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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 (http://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 <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi,
> i am a student and have just seen ur Ada tutorial at this website.
> http://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

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Published in Issue 133 of Linux Gazette, December 2006

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