may want to try pietty:
> http://ntu.csie.org/~piaip/pietty/ <http://ntu.csie.org/%7Epiaip/pietty/>
>
>
> - "Quan Qiu" wrote:
> > Thanks a lot. You are very right about this problem! Now, Fedora can
> display Chinese file names properly although the font doe
Thanks for pointing. I will look at the convmv tool
On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 11:18 AM, Jens Petersen wrote:
> > ls | while read filename
> > do
> > mv -i "$filename" "`echo \"$filename\" | iconv -f GB2312 -t UTF8`"
> > done
>
> Or you can use the convmv tool (in fedora) to do that too.
> --
> u
ty doesn't
support Chinese? If it is the case, which SSH tools do you suggest?
On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 10:51 AM, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
> Quan Qiu writes:
>
> « HTML content follows »
>>
>> Thanks for reply.
>>
>> 1. Where did the imported files come fro
, 2010 at 9:02 AM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 08/31/2010 08:57 AM, Quan Qiu wrote:
> > I installed fedora 12 (English version) on a Dell R300 server, as well
> > as SVN and Trac, after I imported files into Linux, all files named in
> > Chinese became black squares or question ma
Thanks for reply. I tried *yum groupinstall "Chinese Support"*, then restart
the server, but didn't get any luck.
On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 9:02 AM, Chris Smart wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 10:57 AM, Quan Qiu wrote:
> > Could anyone help me with this? I appreciat
I installed fedora 12 (English version) on a Dell R300 server, as well as
SVN and Trac, after I imported files into Linux, all files named in Chinese
became black squares or question marks when listing them, and there were
additional strings "invalid encoding" attached after each filename. In
addit