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Beginning Portable Shell Scripting from Novice to Professional
Beginning Portable Shell Scripting From Novice to Professional Peter Seebach 10436fmfinal 1 10/23/08 10:40:24 PM Beginning Portable Shell Scripting: From Novice to Professional Copyright © 2008 by Peter Seebach All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner and the publisher. ISBN-13 (pbk): 978-1-4302-1043-6 ISBN-10 (pbk): 1-4302-1043-5 ISBN-13 (electronic): 978-1-4302-1044-3 ISBN-10 (electronic): 1-4302-1044-3 Printed and bound in the United States of America 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Trademarked names may appear in this book. Rather than use a trademark symbol with every occurrence of a trademarked name, we use the names only in an editorial fashion and to the benefit of the trademark owner, with no intention of infringement of the trademark. Lead Editor: Frank Pohlmann Technical Reviewer: Gary V. Vaughan Editorial Board: Clay Andres, Steve Anglin, Ewan Buckingham, Tony Campbell, Gary Cornell, Jonathan Gennick, Michelle Lowman, Matthew Moodie, Jeffrey Pepper, Frank Pohlmann, Ben Renow-Clarke, Dominic Shakeshaft, Matt Wade, Tom Welsh Project Manager: Richard Dal Porto Copy Editor: Kim Benbow Associate Production Director: Kari Brooks-Copony Production Editor: Katie Stence Compositor: Linda Weidemann, Wolf Creek Press Proofreader: Dan Shaw Indexer: Broccoli Information Management Cover Designer: Kurt Krames Manufacturing Director: Tom Debolski Distributed to the book trade worldwide by Springer-Verlag New York, Inc., 233 Spring Street, 6th Floor, New York, NY 10013. -
Debugging with DDD
Debugging with DDD User’s Guide and Reference Manual First Edition, for DDD Version 3.2 Last updated 2000-01-03 Andreas Zeller Debugging with DDD User’s Guide and Reference Manual Copyright c 2000 Universität Passau Lehrstuhl für Software-Systeme Innstraße 33 D-94032 Passau GERMANY Distributed by Free Software Foundation, Inc. 59 Temple Place – Suite 330 Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA ddd and this manual are available via the ddd www page. Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies. Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that the sections entitled “Copying” and “GNU General Public License” (see Appendix G [License], page 181) are included exactly as in the original, and provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one. Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions, except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved by the Free Software Foundation. Send questions, comments, suggestions, etc. to [email protected]. Send bug reports to [email protected]. i Short Contents Summary of DDD .............................................. 1 1 A Sample DDD Session ...................................... 5 2 Getting In and Out of DDD ................................... 15 3 The DDD Windows ........................................ 39 4 Navigating through the Code .................................. 71 5 Stopping the Program ....................................... 79 6 Running the Program ....................................... 89 7 Examining Data ......................................... -
Lossless Compression of Internal Files in Parallel Reservoir Simulation
Lossless Compression of Internal Files in Parallel Reservoir Simulation Suha Kayum Marcin Rogowski Florian Mannuss 9/26/2019 Outline • I/O Challenges in Reservoir Simulation • Evaluation of Compression Algorithms on Reservoir Simulation Data • Real-world application - Constraints - Algorithm - Results • Conclusions 2 Challenge Reservoir simulation 1 3 Reservoir Simulation • Largest field in the world are represented as 50 million – 1 billion grid block models • Each runs takes hours on 500-5000 cores • Calibrating the model requires 100s of runs and sophisticated methods • “History matched” model is only a beginning 4 Files in Reservoir Simulation • Internal Files • Input / Output Files - Interact with pre- & post-processing tools Date Restart/Checkpoint Files 5 Reservoir Simulation in Saudi Aramco • 100’000+ simulations annually • The largest simulation of 10 billion cells • Currently multiple machines in TOP500 • Petabytes of storage required 600x • Resources are Finite • File Compression is one solution 50x 6 Compression algorithm evaluation 2 7 Compression ratio Tested a number of algorithms on a GRID restart file for two models 4 - Model A – 77.3 million active grid blocks 3.5 - Model K – 8.7 million active grid blocks 3 - 15.6 GB and 7.2 GB respectively 2.5 2 Compression ratio is between 1.5 1 compression ratio compression - From 2.27 for snappy (Model A) 0.5 0 - Up to 3.5 for bzip2 -9 (Model K) Model A Model K lz4 snappy gzip -1 gzip -9 bzip2 -1 bzip2 -9 8 Compression speed • LZ4 and Snappy significantly outperformed other algorithms -
