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!\n");}
03 probe timer.sec(5) {exit();}
04 probe end {printf("Good-bye, world!\n");}
05
06 # stap helloword.stp
07 Hello, world!
08 <5 seconds later>
09 Good-bye, world!
The "Hello World" example
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Rate;
08 $ServerName = "Cashier";
09 $Workload = "Customers";
10 #------------ PDQ Model ------------
11 # Initialize internal PDQ variable
12 pdq::Init("Grocery Store Checkout");
13 # Modify the units used
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zonecfg:web1> add net
09 zonecfg:web1:net> set address=192.168.1.40/24
10 zonecfg:web1:net> set physical=e1000g1
11 zonecfg:web1:net> set defrouter=192.168.1.254
12 zonecfg:web1:net> end
13 zonecfg:web1
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certain things. Two reasons a script
08 # might fail are:
09 #
10 # 1) timing - A surprising number of programs (rn, ksh, zsh, telnet,
11 # etc.) and devices discard or ignore keystrokes that arrive "too
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the delay
06 * between autoconnecting to servers.
07 */
08 connectfreq = 5 minutes;
09
10 /* max number: the amount of servers to autoconnect to */
11 max_number = 1
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to storage
08 mv archiv/cur/$i storage
09
10 # Create storage directory for email
11 mkdir storage/$pref.$i
12
13 # Extract attachments from mail
14 ripmime -i storage/$i -d storage/$pref.$i
15
16
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06 yum downgrade perl\*
07 rpm -e man-db
08 rpm -e pam_ldap --nodeps
09 yum downgrade nss_ldap
10 ...
Fortunately, Yum introduced a downgrade option in version 3.2.27 that makes it easier to step
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-Specific PATH
01 PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin
02 case `uname -r` in
03 IRIX*)
04 PATH=$PATH:/etc/:/usr/bsd
05 ;;
06 HP-UX*)
07 PATH=$PATH:/sbin
08 ;;
09 ...
10 esac
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#auto eth0
06 #iface eth0 inet dhcp
07 auto br0
08 iface br0 inet dhcp
09 bridge_ports eth0
10 bridge_stp off
11 bridge_maxwait 5
12 post-up /usr/sbin/brctl setfd br0 0
Next, create a directory