Fedora 16 – VirtualBox Installation Issues

Posted: 1st February 2012 by admin in Linux

Before Installing VirtualBox from website. Install following packages.

yum install binutils gcc make patch libgomp glibc-headers glibc-devel kernel-headers kernel-PAE-devel dkms

 

This should help virtualbox run properly
 

Get MS Office OneNote 2007 Working with Wine on Linux

Posted: 1st February 2012 by admin in Linux

It took me about 8 hours to get the Microsoft Office 2007 OneNote working on Wine 1.4. So I would like to help you guys out their who are stuck like me.

My Configurations

OS : Fedora 16

Wine : 1.4 (Upgraded using http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Wine)

      – yum upgrade

      – yum –enablerepo=updates-testing upgrade wine

 

Open Wine Configurations

Go to -> Library tab and add following libraries as Native /buildin

gdiplus
msxml3
riched20
riched32
rpcrt4

BINGOO. This should resolve the crash problem when opening OneNote 2007 NoteBook

 

Updated:

After Above config If you are having a crash on File -> Open -> Notebook. Go to Wine COnfiguration -> Drive -> AutoDetect then remove unwanted drive this should fix the File Open Dialog Crash.

 

Basic Yum Commands and how to use them

This is not an exhaustive list of all yum commands but it is a list of the basic/common/important ones. For a complete list see the yum man page.

   yum list [available|installed|extras|updates|obsoletes|all|recent] [pkgspec]

This command lets you list packages in any repository enabled on your system or installed. It also lets you list specific types of packages as well as refine your list with a package specification of any of the package's name, arch, version, release, epoch.

 

   yum list

By default 'yum list' without any options will list all packages in all the repositories and all the packages installed on your system. Note: 'yum list all' and 'yum list' give the same output.

   yum list available

Lists all the packages available to be installed in any enabled repository on your system.

   yum list installed

This is equivalent to rpm -qa. It lists all the packages installed on the system.

   yum list extras

This command lists any installed package which no longer appears in any of your enabled repositories. Useful for finding packages which linger between upgrades or things installed not from a repo.

   yum list obsoletes

This command lists any obsoleting relationships between any available package and any installed package.

   yum list updates

This command lists any package in an enabled repository which is an update for any installed package.

   yum list recent

This command lists any package added to any enabled repository in the last seven(7) days.

   yum list pkgspec

This command allows you to refine your listing for particular packages.

 

Examples of pkgspecs:

      yum list zsh
      yum list joe\*
      yum list \*.i386
      yum list dovecot-1.0.15

 

   yum install/remove/update

….

 

   yum check-update

Exactly like yum list updates but returns an exit code of 100 if there are updates available. Handy for shell scripting.

 

   yum grouplist
   yum groupinfo
   yum groupinstall
   yum groupupdate
   yum groupremove

Please see the YumGroups page on this wiki for information about the above commands.

 

   yum info

This displays more information about any package installed or available. It takes the same arguments as yum list but it is best run with a specific package name or glob. Example:

     $ yum info yum
     Installed Packages
     Name       : yum
     Arch       : noarch
     Version    : 3.2.20
     Release    : 3.fc10
     Size       : 2.5 M
     Repo       : installed
     Summary    : RPM installer/updater
     URL        : http://yum.baseurl.org/
     License    : GPLv2+
     Description: Yum is a utility that can check for and automatically download and
                : install updated RPM packages. Dependencies are obtained and downloaded
                : automatically prompting the user as necessary.

 

  yum search

This allows you to search for information from the various metadata available about packages. It can accept multiple arguments. It will output the packages which match the most terms first followed by the next highest number of matches, etc. Specifically yum search looks at the following fields: name, summary, description, url. If you're searching for what package provides a certain command try yum provides instead.

Search example:

$ yum search python rsync ssh
========================= Matched: python, rsync, ssh ==========================
rdiff-backup.i386 : Convenient and transparent local/remote incremental
                  : mirror/backup

============================ Matched: python, rsync ============================
cobbler.noarch : Boot server configurator

============================= Matched: python, ssh =============================
denyhosts.noarch : A script to help thwart ssh server attacks
pexpect.noarch : Pure Python Expect-like module
python-paramiko.noarch : A SSH2 protocol library for python
python-twisted-conch.i386 : Twisted SSHv2 implementation

============================= Matched: rsync, ssh ==============================
duplicity.i386 : Encrypted bandwidth-efficient backup using rsync algorithm
pssh.noarch : Parallel SSH tools
   yum provides/yum whatprovides

This command searches for which packages provide the requested dependency of file. This also takes wildcards for files. Examples:

$ yum provides MTA
2:postfix-2.5.5-1.fc10.i386 : Postfix Mail Transport Agent
Matched from:
Other       : MTA

exim-4.69-7.fc10.i386 : The exim mail transfer agent
Matched from:
Other       : MTA

sendmail-8.14.3-1.fc10.i386 : A widely used Mail Transport Agent (MTA)
Matched from:
Other       : Provides-match: MTA

$ yum provides \*bin/ls
coreutils-6.12-17.fc10.i386 : The GNU core utilities: a set of tools commonly
                            : used in shell scripts
Matched from:
Filename    : /bin/ls
   yum shell

….

 

   yum makecache

Is used to download and make usable all the metadata for the currently enabled yum repos. This is useful if you want to make sure the cache is fully current with all metadata before continuing.

 

   yum clean

During its normal use yum creates a cache of metadata and packages. This cache can take up a lot of space. The yum clean command allows you to clean up these files. All the files yum clean will act on are normally stored in /var/cache/yum.

Example commands and what they do:

 

        yum clean packages

This cleans up any cached packages in any enabled repository cache directory.

 

        yum clean metadata

This cleans up any xml metadata that may have been cached from any enabled repository.

        yum clean dbcache

Yum will create or download some sqlite database files as part of its normal operation. This command clean up the cached copies of those from any enabled repository cache.

        yum clean all

Clean all cached files from any enabled repository. Useful to run from time to time to make sure there is nothing using unnecessary space.

Via [http://yum.baseurl.org/wiki/YumCommands]

 

Linux Force Disk Check on Reboot

Posted: 6th January 2012 by admin in Bash, Linux

All you need to do is create a file in root folder /

touch /forcefsck

Reboot your system

shutdown -r now

At bootscreen press F8 to see the verbose log to see if disk is being checked

Attaching Timestamps / Date stamps with file name in linux

Posted: 30th December 2011 by admin in Bash

Hi Folks, some times when we are working with backups we have to assign year, month and date datestamp to out files. 

 

  • Below command gives you time "20111212" format

date +%Y%m%d

 

  • If you have to use above with e.g copy command

cp test.zip /home/user/test_back_$(date +%Y%m%d).zip