| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 3 years, 9 months |
| seen | Apr 30 at 0:24 | |
| stats | profile views | 10 |
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Dec 4 |
accepted | Missing mysql_install_db on CentOS |
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Nov 20 |
accepted | Copy directory structure on top of another |
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Nov 20 |
comment |
Copy directory structure on top of another This one is even nicer as it's a bit more obvious from the command what's going on, plus you get a report of which files were updated. Thanks :) |
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Nov 20 |
comment |
Copy directory structure on top of another I don't actually want to synchronize them, I want to update one directory with the new contents of a second directory, but I don't actually care about updating the second directory - it will be deleted afterwards. |
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Nov 19 |
comment |
Copy directory structure on top of another Although I think you got the names of the directories the wrong way round. A is the folder that should have B's contents applied to it. So A should end up being bigger, not B. |
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Nov 19 |
comment |
Copy directory structure on top of another Awesome, that's exactly what I was after. I'm surprised there' not a more direct way of doing it though. |
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Nov 19 |
awarded | Supporter |
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Nov 19 |
asked | Copy directory structure on top of another |
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Nov 17 |
comment |
Missing mysql_install_db on CentOS hmmm I see. I guess it might need reinstalling then. |
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Nov 17 |
asked | Missing mysql_install_db on CentOS |
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Oct 23 |
comment |
How to determine the location of files installed by a package on CentOS yep, that does it :) I wonder why one might want to use the other way that I found. |
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Oct 23 |
awarded | Editor |
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Oct 23 |
revised |
How to determine the location of files installed by a package on CentOS added 4 characters in body |
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Oct 23 |
accepted | How to determine the location of files installed by a package on CentOS |
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Oct 23 |
answered | How to determine the location of files installed by a package on CentOS |
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Oct 23 |
comment |
How to determine the location of files installed by a package on CentOS I think that does the reverse of what I want. It looks like you give it a file, and it tells you which package it belongs to. |
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Oct 23 |
asked | How to determine the location of files installed by a package on CentOS |
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Sep 21 |
accepted | disabling smartd service for a web server |
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Sep 17 |
asked | disabling smartd service for a web server |
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Aug 9 |
awarded | Student |