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Hi Burton, Here Ya Go, System 1: linuxrelease = "mfxlinux 4.4.1 2.4.26-std" linuxrelease -f = "4.4.1 UniVerse Server Edition" uname -a = "Linux pc_1_118 2.4.26-std #1 Wed Jul 28 17:58:24 EDT 2004 i686 unknown" cat /etc/mfxlinux-release = "4.4.1 UniVerse Server Edition" System 2 linuxrelease = "mfxlinux 5.1.0 2.6.10" linuxrelease -f = "5.1.0 Deluxe Edition" uname -a = "Linux s3 2.6.10 #1 SMP Mon Dec 27 09:58:28 EST 2004 i686 unknown" cat /etc/mfxlinux-release = "5.1.0 Deluxe Edition" System 3 linuxrelease = "mfxlinux 5.0.0 2.6.10" linuxrelease -f = "5.0.0" uname -a = "Linux s1 2.6.10 #1 SMP Thu Dec 30 14:21:00 EST 2004 i686 unknown" cat /etc/mfxlinux-release = "5.0.0" System 4 linuxrelease = "mfxlinux 4.0.0 2.4.21-smp" linuxrelease -f = "4.0.0" uname -a "Linux s1 2.4.21-smp #1 SMP Mon Jul 14 09:56:46 EDT 2003 i686 unknown" cat /etc/mfxlinux-release = "4.0.0" Cheers, Send me: * The exact name and version of your OS/Distribution, from the documentation or the CD. * The output from the 'uname -a command' * The output from utils/linuxrelease script, utils/linuxrelease -f and utils/linuxrelease * The names and contents of any files in the /etc directory with version or release in their names. You can find these files via 'ls /etc | grep -i release' and 'ls /etc | grep -i version'. -- Walter Brock Systems Administrator Crowell Systems [EMAIL PROTECTED] Work: (704) 665-2100 Fax: (704) 665-2180 |
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