On Friday 18 March 2005 17:21, äçè wrote:
> ããæäèå Hacker Humer åéåèéäïæääéèçäã
>
> ããåçèäïæååæèæçåèèçèåïææèæèçãçèæäæçéé
> èèæèæïéæèæäçèéèåäçäæçåèïæèçéæåèäéïéæ
> æåéçãçèçççæäåæçäèäçåæïãäãããéãèãéãäéå
> éèåèãèæãåèçåãæãéççåãïéçååãéãïäåååãäã
> èãéãïäéäéïäçæäïéæéäèåççæïæåéåèçèæãïç
> çïåäåçäæäïåèåççæäãåèçåãéåèäïäæäéäéïä
> çæäïææäèéçåéãï
>
> ããåæèåäåèïææää Hacker Humer 
> ïåæéåçåçåæéçäæï
> éèçèæåææèæçåæïéæäéææåï
>
============>
ååååçéïçåäææéèçéçæçïææçççåäææäæçèåè

åäåæääääå
éç
éåæ
ææé
åæå
åç
èè
åç
äå
éåïæå
éåãéåãåé
æçäååè.....

äéåäççåäåäïãéèããæèããæçæ(èè)ã
äéäåéæåçæïæçææäçææäåççæçã
éäèééèååæèãååèåéäèèäçæååæåã
(æåæèééèåçåäääèéå)

GNU éå <-- åæèççèãæéèäæ

åäæãéèãéåæååæèççãåèçäæåæã :-)
åçæãæèãäæèæ(æéãåç)ééçèäåæäåèçåã
åéçèäæååãdaemon 
ååæååçäãçåäååçåå
äææèã

äéçåæåèçåéåèéäéèç Hacker Humor å daemon 
éåèåéèãåçæçäääèæçç "daemon" 
éäåèåå
æåæåäæäåïææåæèäåæäæã 

åæéèç Hacker Humor äéèïäæäåäåäæèéääã
äåäéèïæéççäçéèåäèé dog vs cat, pe vs qe.
åèéæçåèéåï

åäåå URL æäå UNIX or Linux daemon çåïéæåäç
äéæ daemon ççäã
http://www.enderunix.org/docs/eng/daemon.php
-> Introduction
http://www.linuxprofilm.com/articles/linux-daemon-howto.html
-> 1. Introduction: What is a Daemon?

æåæçåäéåæåïæåçéççççåæ "command line 
äèäå
æå"ïdaemon 
åæãéãããåãããåãççæãæççèäçèåï
ääéääèåääçææïåäççäæïççäææäæåçææã

------------- ääæççèååæäç -------------
dae.mon 
<<åè>>
1ãåèçèãçé
2 åèç, èé(genius)
3 = demon
  æé,é,æé

Daemon
n.
   1. 
ãéèãï{åéå(åUNIXççäççèååååååèççå)

Jargon File (4.3.1, 29 Jun 2001) [jargon]
Daemon and demon are often used interchangeably, but seem to have
distinct connotations. The term `daemon' was introduced to computing by
CTSS people (who pronounced it /dee'mon/) and used it to refer to what
ITS called a dragon; the prototype was a program called DAEMON that
automatically made tape backups of the file system. Although the meaning
and the pronunciation have drifted, we think this glossary reflects
current (2000) usage.

NOTE: éäææèåæ daemon çèæïDAEMON 
åææååäçåçååã
      åèçåæäèäé (command line) ïdaemon 
æåæçæåæäæ
      çééååçääååèåééèçã
NOTE: CTSS Compatible Time-Sharing System.
NOTE: ITS /I-T-S/ n. 1. Incompatible Time-sharing System

The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (09 FEB 02) [foldoc]
   Unix systems run many daemons, chiefly to handle requests
   for services from other hosts on a network.  Most of these
   are now started as required by a single real daemon, inetd,
   rather than running continuously.  Examples are cron (local
   timed command execution), rshd (remote command execution),
   rlogind and telnetd (remote login), ftpd, nfsd (file
   transfer), lpd (printing).

NOTE: äæåéäçäåèéäéæ daemon ã

   Daemon and demon are often used interchangeably, but seem to
   have distinct connotations (see demon).  The term "daemon"
   was introduced to computing by CTSS people (who pronounced
   it /dee'mon/) and used it to refer to what ITS called a
   dragon.
NOTE: åääæã

V.E.R.A. -- Virtual Entity of Relevant Acronyms December 2001 [vera]
DAEMON
        Disk And Execution MONitor (Unix)

NOTE: éåæèåæçå CTSS æåççåã

======================================================>
æçäçååæåæçåèïéæåæèåäååååã
ææååéççéèäåãååçääååäååçåæåè
éæçææèäçæåã

åèååéäåæäææçåçåçïå---ç,é,ç,é,å,é,å,å,å,åã
----éééé........

-- 
       ââ
âââ ââ ââââ
â   âââ éåïçéïçåï
â   ââââ äåïåæïéå
âãââââââãããããlloyd [at] coventive.comããâ 
ââââââââââââââ Coventive Technologies Ltd â


-- 
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

回复