...making Linux just a little more fun!

<-- prev | next -->

Talkbacks

Talkback:132/pfeiffer.html

[ In reference to "Boosting Apache Performance by using Reverse Proxies" in LG#132 ]
Clement Huang [clement_huang at yahoo.com]
Fri, 17 Nov 2006 23:47:58 -0800 (PST)

Nice article, Rene. I also saw apache_mod_proxy can do the reverse-proxy function. How is the performance comparing to squid proxy? any benchmarking on this proxy performance between these two?

thanks again, Clement

[ Thread continues here (2 messages/0.82kB) ]


Talkback:126/savage.html

[ In reference to "IT's Enough To Drive You Crazy" in LG#126 ]
David Low [puma at aznetgate.net]
Tue, 07 Nov 2006 18:27:17 -0700

as to excuses I use for "THAT" OS, I usualy just say "what do you expect? It's Mickey$hit Windblows. And that is why I use Linux.".

I have actualy exclusivly used linux since '95. Before that I used OS/2 Warp cause the "other" OS used broken cooperative multitasking, and that was just a mess for my Fido-net BBS.

[ Thread continues here (3 messages/3.11kB) ]


Talkback:132/renker.html

[ In reference to "Poor Man's Laptop" in LG#132 ]
Peter Hoeg [peter at hoeg.com]
Tue, 7 Nov 2006 11:21:52 +0300

Any particular reason for not just using a tool, which already exists - such as Unison (https://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/unison/) which is cross platform/OS ?

/peter

[ Thread continues here (13 messages/14.68kB) ]


Talkback:81/adam2.html

[ In reference to "Introduction to Programming Ada" in LG#81 ]
Thomas Adam [thomas_adam16 at yahoo.com]
Sat, 25 Nov 2006 11:40:35 +0000 (GMT)

[ I'm CCing TAG on this, given that you read about it in linxugazette. ]

--- Nusrat <nusrat.jabeen@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi,
> i am a student and have just seen ur Ada tutorial at this website.
> https://linuxgazette.net/issue81/adam2.html

Heh. That was back in my "youth".

> from what i have learned i only know that Put is used to display things
> on
> the screen. could you please explain what these Put camands do .

Yes -- this is correct. puts only outputs stuff on the screen. This is when you have Ada.text_io; in use as a package.

> (1)
> Put("Count=");
> Put(Count,5); New_Line;

I am not sure what you're asking me here -- surely it's obvious what the above is doing? Given that "Count" is likely an integer value, and hence you'd have been using something like the following:

with Ada.INTEGER_IO(INTEGER)
Then put in this context takes on a different meaning. What you're asking:

Put(Count,5); New_Line;
To do is output count with a width of five digits.

> (2)
> for Index in 1 .. 4 loop
> Put("Doubled index =");
> Put(2 * Index,5); New_Line;
> 
> i have to submitt my work today, i shall be grateful for any help.

The explanation as above also fits in with this.

Oh dear, it seems I have submitted this work in late. I wonder what your teacher would have awarded me?

-- Thomas Adam


Talkback:128/adam.html

[ In reference to "How Fonts Interact with the X Server and X Clients" in LG#128 ]
GTLA-02 Service Account [gtla02 at linlab1.phy.okstate.edu]
Fri, 10 Nov 2006 14:32:28 -0600

Hello,

Can I get any help for installing fonts server in my machine?

its slackware 10.2

Thanks in advance

[ Thread continues here (10 messages/9.99kB) ]


Talkback:65/tag/12.html

[ In reference to "(?) neighbour table overflow" in LG#65 ]
Peter Gervai [grinapo at gmail.com]
Wed, 22 Nov 2006 00:57:39 +0100

Hi,

Dunno whether you append old pages or not, but since this is the most linked by google, maybe you do. :)

Answer2:

Additionally to the original answer the error message (and the fill of th ARP table) may be caused by an accidentally too broad local net route, like 193.0.0.0/8 on eth0, which would generate plenty of ARP for any 193... addresses, which in fact fills the ARP cache (neighbour table). This usually happens if you mistype the network mask... (like writing /4 instead of /24, or 255.0.0.0 instead of 255.255.255.0)

-- 
 byte-byte,
    grin

Talkback: Discuss this article with The Answer Gang

Copyright © 2006, . Released under the Open Publication license unless otherwise noted in the body of the article. Linux Gazette is not produced, sponsored, or endorsed by its prior host, SSC, Inc.

Published in Issue 133 of Linux Gazette, December 2006

<-- prev | next -->
Tux