Index_S

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S

Scripts

described, 117

Gawk scripting language, 103–114

installation, 129

sed instructions, 99–100, 102

See also Shell scripting

SCSI devices, 14

Sed stream editor

commands, 100–103

overview, 97–98

sample program segment, 98–99

script file, 99–100, 102

sed commands, 100–103

Serialization of Java objects, 378–385

Servant objects and CORBA, 411–415

Servers

applications, 44

client-server architecture, Kylix, 334–336

CORBA, 411–421

JBuilder8, 434–437

JSP. See JSP (Java Server Page) pages

ports for communication, 467

sockets and communication, 386

TCP client-server model, 385–392

UDP client-server model, 385–396

Services, configuring, 44

Servlets

Java, 244

Java server pages, 456–462

life cycle, 462–463

Session beans, 498–500

Session scope, 464

Set command (bash shell), 139

Sets, Object Pascal, 167–168

Shared objects and Linux, 62–63

Shell scripting

alias command, 127–128, 134

bg command, 135

borne again fundamentals, 118–122

break command, 135

builtin command, 135–136

built-in shell commands, 134–141

cd command, 136

command command, 136

conditional statements, 144–150

customizing command prompt, 126–127

declare command, 136

echo command, 119, 130, 137

error log files, 121

eval command, 137

execute permission, 118, 128

exit command, 137

export command, 119, 130, 137

fc command, 137–138

fg command, 138

file existence, checking, 143–144

flow control constructs, 141–150

fundamentals of shell scripts, 128–134

help command, 138

history command, 123–124, 126, 138

installation programs, 129

kill command, 138

let command, 131, 138

logical operators, 142, 144

passing arguments, 131–132

path, 118–120, 123

pattern matching, 130–131

precedence rule, 120

pwd command, 139

read command, 139

redirection, 120–121

return command, 139

scripts, described, 129

set command, 139

shell variables, 124–126

source command, 140

suspend command, 140

test command, 140

trap command, 140

type command, 140

unalias command, 141

unmask command, 141

unset command, 141

user login environment, 118, 122–128

user-defined functions, 132–134

variables, 129–130

wait command, 141

Shells

described, 117

interactive login shell, 122–123

interactive non-login shell, 122–123

noninteractive shell, 122–123

shell prompt, 37–39

Signals, 65–66, 310

Slave controller, 15

Source command (bash shell), 140

SourceForge, 6–7

Stack, 199

Star Office (Sun Microsystems), 6

Stateless session bean, 499–500, 517–532

Static arrays, Object Pascal, 168

Static_cast operator, C++, 222

Streaming, in CLX, 308–309

Strings

in C++, 196

CLX strings and string lists, 305–307

Delphi manipulation functions, 165–166

Struct data type, C++, 196–197

Structured data types

in C++, 196–199

in Delphi, 167–170

Struts. See Jakarta Struts

Sun Microsystems. See Java

SuSE Linux

bash shell, 118

desktop, 49–50

Emacs editor, 83–84

init process, 25

Konqueror window, 35, 36

Kylix 3 on, 271–272

shell prompt, 38–39

user login, 122

users and groups, 41

vendor role, 4–5

version information, 8

Suspend command (bash shell), 140

Swap space

disk, 51, 52

memory, 26

Switch compiler directive, 159

Symbols, pattern matching and, 95–96

Synchronous mode, 330

System administrator and user id root, 40

System events, 310

System global variables, Kylix, 318–322

System monitor, 42–43

System requirements for CD-ROM, 549



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Linux Application Development For The Enterprise
Linux Application Development For The Enterprise (Charles River Media Programming)
ISBN: 1584502533
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2002
Pages: 86

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