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Displaying keyword search results 1 - 10
Created by Dr. Xi on February 24, 2012 12:42:09
Last update: February 24, 2012 12:43:00
Use the copy command to restore a deleted file:
$ svn copy http://svn.example.com/path/to/svn/repo...
@revision must be a revision number before the file was deleted.
You can use the info command to view the info before restoring:
$ svn info http://svn.example.com/path/to/svn/repo...
Created by Dr. Xi on February 23, 2012 14:07:40
Last update: February 23, 2012 14:07:40
The command " svn info " prints information about the current directory:
$ svn info Path: . URL: http://svn.example.c... where: Revision: is the last syncup (update) revision of the current TARGET (artifact/file/directory, whatever you call). This number bumps up to that of the current project revision number after you do an update. Last Changed Rev: is the revision number of the latest change for the current TARGET . If TARGET is a directory, it is the revision number of the latest change within the directory, including all subdirectories. However , this number is not accurate after you do a check in without a following update. The revision number for the file or directory you checked in will have higher revision number than its parent/ancestor. To...
Created by Dr. Xi on February 06, 2012 12:14:11
Last update: February 07, 2012 15:39:35
Oracle sqlplus command line tools does not support command line editing out-of-the-box. But on Linux there's a handy utility that enables command line editing with any command line tool: rlwrap - readline wrapper.
Install rlwrap:
$ sudo apt-get install rlwrap
Create a keywords file .sql.dict (optional, but convenient):
false null true
access add as asc begin by chec...
It would be nice to add the tables names also.
Create an alias for sqlplus (put it in .bashrc ):
alias sqlplus='rlwrap -f $HOME/.sql.dict sqlplus'
Created by timo on January 25, 2012 20:13:13
Last update: January 25, 2012 20:13:13
The MIPS CPU is able to run both big-endian and little-endian. So a system built on MIPS can be either big-endian (mips) or little-endian (mipsel).
The file command shows the architecture:
$ file ls
ls: ELF 32-bit LSB executable, MIPS, ...
but readelf will tell the endianness:
$ readelf -h ls
ELF Header:
Magic: 7f 45...
Created by Dr. Xi on January 09, 2012 09:13:38
Last update: January 09, 2012 09:14:18
Unlike CVS, svn does not have a tag command, you create a new tag with copy :
$ svn copy http://svn.example.com/repos/calc/trunk...
The -r flag may be used to create a tag from an earlier revision:
-r [--revision] ARG : ARG (some commands al...
Created by freyo on August 25, 2011 09:07:40
Last update: August 25, 2011 20:45:43
This is a list of built-in Android permission values: Permission Description Since API Level android.permission.ACCESS_CHECKIN_PROPERTIES Allows read/write access to the "properties" table in the checkin database, to change values that get uploaded. 1 android.permission.ACCESS_COARSE_LOCATION Allows an application to access coarse (e.g., Cell-ID, WiFi) location 1 android.permission.ACCESS_FINE_LOCATION Allows an application to access fine (e.g., GPS) location 1 android.permission.ACCESS_LOCATION_EXTRA_COMMANDS Allows an application to access extra location provider commands 1 android.permission.ACCESS_MOCK_LOCATION Allows an application to create mock location providers for testing 1 android.permission.ACCESS_NETWORK_STATE Allows applications to access information about networks 1 android.permission.ACCESS_SURFACE_FLINGER Allows an application to use SurfaceFlinger's low level features 1 android.permission.ACCESS_WIFI_STATE Allows applications to access information about Wi-Fi networks 1 android.permission.ACCOUNT_MANAGER Allows applications to call into AccountAuthenticators. Only the system can get this permission. 5 android.permission.AUTHENTICATE_ACCOUNTS...
Created by Dr. Xi on February 17, 2011 12:34:58
Last update: August 10, 2011 09:04:32
String comparison operators: Operator Meaning -n str the length of str is nonzero. -z str the length of str is zero (0). str1 = str2 str1 and str2 are the same (note one equal sign, not two!). str1 != str2 str1 and str2 are not the same. str str is not a null string Examples:
# empty string is not null if [ '' ]; then ... Numerical comparisons ( integer expressions only! ): Operator Meaning int1 -eq int2 int1 and int2 are numerically equal int1 -ne int2 int1 and int2 are numerically NOT equal int1 -gt int2 int1 is greater than int2 int1 -ge int2 int1 is greater than or equal to int2 int1 -lt int2 int1 is less than int2 int1 -le...
Created by freyo on April 20, 2011 12:26:08
Last update: April 20, 2011 12:26:08
When you create a new key with Java keytool , it wraps the public key in a self signed certificate. You can generate a certificate signing request with the keytool -certreq command. After a certificate authority (CA) signs the certificate request, you can import the certificate received (a .crt file) back into the key store. Instead of using a CA, you can sign the certificate request with another key (with openssl, for example). If the certificate is not signed by a CA, you'll receive an error:
$ keytool -import -alias android-root -file androi... To fix the problem, import the certificate of the signer: $ keytool -import -trustcacerts -file openssl.crt ... Import the certificate again (alias is the alias of the private key whose certificate was...
Created by jinx on April 05, 2011 11:34:57
Last update: April 05, 2011 11:35:37
There are two variables you can use while writing command line applications with PHP - $argc and $argv :
$argc is the number of arguments plus one (the name of the script running).
$argv is an array containing the arguments, starting with the script name as number zero ( $argv[0] ).
Example:
#!/usr/bin/php
<?php
var_dump($argv);
?>
Created by Dr. Xi on March 28, 2011 11:11:33
Last update: March 28, 2011 11:13:21
grep is a versatile command with many variations (grep, egrep, fgrep, then various implementations). It uses a regula expression (regex) pattern to filter input. But then there are basic and extended flavors of regex - leading to even more confusion. And, beware that there are lots of bad examples of regex in the wild... There are two critical questions to ask when you use grep: which grep implementation are you using? what is the flavor of the regex? Here are some examples for gnu grep v2.7:
# Find all numbers (no decimal point), basic regex... Use the -o flag to show only the matching part instead of the whole matching line: grep -o -E '\b[0-9]{2}\b' The good thing about the gnu grep is that it...