Almost certainly a different header structure. I don't think that the Berkeley and Linux versions of fortune share much in the way of code, let alone structure. But I don't know.
On Thu, Nov 13, 2014 at 4:53 PM, Pierre Abbat <[email protected]> wrote: > I have two files of sayings which I use in my sig in email. For two days my > laptop (which runs Linux) was in the shop getting its memory tested, so I > used > my DragonFly box to read and write email. (It did not work very well. Kmail > spent hours fetching email headers from my IMAP server; if I clicked on a > message while it was doing this, it wouldn't display the message until it > finished reading the folder, if at all.) I rsynced lots of stuff, > including the > sig files. The dat files turned out to be garbage in DFly. I got the > laptop back > today, copied the dat files to /tmp, and rsynced everything back. Here's > the > Linux version of one of the dat files: > > 00000002 00000008 0000005a 00000018 00000000 25000000 00000000 0000003b > 0000005d 000000a8 00000104 0000013c 00000156 0000017d 0000019f > > Here's the DragonFly version of the same file: > > 00000001 00000000 00000008 00000000 0000005a 00000000 00000018 00000000 > 00000000 00000000 25000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 0000003b 00000000 > 0000005d 00000000 000000a8 00000000 00000104 00000000 0000013c 00000000 > 00000156 00000000 0000017d 00000000 0000019f 00000000 > > Both are 64-bit OSes. Why does DragonFly have the extra zeros, making the > file > twice as big? > > Pierre > -- > When a barnacle settles down, its brain disintegrates. > Já não percebe nada, já não percebe nada. > > >