The Ark Handbook
The Ark Handbook Matt Johnston Henrique Pinto Ragnar Thomsen The Ark Handbook 2 Contents 1 Introduction 5 2 Using Ark 6 2.1 Opening Archives . .6 2.1.1 Archive Operations . .6 2.1.2 Archive Comments . .6 2.2 Working with Files . .7 2.2.1 Editing Files . .7 2.3 Extracting Files . .7 2.3.1 The Extract dialog . .8 2.4 Creating Archives and Adding Files . .8 2.4.1 Compression . .9 2.4.2 Password Protection . .9 2.4.3 Multi-volume Archive . 10 3 Using Ark in the Filemanager 11 4 Advanced Batch Mode 12 5 Credits and License 13 Abstract Ark is an archive manager by KDE. The Ark Handbook Chapter 1 Introduction Ark is a program for viewing, extracting, creating and modifying archives. Ark can handle vari- ous archive formats such as tar, gzip, bzip2, zip, rar, 7zip, xz, rpm, cab, deb, xar and AppImage (support for certain archive formats depends on the appropriate command-line programs being installed). In order to successfully use Ark, you need KDE Frameworks 5. The library libarchive version 3.1 or above is needed to handle most archive types, including tar, compressed tar, rpm, deb and cab archives. To handle other file formats, you need the appropriate command line programs, such as zipinfo, zip, unzip, rar, unrar, 7z, lsar, unar and lrzip. 5 The Ark Handbook Chapter 2 Using Ark 2.1 Opening Archives To open an archive in Ark, choose Open... (Ctrl+O) from the Archive menu. You can also open archive files by dragging and dropping from Dolphin. -
Chapter 3 Composite Default Screen Blind Folio 3:61
Color profile: GenericORACLE CMYK printerTips & Techniques profile 8 / Oracle9i for Windows 2000 Tips & Techniques / Jesse, Sale, Hart / 9462-6 / Chapter 3 Composite Default screen Blind Folio 3:61 CHAPTER 3 Configuring Windows 2000 P:\010Comp\OracTip8\462-6\ch03.vp Wednesday, November 14, 2001 3:20:31 PM Color profile: GenericORACLE CMYK printerTips & Techniques profile 8 / Oracle9i for Windows 2000 Tips & Techniques / Jesse, Sale, Hart / 9462-6 / Chapter 3 Composite Default screen Blind Folio 3:62 62 Oracle9i for Windows 2000 Tips & Techniques here are three basic configurations of Oracle on Windows 2000: as T a management platform, as an Oracle client, and as a database server. The first configuration is the platform from which you will manage Oracle installations across various machines on various operating systems. Most system and database administrators are given a desktop PC to perform day-to-day tasks that are not DBA specific (such as reading e-mail). From this desktop, you can also manage Oracle components installed on other operating systems (for example, Solaris, Linux, and HP-UX). Even so, you will want to configure Windows 2000 to make your system and database administrative tasks quick and easy. The Oracle client software configuration is used in more configurations than you might first suspect: ■ Web applications that connect to an Oracle database: ■ IIS 5 ASPs that use ADO to connect to an Oracle database ■ Perl DBI application running on Apache that connects to an Oracle database ■ Any J2EE application server that uses the thick JDBC driver ■ Client/server applications: ■ Desktop Visual Basic application that uses OLEDB or ODBC to connect to an Oracle Database ■ Desktop Java application that uses the thick JDBC to connect to Oracle In any of these configurations, at least an Oracle client installation is required. -
Bzip2 and Libbzip2, Version 1.0.8 a Program and Library for Data Compression
bzip2 and libbzip2, version 1.0.8 A program and library for data compression Julian Seward, https://sourceware.org/bzip2/ bzip2 and libbzip2, version 1.0.8: A program and library for data compression by Julian Seward Version 1.0.8 of 13 July 2019 Copyright© 1996-2019 Julian Seward This program, bzip2, the associated library libbzip2, and all documentation, are copyright © 1996-2019 Julian Seward. All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: • Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. • The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must not claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product documentation would be appreciated but is not required. • Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must not be misrepresented as being the original software. • The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific prior written permission. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DIS- CLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. -
Working with Compressed Archives
