On Fri, Jan 06, 2012 at 01:57:36PM -0500, Chris Sutcliffe wrote:
>On 6 January 2012 12:17, Christopher Faylor wrote:
>> On Thu, Jan 05, 2012 at 09:46:01PM -0500, Chris Sutcliffe wrote:
>>>I'm having an issue where I can't Ctrl+C out of a continuous tail
>>>(tail -f) if I pipe it to grep. ?Ctrl+C ou
On 6 January 2012 12:17, Christopher Faylor wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 05, 2012 at 09:46:01PM -0500, Chris Sutcliffe wrote:
>>I'm having an issue where I can't Ctrl+C out of a continuous tail
>>(tail -f) if I pipe it to grep. Ctrl+C out of a non-pipe tail -f
>>works fine, it seems to be related to the p
On Thu, Jan 05, 2012 at 09:46:01PM -0500, Chris Sutcliffe wrote:
>I'm having an issue where I can't Ctrl+C out of a continuous tail
>(tail -f) if I pipe it to grep. Ctrl+C out of a non-pipe tail -f
>works fine, it seems to be related to the pipe.
WJFFM.
We really do need the pesky cygcheck outpu
On Wed, 2012-01-04 at 08:51 -0600, Thrall, Bryan wrote:
> Perhaps the OP was looking for something like apropos or whatis?
>
>
In this case, the OP was simply using "head" as an example to
show how piping the output of man was generating an unexpected
error. As you all know, Unix is rich in tex
Given the following test scenario:
+---+ +-+ +---+
| Client #1 | | Server (XP/7) | | Client #2 |
| - ssh | 1)| Cygwin/sshd | 2), 3) | - ssh |
| - httpd +>+ +<--+
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