iw was the standard before it was declared obsolete and replaced by
he.
As far as I know, Java still recognizes iw only.
Shalom (Regards), Mati
Bidi Architect
Globalization Center Of Competency - Bidirectional Scripts
IBM Israel
Phone: +972 2
Hi all!
The Tel Aviv Open Source Club will host a talk by Yaron Meiry (Sawyer -
http://blogs.perl.org/users/sawyer_x/ ) about Moose, the Perl Object Oriented
Programming System, for Beginners - on Sunday 17-January-2010 (slightly over
two weeks from now).
The meeting will take place at Tel
found some hints
https://forum.openwrt.org/viewtopic.php?id=19396 and
https://forum.openwrt.org/viewtopic.php?id=17370p=21
cheers,
Ohad
2010/1/11 Erez D erez0...@gmail.com
i am just about to receive a dlink 2650U router from bezeq.
i want to install openwrt on it, and replace my wrt54GL
Hi all,
New lecture upcoming in the Jerusalem Linux Club
This week - Introduction to Drupal.
NOTE: The lecture this week starts at 19:00 and NOT at 18:00 like last time!
Drupal is a the website content management system (CMS) written in PHP, that
lets one build a website,
in some cases with
We have a big legacy embedded code we need to maintain. Often, we wish to
run some functions of the code on the PC with injected input, to test them
or to test changes we've done to them without loading the code to the device
it should run on.
The code is written with C.
Obviously, this is not an
valgrind should be your first tool for the task. use it and fix all the
errors it reports.
what valgrind does not catch, are:
1. corruptions with global variables.
2. many corruptions on the stack.
but it catches a lot of other errors.
i use no other tools at work - except for as many of
valgrind will tell you whenever you are using an un-ninitialized
variable. it'll do so using runtime analysis.
have you tried using valgrind at all?
--guy
Elazar Leibovich wrote:
Just a remark, as some people asked me about it privately.
I'm not interested in static analysis (which gcc
Elazar Leibovich elaz...@gmail.com writes:
Just a remark, as some people asked me about it privately.
I'm not interested in static analysis (which gcc gives for
uninitialized variables). But with runtime analysis of where the
uninitialized variable have been actually used when the code was
I tried using valgrind in a different project. The main problems I've had
with valgrind are speed (which is not a problem here) and false positives.
Getting gdb to report that during runtime has its advantages.
Anyhow, I was hoping to hear about products/valgrind add-ons etc I do not
know.
The
Elazar Leibovich wrote:
I tried using valgrind in a different project. The main problems I've
had with valgrind are speed
Yes, that is known.
and false positives.
That one is new to me. Can you elaborate?
Getting gdb to report that during runtime has its advantages.
Anyhow, I was hoping to
Hi all!
When I run KDE 4.4.x (4.3.90) apps from the command line on my Mandriva Linux
Cooker system (Cooker is like Debian Testing/Unstable) they emit a large
amount of excessive warnings at run-time to the terminal. How can I completely
disable it?
I tried running kdebugdialog and
On Tue, Jan 12, 2010 at 8:02 AM, Shachar Shemesh shac...@shemesh.bizwrote:
Elazar Leibovich wrote:
I tried using valgrind in a different project. The main problems I've had
with valgrind are speed
Yes, that is known.
and false positives.
That one is new to me. Can you elaborate?
IIRC
You can also try:
gcc -fmudflap
#
On Monday 11 January 2010 23:54:09 Elazar Leibovich wrote:
We have a big legacy embedded code we need to maintain. Often, we wish to
run some functions of the code on the PC with injected input, to test them
or to test changes we've done to them without
On Tue, Jan 12, 2010 at 08:38:20AM +0200, Shlomi Fish wrote:
Hi all!
When I run KDE 4.4.x (4.3.90) apps from the command line on my Mandriva Linux
Cooker system (Cooker is like Debian Testing/Unstable) they emit a large
amount of excessive warnings at run-time to the terminal. How can I
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