CONTENTS: ash bc diff ftape ghostscr gp9600 jed joe mt_st sudo ash: Kenneth Almquist's ash shell. ash: ash: A lightweight (62K) Bourne compatible shell. Great for machines with ash: low memory, but does not provide all the extras of shells like bash, ash: tcsh, and zsh. Runs most shell scripts compatible with the Bourne ash: shell. Note that under Linux, most scripts seem to use at least some ash: bash-specific syntax. The Slackware setup scripts are a notable ash: exception, since ash is the shell used on the install disks. NetBSD ash: uses ash as its /bin/sh. ash: ash: bc: GNU bc 1.03 - An arbitrary precision calculator language. bc: bc: bc is a language that supports arbitrary precision numbers with bc: interactive execution of statements. There are some similarities in bc: the syntax to the C programming language. bc: bc: bc: bc: bc: bc: diff: GNU diffutils-2.7 diff: diff: The GNU diff utilities - finds differences between files. (to make diff: source code patches, for instance) diff: diff: diff: diff: diff: diff: diff: ftape: ftape 2.03b ftape: ftape: Bas Laarhoven's FTAPE module. ftape: ftape: The FTAPE driver allows you to use a QIC-40 or QIC-80 floppy tape ftape: drive with Linux. ftape: ftape: This module was compiled under Linux 1.2.13 ELF. ftape: ftape: ftape: ghostscr: Ghostscript version 2.6.2 ghostscr: Preview, print and process PostScript documents on both PostScript and ghostscr: non-PostScript devices. This version supports all SVGAlib video modes ghostscr: for output directly to the screen. See the man page for 'gs' for more ghostscr: information. [NOTE]: The /usr/bin/gs binary included with this package ghostscr: does not support X11; support was left out so that Slackware users ghostscr: without X could use SVGAlib output and not need to install the X ghostscr: shared libraries. If you need X11 support, you should also install the ghostscr: package 'gs_x11' found on the XAP series. It contains a /usr/bin/gs ghostscr: with support for X11 (as well as full SVGAlib support). ghostscr: gp9600: Change the default modem speed from 9600 baud. gp9600: gp9600: By default, your baud rate will be set to 9600. If you install this gp9600: package, a menu will be presented later which allows you to select any gp9600: of the following baud rates: gp9600: gp9600: 300, 1200, 2400, 4800, 9600, 19200, 38400. gp9600: gp9600: If you need something faster than this, you should set the baud to gp9600: 38400, which can be changed to mean a faster rate with setserial. gp9600: jed: John E. Davis's JED 0.97-9 editor. jed: jed: JED is an extremely powerful but small emacs programmer's editor that jed: is extensible in a C-like macro language and is able to perform color jed: syntax highlighting. Among the many features: jed: Emacs, wordstar, EDT emulation; jed: C, Fortran, TeX, text editing modes; Full undo; jed: GNU Emacs compatible info reader, and lots more. jed: jed: 8 bit clean, so you can even edit binary files! jed: joe: Joe text editor, 2.2. joe: joe: Joseph H. Allen's easy to use text editor, similar to WordStar[tm]. joe: joe: joe: joe: joe: joe: joe: joe: mt_st: mt-st-0.2 - controls magnetic tape drive operation mt_st: mt_st: This mt originates from BSD NET-2. Some Linux SCSI tape-specific mt_st: ioctls have been added to the original source and the man page has mt_st: been updated. Although this mt program is tailored for SCSI tape, it mt_st: can also be used with the QIC-02 driver and hopefully with other Linux mt_st: tape drivers using the same ioctls (some of the commands may not work mt_st: with all drivers). mt_st: mt_st: mt_st: sudo: sudo 1.2 sudo: sudo: 'sudo' is a command that allows users to execute some commands as sudo: root. The /etc/sudoers file (edited with 'visudo') specifies which sudo: users have access to sudo and which commands they can run. 'sudo' logs sudo: all its activities to /var/adm/sudo, so the system administrator can sudo: can keep an eye on things. sudo: sudo: sudo: sudo: