indication and then quits.
I believe it's called truss on Solaris (but it has been a number of years
since I've been on such a box).
mrc
--
Mike Castle [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.netcom.com/~dalgoda/
We are all of us living in the shadow of Manhattan. -- Watchmen
fatal (You
which
a lot of people, such as myself, hate.
-lreadline for dynamic linking but
-lreadline -ltermcap for static linking?
No thanks; I'd rather have consistency.
mrc
--
Mike Castle [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.netcom.com/~dalgoda/
We are all of us living in the shadow of Manhattan
, but a known state. That is, you know for sure that
whatever was done before you stopped the server is what was done.
Which approach is necessary for you depends on your needs, I as always.
mrc
--
Mike Castle [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.netcom.com/~dalgoda/
We are all of us living
with that whether or not the local libc has ever
heard of \r\n newlines.
Are there many (any?) complaints about a similar problem when a file is
created/modified on a Mac system with it's own EOL characteristics?
mrc
--
Mike Castle [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.netcom.com/~dalgoda/
We are all
unix crypt() function, which is
traditionally limited to 8 characters.
The file doc/TODO lists a future enhancement to support md5 hashes (and
longer passwords). Perhaps you could contribute some code to that end?
mrc
--
Mike Castle [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.netcom.com/~dalgoda/
We
where you a transaction log is actually useful
and you can guarantee it is not corrupt?
mrc
--
Mike Castle Life is like a clock: You can work constantly
[EMAIL PROTECTED] and be right all the time, or not work at all
www.netcom.com/~dalgoda/ and be right at least twice a day. --
just prior to the failure. I've seen some creative dialogue on this list
And where do you get this transaction log?
h
let me guess:
From a backup?
mrc
--
Mike Castle Life is like a clock: You can work constantly
[EMAIL PROTECTED] and be right all the time, or not work at all
www.
sure someone's mail gateway will notice this is a virus (trojan, worm,
whatever) and send back a nasty gram to this list.
mrc
--
Mike Castle Life is like a clock: You can work constantly
[EMAIL PROTECTED] and be right all the time, or not work at all
www.netcom.com/~dalgoda