Working with compressed archives Archiving a collection of files or folders means creating a single file that groups together those files and directories. Archiving does not manipulate the size of files. They are added to the archive as they are. Compressing a file means shrinking the size of the file. There are software for archiving only, other for compressing only and (as you would expect) other that have the ability to archive and compress. This document will show you how to use a windows application called 7-zip (seven zip) to work with compressed archives. 7-zip integrates in the context menu that pops-up up whenever you right-click your mouse on a selection1. In this how-to we will look in the application interface and how we manipulate archives, their compression and contents. 1. Click the 'start' button and type '7-zip' 2. When the search brings up '7-zip File Manager' (as the best match) press 'Enter' 3. The application will startup and you will be presented with the 7-zip manager interface 4. The program integrates both archiving, de/compression and file-management operations. a. The main area of the window provides a list of the files of the active directory. When not viewing the contents of an archive, the application acts like a file browser window. You can open folders to see their contents by just double-clicking on them b. Above the main area you have an address-like bar showing the name of the active directory (currently c:\ADG.Becom). You can use the 'back' icon on the far left to navigate back from where you are and go one directory up. -
Technical Computing on the OS … That Is Not Linux! Or How to Leverage Everything You‟Ve Learned, on a Windows Box As Well
Tools of the trade: Technical Computing on the OS … that is not Linux! Or how to leverage everything you‟ve learned, on a Windows box as well Sean Mortazavi & Felipe Ayora Typical situation with TC/HPC folks Why I have a Windows box How I use it It was in the office when I joined Outlook / Email IT forced me PowerPoint I couldn't afford a Mac Excel Because I LIKE Windows! Gaming It's the best gaming machine Technical/Scientific computing Note: Stats completely made up! The general impression “Enterprise community” “Hacker community” Guys in suits Guys in jeans Word, Excel, Outlook Emacs, Python, gmail Run prepackaged stuff Builds/runs OSS stuff Common complaints about Windows • I have a Windows box, but Windows … • Is hard to learn… • Doesn‟t have a good shell • Doesn‟t have my favorite editor • Doesn‟t have my favorite IDE • Doesn‟t have my favorite compiler or libraries • Locks me in • Doesn‟t play well with OSS • …. • In summary: (More like ) My hope … • I have a Windows box, and Windows … • Is easy to learn… • Has excellent shells • Has my favorite editor • Supports my favorite IDE • Supports my compilers and libraries • Does not lock me in • Plays well with OSS • …. • In summary: ( or at least ) How? • Recreating a Unix like veneer over windows to minimize your learning curve • Leverage your investment in know how & code • Showing what key codes already run natively on windows just as well • Kicking the dev tires using cross plat languages Objective is to: Help you ADD to your toolbox, not take anything away from it! At a high level… • Cygwin • SUA • Windowing systems “The Unix look & feel” • Standalone shell/utils • IDE‟s • Editors General purpose development • Compilers / languages / Tools • make • Libraries • CAS environments Dedicated CAS / IDE‟s And if there is time, a couple of demos… Cygwin • What is it? • A Unix like environment for Windows. -
Gzip, Bzip2 and Tar EXPERT PACKING
LINUXUSER Command Line: gzip, bzip2, tar gzip, bzip2 and tar EXPERT PACKING A short command is all it takes to pack your data or extract it from an archive. BY HEIKE JURZIK rchiving provides many bene- fits: packed and compressed Afiles occupy less space on your disk and require less bandwidth on the Internet. Linux has both GUI-based pro- grams, such as File Roller or Ark, and www.sxc.hu command-line tools for creating and un- packing various archive types. This arti- cle examines some shell tools for ar- chiving files and demonstrates the kind of expert packing that clever combina- tained by the packing process. If you A gzip file can be unpacked using either tions of Linux commands offer the com- prefer to use a different extension, you gunzip or gzip -d. If the tool discovers a mand line user. can set the -S (suffix) flag to specify your file of the same name in the working di- own instead. For example, the command rectory, it prompts you to make sure that Nicely Packed with “gzip” you know you are overwriting this file: The gzip (GNU Zip) program is the de- gzip -S .z image.bmp fault packer on Linux. Gzip compresses $ gunzip screenie.jpg.gz simple files, but it does not create com- creates a compressed file titled image. gunzip: screenie.jpg U plete directory archives. In its simplest bmp.z. form, the gzip command looks like this: The size of the compressed file de- Listing 1: Compression pends on the distribution of identical Compared gzip file strings in the original file. -
