See here for how to install debugging symbols. You will probably need package libssl-dbg or something similar.
Type: Posts; User: Bachstelze; Keyword(s):
See here for how to install debugging symbols. You will probably need package libssl-dbg or something similar.
"singapore" is not a valid value for date.timezone. What you want is
date.timezone = "Asia/Singapore"
The list of valid timezones is here: http://php.net/manual/en/timezones.php
If you see nothing in your logs, it means your logs are not "sensitive" enough, so you should increase your LogLevel. By the way, I recommed setting separate logs for each vhost for better...
Guess what I'm doing... Yes, procrastinating, that's why I'm here!
In addition to what Vaphell said, two don'ts to keep in mind:
1. Don't use scanf().
2. Don't write comments which just paraphrase the code. Code should be commented if and only if its meaning is...
I suppose one has to start somewhere, but be advised that "making your own OS" is a very long shot from where you seem to be now. Being a good programmer is necessary but very very far from...
Is that what you want to do?
firas@itsuki ~ % cat test.c
#include<stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
int check_password(char *password){
int flag = 0;
char buffer[20];
What else could it be?
You need to install the 32-bit versions of those libraries. Try appending :i386 to the package names in apt-get install.
I have no idea what you mean by that...
Hmm, it shouldn't do that, and I can't run the Live CD right now as my laptop's drive seems broken... In any case, as you said the version of Ubuntu in the provided Live CD is very old, so if I were...
The "memory map" printed is not very useful anyway. Much better is to run the program in gdb and use the examine command.
If you are running your program on Windows, then you probably need rb indeed. In Linux (or other POSIX-compliant systems), it has no effet (r and rb are equivalent).
Looks like Trent woke up on the wrong side of bed this morning. :D What he said is true of course but you can feel free to disregard it for now and continue experimenting with pointers and stuff...
array and &array are not the same thing. (This is subtle, on a common system they have the same value, but not the same type.) You want array+6 and not &array+6.
Yes, but not for the reason you are probbly thinking of: it's just completely irrelevant to the problem here.
What is %a supposed to represent?
You want to do
sudo apt-get install scons libboost-all-dev libsundials-serial-dev subversion libblas-dev liblapack-dev
You very much need to review how to install software. ;)
(What you want here is probably apt-get.)
There is no special storage area in memory for floating-point variables, they are stored in exactly the same way as any other variable.
sed is overkill here, use cut (or maybe awk).
Basically, no. checkinstall is the quick and dirty way, but if it doesn't work I think your only option is to follow the packaging guide.
Yes... assuming randomnumber >= 2. ;)
Study this book.
But to answer your questions...
See above.
the easiest way is to link the libraries statically, but you need to be careful about the license terms of the libraries you use (for example if you use a GPL library, then you can't distribute your...