truncate -s 10G foo
fallocate -l 5G bar
It needs to be stated that truncate on a file system supporting sparse files will create a sparse file and fallocate will not
Release top of distribution archive description and integrity information
Release.gpg top of distribution signature file for the "Release" file signed with the archive key
%A Author
%B Secondary Title (of a Book or Conference Name)
%C Place Published
%D Year
%E Editor /Secondary Author
%F Label
%G Language
%H Translated Author
%I Publisher
%J Journal Name
%K Keywords
%L Call Number
%M Accession Number
%N Number (Issue)
%O Alternate Title
%P Pages
%Q Translated Title
%R DOI
%S Tertiary Title
%T Title
%U URL
%V Volume
%W Database Provider
%X Abstract
%Y Tertiary Author / Translator
%Z Notes
%0 Reference Type
%1 Custom 1
%2 Custom 2
%3 Custom 3
%4 Custom 4
%6 Number of Volumes
%7 Edition
%8 Date
%9 Type of Work
%? Subsidiary Author
%@ ISBN/ISSN
%! Short Title
%# Custom 5
%$ Custom 6
%] Custom 7
%& Section
%( Original Publication
%) Reprint Edition
%* Reviewed Item
%+ Author Address
%^ Caption
%> File Attachments
%< Research Notes
%[ Access Date
%= Custom 8
%~ Name of Database
rpm2cpio ./packagecloud-test-1.1-1.x86_64.rpm | cpio -idmv
An RPM package is simply a header structure on top of a CPIO archive. The package itself is comprised of four sections: a header with a leading identifier (magic number) that identifies the file as an RPM package, a signature to verify the integrity of the package, the header or ‘tagged’ data containing package information, version numbers, and copyright messaging, and the archive containing the actual program files.
In the example above, we use cpio with the -i flag to extract the files from the archive, -d to create the leading directories where needed, and -m to preserve the file modification times when creating files. The -v flag (verbose) is to list the files processed for the sake of this example.
entr (http://entrproject.org/) provides a more friendly interface to inotify (and also supports *BSD & Mac OS X).
It makes it very easy to specify multiple files to watch (limited only by ulimit -n), takes the hassle out of dealing with files being replaced, and requires less bash syntax:
$ find . -name '*.py' | entr ./myfile.py
The log file containing the information referenced will usually be the one named with the hostname on which Tomcat is running. On a simple server (e.g. development environment) this is localhost.<datestamp>.log
D. Hickok, D. Lesniak, and M. Rowe. 38th Midwest Instruction and Computing Symposium April 8 - 9, 2005. University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, Eau Claire, WI, (2005)