Re: [expert] XFree 4 vs 3.3.6 in 7.1

2000-06-09 Thread Sebastian Dransfeld
On Thu, 8 Jun 2000, Stephen Boulet wrote: I selected the option of trying out xfree 4 in my upgrade to 7.1. Does anyone know how to choose between the two from the console? X is started witd /etc/X11/X, which is a symlink. So it can point to the XF4 binary (XFree86), or the XF3 (XF86_*).

RE: [expert] XFree 4 vs 3.3.6 in 7.1

2000-06-09 Thread Brash, Matthew
: [expert] XFree 4 vs 3.3.6 in 7.1 On Thu, 8 Jun 2000, Stephen Boulet wrote: I selected the option of trying out xfree 4 in my upgrade to 7.1. Does anyone know how to choose between the two from the console? X is started witd /etc/X11/X, which is a symlink. So it can point to the XF4 binary

Re: [expert] XFree 4 vs 3.3.6 in 7.1

2000-06-09 Thread laurent . duperval
On 9 Jun, Brash, Matthew wrote: Now, where are the XF3 and XF4 binaries located? Furthermore, what's the EASIEST way to search for a file (recursively)? find / -name \*filename\* -print L -- Laurent Duperval "Montreal winters are an intelligence test, U|Force - Java

Re: [expert] XFree 4 vs 3.3.6 in 7.1

2000-06-09 Thread Fran Parker
PROTECTED] Subject: Re: [expert] XFree 4 vs 3.3.6 in 7.1 On Thu, 8 Jun 2000, Stephen Boulet wrote: I selected the option of trying out xfree 4 in my upgrade to 7.1. Does anyone know how to choose between the two from the console? X is started witd /etc/X11/X, which is a symlink. So it

RE: [expert] XFree 4 vs 3.3.6 in 7.1

2000-06-09 Thread Sebastian Dransfeld
On Fri, 9 Jun 2000, Brash, Matthew wrote: Now, where are the XF3 and XF4 binaries located? Furthermore, what's the EASIEST way to search for a file (recursively)? They are in /usr/X11R6/bin. To find a file use "find /directory -name filename" or "find /directory -depth|grep filename". --

Re: [expert] XFree 4 vs 3.3.6 in 7.1

2000-06-09 Thread John Aldrich
On Fri, 09 Jun 2000, you wrote: On 9 Jun, Brash, Matthew wrote: Now, where are the XF3 and XF4 binaries located? Furthermore, what's the EASIEST way to search for a file (recursively)? find / -name \*filename\* -print Or, "locate filename" if it's been at least overnight since you