Matthias Apitz wrote: >>> >>> $ man proc >> >> By the way, if you don't have them locally: >> >> http://www.google.com/search?q=proc+manpage > > Don't you think that this answer is too simple?
I thought it was dead easy. Why, what sort of hoops do you prefer to jump through to find a man page? ;-) Second Google result: http://linux.die.net/man/5/proc > I have a lot of Unix > systems sitting around me, I'm just typing these lines into one, a > FreeBSD 7.0. I was asking for the man pages matching exactly the Linux > derivate which is installed in the FR; Well of course it's going to be different on FreeBSD -- different kernel -- but the location of the CPU time in /proc is going to be the same as any other system running the Linux kernel (well at least any that's not completely ancient anyway). So the simplest option, as I was suggesting is just to consult the proc manpage on any random Linux PC and if you don't have a Linux box handy then Google it, as people have put most of the man pages online. > for example where is the man page > of 'dropbear'? http://www.google.com/search?q=dropbear+manpage First result: http://downloads.openwrt.org/people/nico/man/man8/dropbear.8.html ;-) Seriously though, if you must have the absolute exact same version for some reason and don't have a Linux box, just grab the source tarball: wget http://downloads.openmoko.org/sources/dropbear-0.51.tar.bz2 tar -jxvf dropbear-0.51.tar.bz2 cd dropbear-0.51 man ./dropbear.8 Usually manpages aren't installed on embedded systems in the interests of saving space. _______________________________________________ Openmoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community