On Tue, Jan 01, 2002 at 09:35:04PM +0530, Peeyush Prasad wrote: > > Three newbie Questions: > - Please point me to the equivalent of a web site ripper > (like Teleport pro for win) in linux. >
For most sites wget -r is good enough. If you are looking for powerful stuff which can negotiate passwords and cookies try curl (pronounced see-URL). The latter is not a newbie toy. > > Can someone tell me why the linux filesystem is structured > the way it is (/var,/etc ,/usr etc....) this is because I > just dont seem to understand where all the files are insta- > lled by the various rpms. > This "file-system" (as you call it) is not a Linux thing it is uniform for the *nix world. Any standard book on Unix will will furnish the details ... the details are a bit long to put in mail ... For the job that you want, rpm itself will give the answer. I am not on RH/ rpm distros. IIRC, something like rpm -qf is to query package owning the file, and -ql is to list files in a package ... some rpm folk please correct me if I am wrong. See the man page for rpm. > Where is jdk installed ? or is it under another name? > I cant find a "/jdk1.x " like under win. > am on redhat 7.0 > This you need to get from the RH guys. I do not think that JDK should be installed by default for any distro. Bish -- : ####[ Linux One Stanza Tip (LOST) ]########################### Sub : Searching for strings in files LOST #172 In order to search for a string in some files, use: grep "string" filename1 [filename2 filename3 ...] This will print out the filename and the lines in the file that contain the string. Type 'man grep' for details. ####<From : freebsd fortune>################################## : _______________________________________________ linux-india-help mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/linux-india-help
