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Friday, November 18, 2011
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Unzip 7zip file in Centos
Download a VMware appliance recently and copy it to my notebook for web browsing. However, I am not sure how to extract it. Search in Google and find the following steps (thegeekstuff).
Install p7zip package as shown below.
Install p7zip to unzip *.7z files on CentOS
# yum install p7zip
Uncompressing a *.7z 7zip files in Linux using 7za
$ 7za e myfiles.7z
7-Zip (A) 9.04 beta Copyright (c) 1999-2009 Igor Pavlov 2009-05-30
p7zip Version 9.04 (locale=C,Utf16=off,HugeFiles=on,1 CPU)
Processing archive: ../../myfiles.7z
Extracting myfiles/test1
Extracting myfiles/test2
Extracting myfiles/test
Extracting myfiles
Everything is Ok
Folders: 1
Files: 3
Size: 7880
Compressed: 404
7za – command name
e – specifies the 7z to be extracted
myfiles.7z – is the file that is to be extracted
Creating a 7zip compression file in Linux
$ 7za a myfiles.7z myfiles/
7-Zip (A) 9.04 beta Copyright (c) 1999-2009 Igor Pavlov 2009-05-30
p7zip Version 9.04 (locale=C,Utf16=off,HugeFiles=on,1 CPU)
Scanning
Creating archive myfiles.7z
Compressing myfiles/test1
Compressing myfiles/test2
Everything is Ok
Install p7zip package as shown below.
Install p7zip to unzip *.7z files on CentOS
# yum install p7zip
Uncompressing a *.7z 7zip files in Linux using 7za
$ 7za e myfiles.7z
7-Zip (A) 9.04 beta Copyright (c) 1999-2009 Igor Pavlov 2009-05-30
p7zip Version 9.04 (locale=C,Utf16=off,HugeFiles=on,1 CPU)
Processing archive: ../../myfiles.7z
Extracting myfiles/test1
Extracting myfiles/test2
Extracting myfiles/test
Extracting myfiles
Everything is Ok
Folders: 1
Files: 3
Size: 7880
Compressed: 404
7za – command name
e – specifies the 7z to be extracted
myfiles.7z – is the file that is to be extracted
Creating a 7zip compression file in Linux
$ 7za a myfiles.7z myfiles/
7-Zip (A) 9.04 beta Copyright (c) 1999-2009 Igor Pavlov 2009-05-30
p7zip Version 9.04 (locale=C,Utf16=off,HugeFiles=on,1 CPU)
Scanning
Creating archive myfiles.7z
Compressing myfiles/test1
Compressing myfiles/test2
Everything is Ok
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
rpm for ATI video card
You can download latest executables to create rpm from the AMD website.
Or you can download the rpm from pkgs.org. Two required rpm are
flgrx-kmod
flgrx-x11-drv
My machine is running CentOS 5.7.
I ran rpm -i flgrx-kmod flgrx-x11-drv to install the packages.
If fglrxinfo says “mesa3d.org” instead of “ATI” Like below: (found in Madathil Unni's Blog)
you may need to type this command as root:
#set opengl ati
Now, opening the VM running Windows XP, you should not have no trouble enabling 3D accelerations on your XP VM.
Or you can download the rpm from pkgs.org. Two required rpm are
flgrx-kmod
flgrx-x11-drv
My machine is running CentOS 5.7.
I ran rpm -i flgrx-kmod flgrx-x11-drv to install the packages.
If fglrxinfo says “mesa3d.org” instead of “ATI” Like below: (found in Madathil Unni's Blog)
you may need to type this command as root:
#set opengl ati
Now, opening the VM running Windows XP, you should not have no trouble enabling 3D accelerations on your XP VM.
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