Begin forwarded message:
From: Gary Meyer <gary(a)sluug.org>
Subject: [DISCUSS] TODAY (WED) Command Line History, AMP stack. NEW LOCATION=SIEMENS
Date: October 9, 2019 at 12:18:32 AM CDT
To: SLUUG general discussion <discuss(a)sluug.org>
Reply-To: SLUUG general discussion <discuss(a)sluug.org>
STL Unix Users Group ~Command Line History, AMP stack
Wednesday, October 9
http://www.sluug.org/ <https://www.google.com>
VENUE Siemens, 13690 Riverport Dr, Maryland Heights, MO 63043
(use east doors, i.e. facing street w gas station.)
Meetings are every 2nd Wednesday of the month from 6:30PM to 9:00PM.
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BASIC/tutorial: Command Line History by David Forrest
Bang (!) is an affectionate way of referring to the GNU History library, or history
command. The library contains a structured array of previous command lines, containing
entry number, timestamp, commands and arguments, and tokenized stream editor commands a la
sed.
These sessions might show factors common with both personal and enterprise computing.
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MAIN: AMP stack on non-Linux systems
Installing, Configuring, and Using
by Lee Lammert
Extract from Wikipedia coverage of LAMP :
LAMP (Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP) is an archetypal model of web service stacks, named as an
acronym of the names of its original four open-source components: the Linux operating
system, the Apache HTTP Server, the MySQL relational database management system (RDBMS),
and the PHP programming language. The LAMP components are largely interchangeable and
not limited to the original selection. As a solution stack, LAMP is suitable for
building dynamic web sites and web applications.[
Since its creation, the LAMP model has been adapted to other componentry, though typically
consisting of free and open-source software. For example, an equivalent installation on
the Microsoft Windows family of operating systems is known as WAMP and an equivalent
installation on macOS is known as MAMP.
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SLUUG is your forum for exchanging information about OPEN standards, OPEN systems, OPEN
source, products, services and architectures.
We usually start the general meeting with a basic session, which may include either simple
tutorials, displays of newly discovered web sites, command line wonders, demonstrations of
useful applications, amazing graphical packages, major resolution of long standing
anomalies, blinking lights, or quantum shifts in both time and space. Then we will have
our usually quick welcome, introduction, administrative announcements, and a Call For Help
- Questions and Answers Period. After all that, we take a break before our main event.
Creator: Created by: Reichardt, StanCreated by: Reichardt, Stan