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  2. nmon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nmon

    nmon (Nigel's Monitor [2]) is a computer performance system monitor tool for the AIX and Linux operating systems. [3] [4] The nmon tool has two modes a) displays the performance stats on-screen in a condensed format or b) the same stats are saved to a comma-separated values (CSV) data file for later graphing and analysis to aid the understanding of computer resource use, tuning options and ...

  3. Mach-O - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mach-O

    The size of load commands is used as a redundancy check. When the last load command is read and the number of bytes for the load commands do not match, or if we go outside the number of bytes for load commands before reaching the last load command, then the file may be corrupted. Each load command is a sequence of entries in the following form ...

  4. file (command) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_(command)

    The command tells only what the file looks like, not what it is (in the case where file looks at the content). It is easy to fool the program by putting a magic number into a file the content of which does not match it. Thus the command is not usable as a security tool other than in specific situations.

  5. Filesystem Hierarchy Standard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filesystem_Hierarchy_Standard

    Users' home directories, containing saved files, personal settings, etc. /lib: Libraries essential for the binaries in /bin and /sbin. /lib<qual> Alternate format essential libraries. These are typically used on systems that support more than one executable code format, such as systems supporting 32-bit and 64-bit versions of an instruction set ...

  6. Unix file types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix_file_types

    A file's type can be identified by the ls -l command, which displays the type in the first character of the file-system permissions field. For regular files, Unix does not impose or provide any internal file structure; therefore, their structure and interpretation is entirely dependent on the software using them. [2]

  7. Hierarchical Data Format - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hierarchical_Data_Format

    Hierarchical Data Format (HDF) is a set of file formats (HDF4, HDF5) designed to store and organize large amounts of data.Originally developed at the U.S. National Center for Supercomputing Applications, it is supported by The HDF Group, a non-profit corporation whose mission is to ensure continued development of HDF5 technologies and the continued accessibility of data stored in HDF.

  8. RPM Package Manager - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPM_Package_Manager

    A file archive (the payload), which usually is in cpio format, compressed with gzip. The rpm2cpio tool enables retrieval of the cpio file without needing to install the RPM package. [18] The Linux Standard Base requires the use of gzip, but Fedora 30 packages are xz-compressed and Fedora 31 packages might be zstd-compressed. [19]

  9. man page - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man_page

    xman, an early X11 application for viewing manual pages OpenBSD section 8 intro man page, displaying in a text console. Before Unix (e.g., GCOS), documentation was printed pages, available on the premises to users (staff, students...), organized into steel binders, locked together in one monolithic steel reading rack, bolted to a table or counter, with pages organized for modular information ...