Yes, there are interesting use of jabberfs ... I haven't tought yet how and what for jabberfs would be used, but these are interesting ideas ...
Yes, tail can be used too to see messages ... I prefer less ( can't explain why ... hehe ... just got used to it ... ) On 9/16/05, Sander Devrieze <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Op vrijdag 16 september 2005 05:36, schreef Samuel Goto: > > I am very proud to announce the Jabber File System !!!! > > > > It is as simple as that : mounting your roster on a file system > > !!!! Check it out in > > > > http://www.lsc.ic.unicamp.br/~samuel.goto/jabberfs/jabberfs.html > > Cool! B-) Don't forget to send a patch to Linus when it is done for inclusion > in the standard Linux kernel ;-) > > I think this file system can become very interesting for embeded Linux. > Imagine these: > * You have a router and send him via Jabber a command to retrieve the logs. A > script on the router that uses jabberfs archives the logs in a tar.gz file > (and maybe it even encrypts it with your public GPG key!). Then it sends this > file to you! :o) > * A network camera that can send you up to date pictures/movies through Jabber > (even more cool with TINS!). > > <snip> > > > Well, I will wait now your answers and comments, please, give me > > any feedback , > > I see you use the commands "cat" and "less" in the examples to read incoming > messages. Isn't the command "tail -f" better to do this? > > -- > Mvg, Sander Devrieze. > > xmpp:[EMAIL PROTECTED] ( http://jabber.tk/ ) > -- f u cn rd ths u cn b a gd prgmr !
