lsb(8) System Manager's Manual lsb(8)NAME
lsb - Linux Standard Base support for Debian
DESCRIPTION
The lsb package provides infrastructure for installing Linux Standard Base applications on Debian. This manual page is designed to refer
system adminstrators and others to the documentation available.
The Linux Standard Base is a common runtime environment for third-party packages. The goal of the LSB is to make it easy to create binary
packages that will run on any Linux distribution. For more information on the standard, please see the LSB web site.
SEE ALSO
/usr/share/doc/lsb-core/README.Debian.gz http://www.linuxbase.org/ http://refspecs.linuxbase.org/lsb.shtml
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Chris Lawrence <lawrencc@debian.org> for the Debian system (but may be used by others).
2002-02-24 lsb(8)
Check Out this Related Man Page
lsb_release(1) General Commands Manual lsb_release(1)NAME
lsb_release - print distribution-specific information
SYNOPSIS
lsb_release [options]
DESCRIPTION
The lsb_release command provides certain LSB (Linux Standard Base) and distribution-specific information.
If no options are given, the -v option is assumed.
OPTIONS
The program follows the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes (`--'). A summary of options are
included below.
-v, --version
Show the version of the LSB against which your current installation is compliant. The version is expressed as a colon separated
list of LSB module descriptions.
-i, --id
Display the distributor's ID.
-d, --description
Display a description of the currently installed distribution.
-r, --release
Display the release number of the currently installed distribution.
-c, --codename
Display the code name of the currently installed distribution.
-a, --all
Display all of the above information.
-s, --short
Use the short output format for any information displayed. This format omits the leading header(s).
-h, --help
Show summary of options.
NOTES
This is a reimplementation of the lsb_release command provided by the Free Standards Group. Any bugs are solely the responsibility of the
author below.
Detection of systems using a mix of packages from various distributions or releases is something of a black art; the current heuristic
tends to assume that the installation is of the earliest distribution which is still being used by apt but that heuristic is subject to
error.
SEE ALSO lsb(8)AUTHOR
Chris Lawrence <lawrencc@debian.org>.
lsb_release(1)
Hi!
I'm having some troubles to make a Unix system communicate with a Linux system, because the LSB and MSB of an 'int' is inverted in each other.
I can't use a Algorithm for Bit Reversal, because I would have to change a lot of the services that I use im my application.
Is there any way to... (3 Replies)
Hi
i have shared object file called libvp.so , which is
ELF 32-bit LSB shared object, Intel 80386, version 1 (SYSV), dynamically linked, not stripped
i am calling this program on architecture 64-bit MSB machine ( zLinux)
is there anyway to convert between LSB to MSB ??
what is... (2 Replies)
I don't know why, but the rendering of my code mucks up the spacing and indentation, despite being correct in the original file. I'm having issues getting the following script to run (specifically the nested script at the end of the docker command near the end of the script; I think I'm not passing... (2 Replies)
lsblk -o NAME | grep -A1 -w "sdh" |grep -v "sdh"
└─mpathw
Note the above output
I would like to create variable called $MPATH
echo $MPATH using the input of the above
echo $MPATH
mpatchw
Basically, I am trying to grab the NAME after the bar/dash configuration
------ Post... (1 Reply)
When I use lsblk | tail -1 | awk -F " " '{print $1}' command and if a disk is a multipath I get output as └─mpathe
But i need only mpathe to be grepped as output.. Please help.. But It works well if the disk is not mpath (2 Replies)