Displaying 20 results from an estimated 660 matches for "tailored".
2017 Feb 01
2
CentOS 7.3.1611 scap-security-guide issue
Hello,
I have noticed that pci-dss profile, ssg-centos7-xccdf.xml will always fail
on test and remediation for disable_prelink rule. That seem to be caused by
insufficient CentOS RPM customization of upstream code. Specifically this:
https://github.com/OpenSCAP/scap-security-guide/blob/master/shared/oval/disable_prelink.xml#L24-L35
2007 Apr 02
0
[LLVMdev] CVS Branches To Discard?
Hi Reid,
> A deficiency in the cvs2svn script causes it to bloat the Subversion
> repository (significantly, as in 10x) in the conversion of branches
> and tags.
It's probably a bit late in the day, but have you considered other CVS
to SVN conversion tools, e.g. Tailor?
http://www.darcs.net/DarcsWiki/Tailor
http://darcs.arstecnica.it/tailor/
Cheers,
Ralph.
2006 Nov 27
2
[LLVMdev] moving to svn?
Hello, Scott.
> the official cutover. Granted, you might need darcs to pull the current
> version out of its repo, since it was originally designed with darcs in
> mind.
I can confirm, that tailor converts LLVM CVS with all history preserved
to mercurial repository without any visible troubles.
--
With best regards, Anton Korobeynikov.
Faculty of Mathematics & Mechanics, Saint
2006 Nov 27
0
[LLVMdev] moving to svn?
Anton Korobeynikov wrote:
>>the official cutover. Granted, you might need darcs to pull the current
>>version out of its repo, since it was originally designed with darcs in
>>mind.
>
> I can confirm, that tailor converts LLVM CVS with all history preserved
> to mercurial repository without any visible troubles.
I'm not sure if I just took HEAD or converted the
2006 Nov 28
1
[LLVMdev] moving to svn?
On 11/27/06, Scott Michel <scottm at rushg.aero.org> wrote:
> Anton Korobeynikov wrote:
> >>the official cutover. Granted, you might need darcs to pull the current
> >>version out of its repo, since it was originally designed with darcs in
> >>mind.
> >
> > I can confirm, that tailor converts LLVM CVS with all history preserved
> > to mercurial
2007 Apr 02
5
[LLVMdev] CVS Branches To Discard?
All,
We are considering removing some branches and tags in the conversion
process from CVS to SVN. We don't want to do this in a vaccuum, so
please read carefully.
A deficiency in the cvs2svn script causes it to bloat the Subversion
repository (significantly, as in 10x) in the conversion of branches and
tags. We can minimize the impact of this by only keeping branches and
tags that we really
2006 Nov 27
7
[LLVMdev] moving to svn?
Just wondering: Is there any plan to move to svn? I would love to have
a diff command that works when I am offline :-)
Best Regards,
Rafael
2001 May 09
4
Can compressed music sound better than uncompressed?
I quote from "Principles of Digital Audio" by Ken C. Pohlmann:
"Because perceptual coders tailor the coded signal to the ear's acuity, they
similarly tailor the required response of the playback system itself. Live
music does not pass through amplifiers and loudspeakers, it goes directly to
the ear. But recorded music must pass through the playback signal chain. Much
of the
2006 Nov 29
0
[LLVMdev] moving to svn?
Hi Chris,
> 2. The main deficiencies of CVS don't impact us much (we aren't
> hampered by lack of atomic commits, renames, and better branch
> facilities).
If people would like to see the logical `patch set' that made up a CVS
commit then cvsps may be useful, or, as others have said, use Tailor to
convert to a local repos. in your preferred format.
2006 Nov 28
5
[LLVMdev] moving to svn?
> I'm not sure if I just took HEAD or converted the whole llvm repo.
> Personally, I like darcs for the atomic theory of patches. YMMV.
I have used darcs to work with psi. It looks like a very clean design,
but currently it is a very anemic implementation IMHO. I constantly
find myself trying to find out how to do a relatively simple task.
Git is fast and has a lot of features, but
2006 Nov 28
2
[LLVMdev] moving to svn?