Linux Installation and Getting Started
Linux Installation and Getting Started Copyright c 1992–1996 Matt Welsh Version 2.3, 22 February 1996. This book is an installation and new-user guide for the Linux system, meant for UNIX novices and gurus alike. Contained herein is information on how to obtain Linux, installation of the software, a beginning tutorial for new UNIX users, and an introduction to system administration. It is meant to be general enough to be applicable to any distribution of the Linux software. This book is freely distributable; you may copy and redistribute it under certain conditions. Please see the copyright and distribution statement on page xiii. Contents Preface ix Audience ............................................... ix Organization.............................................. x Acknowledgments . x CreditsandLegalese ......................................... xii Documentation Conventions . xiv 1 Introduction to Linux 1 1.1 About This Book ........................................ 1 1.2 A Brief History of Linux .................................... 2 1.3 System Features ......................................... 4 1.4 Software Features ........................................ 5 1.4.1 Basic commands and utilities ............................. 6 1.4.2 Text processing and word processing ......................... 7 1.4.3 Programming languages and utilities .......................... 9 1.4.4 The X Window System ................................. 10 1.4.5 Networking ....................................... 11 1.4.6 Telecommunications and BBS software ....................... -
Pipenightdreams Osgcal-Doc Mumudvb Mpg123-Alsa Tbb
pipenightdreams osgcal-doc mumudvb mpg123-alsa tbb-examples libgammu4-dbg gcc-4.1-doc snort-rules-default davical cutmp3 libevolution5.0-cil aspell-am python-gobject-doc openoffice.org-l10n-mn libc6-xen xserver-xorg trophy-data t38modem pioneers-console libnb-platform10-java libgtkglext1-ruby libboost-wave1.39-dev drgenius bfbtester libchromexvmcpro1 isdnutils-xtools ubuntuone-client openoffice.org2-math openoffice.org-l10n-lt lsb-cxx-ia32 kdeartwork-emoticons-kde4 wmpuzzle trafshow python-plplot lx-gdb link-monitor-applet libscm-dev liblog-agent-logger-perl libccrtp-doc libclass-throwable-perl kde-i18n-csb jack-jconv hamradio-menus coinor-libvol-doc msx-emulator bitbake nabi language-pack-gnome-zh libpaperg popularity-contest xracer-tools xfont-nexus opendrim-lmp-baseserver libvorbisfile-ruby liblinebreak-doc libgfcui-2.0-0c2a-dbg libblacs-mpi-dev dict-freedict-spa-eng blender-ogrexml aspell-da x11-apps openoffice.org-l10n-lv openoffice.org-l10n-nl pnmtopng libodbcinstq1 libhsqldb-java-doc libmono-addins-gui0.2-cil sg3-utils linux-backports-modules-alsa-2.6.31-19-generic yorick-yeti-gsl python-pymssql plasma-widget-cpuload mcpp gpsim-lcd cl-csv libhtml-clean-perl asterisk-dbg apt-dater-dbg libgnome-mag1-dev language-pack-gnome-yo python-crypto svn-autoreleasedeb sugar-terminal-activity mii-diag maria-doc libplexus-component-api-java-doc libhugs-hgl-bundled libchipcard-libgwenhywfar47-plugins libghc6-random-dev freefem3d ezmlm cakephp-scripts aspell-ar ara-byte not+sparc openoffice.org-l10n-nn linux-backports-modules-karmic-generic-pae -
ARM Optimizing C/C++ Compiler V20.2.0.LTS User's Guide (Rev. V)
ARM Optimizing C/C++ Compiler v20.2.0.LTS User's Guide Literature Number: SPNU151V January 1998–Revised February 2020 Contents Preface ........................................................................................................................................ 9 1 Introduction to the Software Development Tools.................................................................... 12 1.1 Software Development Tools Overview ................................................................................. 13 1.2 Compiler Interface.......................................................................................................... 15 1.3 ANSI/ISO Standard ........................................................................................................ 15 1.4 Output Files ................................................................................................................. 15 1.5 Utilities ....................................................................................................................... 16 2 Using the C/C++ Compiler ................................................................................................... 17 2.1 About the Compiler......................................................................................................... 18 2.2 Invoking the C/C++ Compiler ............................................................................................. 18 2.3 Changing the Compiler's Behavior with Options ......................................................................