, Apr 14, 2004 at 07:47:15PM +0530, Sridhar R wrote:
PPE said:
Hi,
In the process of learning to use/program under linux (still
learning...), i wrote a small utility to list the tree structure of a
given directory. I found it quite userful (as a linux newbie) to
visualise the directory structures of the OS and other apps in my
system.
That's an appreciated work. I think now you should look at some of the
scripting languages available like, 1. Perl
2. Python (search google for "why python esr" without quotes)
3. Ruby
4. ... (even bash)
A scripting would have achieved this job with few lines of code and few
minutes of development ;)
Besides, there already exists a program called tree.
$man tree
Tree is a recursive directory listing program that produces a depth
indented listing of files.
Arvind
From Ankit Malhotra" <batfan_returns_forever@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx Thu Apr 15
11:55:24 2004
From: Ankit Malhotra" <batfan_returns_forever@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx (Ankit Malhotra)
Date: Thu, 15 Apr 2004 17:25:24 +0530
Subject: [Ilugc] Kernel Upgrade
Message-ID: <200404151124.QAA09461@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Hello All,
I know this a topic discussed with high reverence in the list recently. I just
have a small doubt.
I have RedHat Linux 9.0 installed on my system and I tried to upgrade it to
kernel 2.6.
The steps are pretty much clear thanks to the previous mails. But as soon as i
reach the make config (xconfig, menuconfig, oldconfig) things get little
confusing. Confusing for me that is not for the system.
I tried with oldconfig but still some of the new features are asked for
configuration and i dont know which ones to select as there are really many and
which of them should i select to optimize my system.
I am ready to use menuconfig or xconfig but then i would like to know which all
modules are currently loaded (how do i come to know this) and would like to
retain them. Somebosy please tell me in general how to choose the options. Or
please give some valuable pointers.
I have a standalone machine with the following hardware :
->Intel Pentium 4 1.7 GHz 256 KB Cache
->Intel Original 845 GLAD Motherboard
->128 MB 266 MHz DDR SDRAM
->Samsung 5400 rpm 40 GB IDE HDD
->Samsung 32-10-40 CD-RW Drive
->LG 500V 15" Color Monitor
->Logitech PS/2 First Mouse+
I need the system to do the following :
->Programming, Programming & lots more Programming in C/C++, Java, PHP, Python,
Perl & of course the almighty Bash shell
->Running an Apache Web Server with support for Databases and Server Side
Scripts.
->Running Database Servers (MySQL & PostGreSQL)
->Running an X Server
Currently my system is in a stable condition (I normally shutdown/rebbot
infrequenly only to play some games in Windoze but i have had uptimes of upto 7
days without any problems. On the whole no big prob upto now.) but is a bit
slow (using KDE) because of 128 MB ram only. I think the undue requirements of
more ram are unjustified by new OS. Is it really necessary to upgrade to at
least 256MB for kernel 2.6.
3 cheers for OSS.
Ankit Malhotra
(The BATFAN)
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