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Linux Porting Tutorials

With Chiphopper you get significant application porting cost reductions.Chiphopper provides tools to scrub their C/C++ code for portability prior to porting to System p, System i, or System z.
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Here's some help to port your applications from Windows, Solaris, and OS/2 to run natively on Linux on x86-based systems. The information here also covers porting from Windows to Java and porting and migrating x86-based Linux apps to Linux on multiple other hardware platforms.
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Accelerate your porting efforts by following this six-step guide to porting from Solaris to Linux on POWER. Learn the differences between Solaris and Linux on POWER that you commonly encounter during a port. Also learn about tools for performance analysis and software packaging for Linux on POWER.
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Created by Cognos experts from real-life customer experiences, these Cognos best Practices in Development, Performance, Financial Management, Reporting, Infrastructure, Security, Modeling, and Migration is your source for rich technical information that is tried, tested, and proven to help you succeed with Cognos products in your specific technology environment.
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This article gives an overview on configuration of Advanced Accounting for WPARs with examples, methods of enabling WPAR Accounting, and the various reporting tools available for viewing the accounting records.
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IBM AIX V6.1 introduced the software-based partition technology called Workload Partitions (WPAR). This article provides an overview of auditing subsystems in a WPAR environment and presents information about the audit reporting tools that can be used to view the audit records.
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Writing software for more than one UNIX platform can be difficult. This tutorial covers tools and tricks that can make the process of supporting different UNIX platforms significantly easier at the code level.
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Participate in the open beta program for IBM Rational Quality Manager, a collaborative, web-based quality management solution for test planning, workflow control, and tracking and metrics reporting. Rational Quality Manager enables you to quantify how project decisions and deliverables impact and align with business objectives.
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Examine methods for reporting on e-mail usage and getting detailed statistics on mailbox use. Depending on your UNIX systems, you might even be able to glean more detailed information, such as identifying which users are using their folders effectively and who could benefit from further training and advice.
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Delve into some of the compiler options used to build Visual C++ projects and the UNIX and g++ equivalents, takes a closer look at the g++ attribute mechanism as it relates to porting, and examines some common problems you might encounter while porting from a 32-bit Windows environment to a 64-bit UNIX environment.
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Explore new ways to record UNIX logins and other system activities in a number of different logs, and take advantage of this information to monitor user usage. This can be helpful from a number of perspectives, either to use for chargeback reporting or just to get an idea of how busy and active individual users are on the system to help when planning and allocating resources.
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Although beneficial for users, heterogeneity can vex software developers who must build and support packages on a multitude of similar platforms. Fortunately, if an application conforms to the Linux Standard Base (LSB), and a flavor of Linux is LSB compliant, the application is guaranteed to run. Discover the LSB, and learn how to port your code to the standard.
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ZABBIX is a 24×7 monitoring solution without high cost.ZABBIX is software that monitors numerous parameters of a network and the health and integrity of servers. ZABBIX uses a flexible notification mechanism that allows users to configure e-mail based alerts for virtually any event. This allows a fast reaction to server problems. ZABBIX offers excellent reporting and data visualization features based on the stored data. This makes ZABBIX ideal for capacity planning.
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