Recent Notes

Displaying keyword search results 1 - 10
Created by Fang on March 30, 2012 12:15:49    Last update: March 30, 2012 12:15:49
1. mvc:default-servlet-handler Configures a handler for serving static resources by forwarding to the Servlet container's default Servlet. Use of this handler allows using a "/" mapping with the DispatcherServlet while still utilizing the Servlet container to serve static resources. HandlerMapping: org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.SimpleUrlHandlerMapping Handler: org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.SimpleUrlHandlerMapping Attribute Description default-servlet-name The name of the default Servlet to forward to for static resource requests. The handler will try to auto-detect the container's default Servlet at startup time using a list of known names. If the default Servlet cannot be detected because of using an unknown container or because it has been manually configured, the servlet name must be set explicitly. 2. mvc:view-controller Defines a simple Controller that selects a view to render the response. HandlerMapping: org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.SimpleUrlHandlerMapping Handler: org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc.ParameterizableViewController Attribute Description...
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 August 11, 2007 15:56:47    Last update: July 19, 2011 08:15:55
Here's a list of common TCP ports. You can find a more complete list here: http://www.gasmi.net/docs/tcp.html . Port Number Service Description 21 FTP File Transfer Protocol 22 SSH Secure Shell 23 Telnet Telnet remote login 25 SMTP Simple Mail Transfer Protocol 70 gopher Gopher 79 finger Finger 80 HTTP Hyper Text Transfer Protocol (WWW) 88 Kerberos Kerberos authentication 94 tivoli Tivoli Object Dispatcher 110 pop3 Post Office Protocol Version 3 123 ntp Network Time Protocol 137 netbios NetBIOS Name Service 138 netbios NetBIOS Datagram 139 netbios NetBIOS Session 143 imap Internet Message Access Protocol 161 snmp Simple Network Management Protocol 162 snmptrap SNMP trap 194 irc Internet Relay Chat Protocol 389 ldap Lightweight Directory Access Protocol 443 https Secure HTTP 445 SMB MS Server Message...
Created by magnum on June 23, 2011 20:15:49    Last update: June 23, 2011 20:29:45
Linux services startup order in general: kernel runs /sbin/init /sbin/init reads /etc/inittab and runs script defined by this line: si::sysinit:/etc/init.d/rcS switches to runlevel defined by id:3:initdefault: which causes /etc/init.d/rc to be called with the current run level. /etc/init.d/rc calls the scripts under the /etc/rc <current_run_level> .d directory (symbolic links to actual scripts under /etc/init.d/ ) in this order: The KILL scripts first (scripts with name starting with K, i.e., rc?.d/Knn name ): "script_name stop" then, the START scripts (scripts with name starting with S, i.e., rc?.d/Snn name ): "script_name start" Within each group (KILL or START), run scripts from lower priority number (i.e., the nn in the symlink name) to higher priority number. The Upstart init daemon does not use /etc/inittab . Instead, it...
Created by voodoo on June 14, 2011 15:16:30    Last update: June 14, 2011 15:18:18
Count the total number of lines of shell scripts (files ending with sh ): $ find . -type f -name \*.sh | xargs wc -l 2... Count the total number of lines for files under the src directory: find src -type f | xargs wc -l Count the total number of lines for files under the current directory whose path contains src/ : find . -type f -path \*src/\* | xargs wc -l
Created by woolf on February 10, 2011 13:25:20    Last update: February 10, 2011 13:25:20
If Command Extensions are enabled (which is enabled by default), then there are several dynamic environment variables that can be expanded but which don't show up in the list of variables displayed by SET . These variable values are computed dynamically each time the value of the variable is expanded (but see example below). If the user explicitly defines a variable with one of these names, then that definition will override the dynamic one described below: %CD% - expands to the current directory string. %DATE% - expands to current date using same format as DATE command. %TIME% - expands to current time using same format as TIME command. %RANDOM% - expands to a random decimal number between 0 and 32767. %ERRORLEVEL% - expands to the...
Created by Dr. Xi on January 31, 2011 16:24:31    Last update: January 31, 2011 16:24:58
Perl file test operators are unary operators that takes one argument, which can be a file name, a filehandle, or dirhandle. If the argument is omitted, it tests $_ , except for -t , which tests STDIN. Syntax: -X FILEHANDLE -X EXPR -X DIRHANDLE -X where X is: Operator Meaning -r File is readable by effective uid/gid. -w File is writable by effective uid/gid. -x File is executable by effective uid/gid. -o File is owned by effective uid. -R File is readable by real uid/gid. -W File is writable by real uid/gid. -X File is executable by real uid/gid. -O File is owned by real uid. -e File exists. -z File has zero size (is empty). -s File has nonzero size (returns size in bytes)....
Created by voodoo on July 11, 2009 15:14:55    Last update: July 29, 2010 22:45:48
cURL is a command line tool for transferring files with URL syntax. The main purpose and use for cURL is to automate unattended file transfers or sequences of operations. It's really easy to see HTTP headers with curl: C:\>curl --head http://www.google.com HTTP/1.0 ... or, headers and page together (dump headers to stdout): $ curl --dump-header - http://www.google.com HTTP/... Download openssl from openssl.org: curl http://www.openssl.org/source/openssl-0.9.6m.... C:\>curl --help Usage: curl [options...] <url> ...
Created by Fang on April 03, 2010 20:21:15    Last update: April 04, 2010 03:30:22
The tags <c:out> The <c:out> tag evaluates an expression and outputs the result on the page. The syntax is: <c:out value="value" [escapeXml="{true|false}"] ... where escapeXml defaults to true and default defaults to empty string "". <c:out value="${expr}" escapeXml="false"/> is equivalent to ${expr} . If a variable is set in multiple scopes, the lower scope wins. In the following example code, attribute1 is set in request, session, and application scopes; attribute2 is set in session and application scopes; attribute3 is set in the application scope. The results are: <c:out value="${attribute1}"/> : Attribute1 request scope <c:out value="${attribute2}"/> : Attribute2 session scope <c:out value="${attribute3}"/> : Attribute3 application scope To access values in higher scopes, you have to specify the scope explicitly, like this: <c:out value="${sessionScope.attribute1}"/> : Attribute1 session...
Created by Dr. Xi on December 04, 2009 04:33:05    Last update: December 04, 2009 04:33:05
Variable Meaning $_ The default or implicit variable. @_ Within a subroutine the array @_ contains the parameters passed to that subroutine. $a, $b Special package variables when using sort() $<digit> Contains the subpattern from the corresponding set of capturing parentheses from the last pattern match, not counting patterns matched in nested blocks that have been exited already. $. Current line number for the last filehandle accessed. $/ The input record separator, newline by default. $| If set to nonzero, forces a flush right away and after every write or print on the currently selected output channel. Default is 0 (regardless of whether the channel is really buffered by the system or not; $| tells you only whether you've asked Perl explicitly to flush after...
Previous  1 2 Next