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Is there any difference between the two parameters?
If not, what's the reason there's two parameter names that do exactly the same thing?
The name ‘-wholename’ is GNU-specific, but ‘-path’ is more portable; it is supported by HP-UX find and is part of the POSIX 2008 standard.
Examples given at:
https://www.gnu.org/software/findutils/manual/html_node/find_html/Full-Name-Patterns.html
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I'm trying to make files in my linux virtual server browsable from my windows. I'm following the instructions given here: https://help.ubuntu.com/lts/serverguide/samba-fileserver.html
However, I cannot find the security parameter it's talking about. Can I just create that anywhere under the [global]? Or is there a pretty specific place to put it?
Yep, you can just specify the "security=" parameter anywhere in the global section.
https://www.samba.org/samba/docs/man/manpages/smb.conf.5.html
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Using the unix command line tool less, how do I scroll horizontally? I need to scroll one (or a half) screen to the right or left
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Hi every one
on a web server running Centos 6 with 4 Network Interfaces, we have to setup/Merge all 4 interfaces to be shown / used as a single NIC, we know it's possible but we forgot the technical name of the solution, we need just the name to google it if it's possible.
Thanks
The word your looking for is "bonding". That's what it's called in Linux.
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On Linux systems there are some special paths like /etc/cron.d/, /etc/apt/sources.list.d/. That are the paths where you can place your own custom configs in separate files.
My question is — what does letter d mean?
directory :) Since there can possibly be a /etc/cron file as well. It is the same for /etc/modprobe.d/
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I just uninstalled a program (ros) from my computer (ubuntu) using the ubuntu software center.
However, since this moment, whenever I open a shell, I get the following message:
bash: /opt/ros/groovy/setup.bash: No such file or directory
Did I do anything wrong?
Have a look at ~/.bash_profile