Jason Hughes wrote:
> All versions of Windows have a limit of 250-ish characters maximum for a
> full path, including the filename and extension, regardless of file
> system. I'm not aware of a lower limit imposed by the file system or
> OS, but it's likely related. Are you running Unicode-16
Dont know if this went through the first time:
Nils Breunese (Lemonbit Internet) wrote:
> > Nils Breunese wrote:
> >
>> >> Hendrik Friedel wrote:
>> >>
On my CentOS machines Apache/Response.pm is part of the mod_perl
package (/usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8.5/i386-linux-thread-m
Nils Breunese (Lemonbit Internet) wrote:
> Nils Breunese wrote:
>
>> Hendrik Friedel wrote:
>>
On my CentOS machines Apache/Response.pm is part of the mod_perl
package (/usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.8.5/i386-linux-thread-multi/
Apache/Response.pm). Can locate Apache/Response.pm on yo
Filipe wrote:
> I appreciate your answer but I forgot to tell you that I'm kind of
> newbie to linux :s
>
> And I'm afraid to wreck something cause the machine is now working well
> with the backups...
>
> Do you know any good tutorial for this?
>
> thanks
>
> nilesh vaghela escreveu:
>> you ca
Bill Hudacek wrote:
> Perhaps this will help: http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html
>
> In short, it would be best to use "df -H" to get the disk storage
> standard of 10^6 for "a MB", rather than "2^20" for MiB. If you want
> raw numbers, the closest I think you can come is "df --block-s