Jonathan Ben Avraham wrote:
On Wed, 20 Dec 2006, Hetz Ben Hamo wrote:
Date: Wed, 20 Dec 2006 15:30:39 +0200
From: Hetz Ben Hamo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: linux-il
Subject: MySQL conversion question
Hi,
A friend of mine has a MySQL server for a web site and his whole DB is
encoded to ISO-8859-1
Tzahi
Thx - Fair enough - I can look in archives.
I may be mistaken, but afaik, there is no /proc/sys/vm/block_dump on Red
Hat EL3 - I couldn't find any /proc counters that were per process and
all the counters I can see
are system-wide.
Looking for a real solution today; I started poking a
Check out the archives.
We discussed this in the past.
IIRC, you can use echo "1" > /proc/sys/vm/block_dump
(it might also involve /proc/sys/vm/laptop_mode but i can't remember why).
and then tail /proc/kmsg to see the dump of the processes i/o requests.
On Wednesday 20 December 2006 12:32, Danny
Hi!
On Wednesday 20 December 2006 18:17, Chaim Keren Tzion wrote:
> http://www.iglu.org.il/IGLU/index.php
> Returns: Session initialisation failed
>
Fixed now. The problem was this:
http://community.postnuke.com/module-Forum-viewtopic-topic-9316.htm
It was solved by a "REPAIR TABLE" command.
R
http://www.iglu.org.il/IGLU/index.php
Returns: Session initialisation failed
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On 12/20/06, Jonathan Ben Avraham <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
ISO-8859-1 -> UTF-8 is a trivial conversion, just move the data.
This is only true if your data is Latin-only. Otherwise, this will
result in data corruption. In any case, with MySQL 4 and higher, you
should update the table scheme ac
Quoting Noam Rathaus, from the post of Wed, 20 Dec:
> Hi,
>
> We are seeking someone that can come and provide a one day
> crash-training-course to our development team (skilled in C/C++ and MFC) on
> how to build good looking KDE applications.
>
> --
> Noam Rathaus
> CTO
> 1616 Anderson
Hi,
We are seeking someone that can come and provide a one day
crash-training-course to our development team (skilled in C/C++ and MFC) on
how to build good looking KDE applications.
--
Noam Rathaus
CTO
1616 Anderson Rd.
McLean, VA 22102
Tel: 703.286.7725 extension 105
Fax: 888.667
On Wed, 20 Dec 2006, Hetz Ben Hamo wrote:
Date: Wed, 20 Dec 2006 15:30:39 +0200
From: Hetz Ben Hamo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: linux-il
Subject: MySQL conversion question
Hi,
A friend of mine has a MySQL server for a web site and his whole DB is
encoded to ISO-8859-1. Now he needs to convert the
Quoting Hetz Ben Hamo, from the post of Wed, 20 Dec:
> Hi,
>
> A friend of mine has a MySQL server for a web site and his whole DB is
> encoded to ISO-8859-1. Now he needs to convert the entire database to
> UTF-8.
>
> So, my question is: has anyone done this before? any good scripts,
> pointers
Hi,
A friend of mine has a MySQL server for a web site and his whole DB is
encoded to ISO-8859-1. Now he needs to convert the entire database to
UTF-8.
So, my question is: has anyone done this before? any good scripts,
pointers how he could convert his database from one encoding to
another and r
I have an Ultra 5 computer I no longer need. It has NO hard drive (will take
an IDE drive up to 120gig), a CD-ROM drive, 128m RAM. Runs Linux, xBSD,
and Solaris, all available as open source for free.
Takes 5v PARITY DIMMS, can be expanded to 512m. 3 PCI slots, VGA type
monitor connector, requires
grep -q -f keywords.txt story.txt && \
echo "Pattern founds in file. Great success! High five!"
Impressive!
Thanks for all who helped.
Thanks,
Hetz
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Quoting Hetz Ben Hamo, from the post of Wed, 20 Dec:
> Hi,
>
> I'm trying to figure out a trick to do in shell, and it goes like this:
>
> I have a text file with unknown number of keywords (lets call it
> keywords.txt), and I have another text file with story (lets call it
> story.txt).
grep -
Simple way to do it:
#!/bin/bash
for i in `cat $1`
do
RES=`grep $i $2 | wc -l`
if [ $RES -gt 0 ]; then
echo "$i found in $2 [$RES line(s)]";
fi
done
where $1 = your keywords file and $2 = your story file as parameters
eg. (script name: bigscan): # bigscan keywords.txt story.txt
gives
guys
How do I get the real IO (block reads/writes per second, not cached) of
each process on a running Linux system?
vmstat and iostat dont provide process level detail
I'm looking at a system right now which is CPU idle but very IO busy and
I cant figure out who's moving the disks around.
foreach word `cat keywords.txt`; do
grep -l $word /some/text.file || echo "$word: not found"
done
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echo
grep -e 'keyword1' -e 'keyword2' ... -e 'keyword N'
story.txt
Convert from keywords.txt to '-e keyword N' depend on
the keywords.txt format, but shouldn't be too
difficult.
Or may be you looking for pure shell solution, without
any externel program invoked ?
Valery
--- Hetz Ben Hamo <[EMAIL
Hi,
I'm trying to figure out a trick to do in shell, and it goes like this:
I have a text file with unknown number of keywords (lets call it
keywords.txt), and I have another text file with story (lets call it
story.txt).
The issue: find if one or more keywords are found inside the story.
I hav
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