On Saturday, 2012-02-11 at 12:50:41 -0500, Harry Putnam wrote:
> Lupe Christoph <[email protected]> writes:

> Maybe I just don't know how to read it.  Apparently Attitude
> Adjustment is the name of a drink, but maybe its the name of a
> version? 

That's right. It will be 12.x I guess.

> Just a little to clever for me...
>   _______                     ________        __
>  |       |.-----.-----.-----.|  |  |  |.----.|  |_
>  |   -   ||  _  |  -__|     ||  |  |  ||   _||   _|
>  |_______||   __|_____|__|__||________||__|  |____|
>           |__| W I R E L E S S   F R E E D O M
>  ATTITUDE ADJUSTMENT (bleeding edge, r29903) ----------
>   * 1/4 oz Vodka      Pour all ingredients into mixing
>   * 1/4 oz Gin        tin with ice, strain into glass.
>   * 1/4 oz Amaretto
>   * 1/4 oz Triple sec
>   * 1/4 oz Peach schnapps
>   * 1/4 oz Sour mix
>   * 1 splash Cranberry juice

Actually, "bleeding edge, r29903" is the version number. "bleeding edge"
means that you are running a development version, aka trunk (a name used
by SVN for the main development stream). And "r29903" is the number of
the latest change to the Subversion repository, not necessarily applied
to trunk.

BTW, the drink is also on the sweet side ;-)

> > So unless you reveal the secret recipe, we're outta luck.

> >> Is there some command that will reveal what is running.  I mean beyond
> >> uname -a.

> Is there no answer to that questions beyond cat /etc/banner?  That is,
> does the software not supply a command that will reveal its name and
> version in some kind of way beside overly clever looking nonsense?

I don't know one, but I'm not a developer. Since snapshots don't have a
version number, you will probably not find one in your installation.

> > Since you did not supply the kernel version, either, we can't use it
> > to determine what you are running.

> kernel 2.6.39.4

As can be expected from a development snapshot, quite recent.

HTH,
Lupe Christoph
-- 
| It is a well-known fact in any organisation that, if you want a job    |
| done, you should give it to someone who is already very busy.          |
| Terry Pratchett, "Unseen Academicals"                                  |
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