On Tue, 28 Nov 2006, Bill Wendling wrote:
> Perhaps someone could come up with a list of different versioning
> software, list the pros and cons, and then we could vote? (Has anyone
> mentioned Bitkeeper yet? :-)
There are a couple reasons we are using CVS still:
1. CVS works and is well understood by all involved.
2. The main deficiencies of CVS don't impact us much (we aren't
2009 Sep 04
3
Load a package without installing it
...e, it's often useful to be able to reload it,
without re-installing, re-starting R and re-loading. To do this I've
written a little script that inspects the package description and
loads dependencies, data and code - http://gist.github.com/180883.
It's obviously not very general (being tailored to my description
files) and won't work for packages containing C code, but I hope you
might find it useful nonetheless.
Any comments would be appreciated.
Hadley
--
http://had.co.nz/
2009 Jan 30
3
identifying what labels have been created in a plot
Colleagues
R 2.8.0; OS X, Vista, Ubuntu Linux
In some instances, when I create a graphic using plot(XVAR, YVAR), it
would be valuable to know the values that R will display on the y-axis
(e.g., if the range of data is 0-70, it might display 0, 10, 30, 50,
70). Is there a simple means to access these values?
Also, in some instances, additional ticks appear between the displayed
values
2006 Jul 02
3
large dataset!
Hi, I need to analyze data that has 3.5 million observations and
about 60 variables and I was planning on using R to do this but
I can't even seem to read in the data. It just freezes and ties
up the whole system -- and this is on a Linux box purchased about
6 months ago on a dual-processor PC that was pretty much the top
of the line. I've tried expanding R the memory limits but it
2010 Feb 22
2
[LLVMdev] great (detailed) article about GHC + LLVM
I found this interesting:
http://donsbot.wordpress.com/2010/02/21/smoking-fast-haskell-code-using-ghcs-new-llvm-codegen/
2010 Feb 23
0
[LLVMdev] great (detailed) article about GHC + LLVM
...sing-ghcs-new-llvm-codegen/
David Terei sent it a few days ago too, as part of another thread.
(which prevented me of sharing too) ;)
It's really interesting how the optimizations scrambled the code to a
point of non-recognition, but making it much faster. Are the generic
optimizations (also) tailored towards functional programming or was it
just coincidence/luck?
cheers,
--renato
http://systemcall.org/
Reclaim your digital rights, eliminate DRM, learn more at
http://www.defectivebydesign.org/what_is_drm
2009 Feb 19
2
Managing SIP hardphones call history
Hi,
I've been asked sometimes to tailor call history features embeded in SIP
hardphones.
For example, a cutomer wanted internal call to be taken out.
Another wanted calls to sorted according specific criteria.
1. Have you identified a phone offering the possibility to display as Call
History, an XML list produced on a distant web server ?
With this feature, you would simply have to tell the
2014 Mar 14
2
Creating a new NUT USB HID subdriver
Thanks to the great help here, I now have a UPS spitting out something resembling a report descriptor. So since I seem destined to have to create a new USB HID subdriver, I figured I'd get started on the path.
I followed all of the directions on the web....I used the script to generate the usbhid subdriver, feeding it the output of the usbhid-ups driver from reading my UPS. All that worked
2006 Nov 15
2
Java JDK on CentOS 4.4
...tall
a JDK to do Java programming. What is the default Java JDK for CentOS
4.4 ? I see under YumEx very little which looks like a Java JDK. Is
there one in the distribution ? Is there a way to get Sun's latest JDK 5
installed safely and successfully on CentOS 4.4, perhaps via an RPM for
it tailored to CentOS 4.4, or should I just use the one on Sun's web
site ? After installing the RPM is there anything else I have to do to
get it to work properly in CentOS 4.4 ? Any help is gratefully appreciated.
2009 Aug 17
4
Rounding to the nearest 5
Dear all,
A hopefully simple question: how do I round a series of values (held in an object) to the nearest 5? I've checked out trunc, round, floor and ceiling, but these appear to be more tailored towards rounding decimal places.
Thanks,
Steve
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