From de7e5867a65e0a46f1388e3e50bc7eeddd1aecbf Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Timothy Pearson Date: Sun, 27 Jan 2013 01:02:02 -0600 Subject: Rename a number of libraries and executables to avoid conflicts with KDE4 --- doc/tdeioslave/CMakeLists.txt | 12 +++ doc/tdeioslave/Makefile.am | 4 + doc/tdeioslave/bzip.docbook | 29 +++++++ doc/tdeioslave/bzip2.docbook | 29 +++++++ doc/tdeioslave/cgi.docbook | 24 ++++++ doc/tdeioslave/data.docbook | 47 +++++++++++ doc/tdeioslave/file.docbook | 20 +++++ doc/tdeioslave/finger.docbook | 33 ++++++++ doc/tdeioslave/fish.docbook | 66 +++++++++++++++ doc/tdeioslave/floppy.docbook | 51 ++++++++++++ doc/tdeioslave/ftp.docbook | 43 ++++++++++ doc/tdeioslave/gopher.docbook | 39 +++++++++ doc/tdeioslave/gzip.docbook | 30 +++++++ doc/tdeioslave/help.docbook | 17 ++++ doc/tdeioslave/http.docbook | 25 ++++++ doc/tdeioslave/https.docbook | 21 +++++ doc/tdeioslave/imap.docbook | 31 +++++++ doc/tdeioslave/imaps.docbook | 17 ++++ doc/tdeioslave/index.docbook | 93 +++++++++++++++++++++ doc/tdeioslave/info.docbook | 36 +++++++++ doc/tdeioslave/lan.docbook | 23 ++++++ doc/tdeioslave/ldap.docbook | 23 ++++++ doc/tdeioslave/mac.docbook | 53 ++++++++++++ doc/tdeioslave/mailto.docbook | 17 ++++ doc/tdeioslave/man.docbook | 86 ++++++++++++++++++++ doc/tdeioslave/mrml.docbook | 26 ++++++ doc/tdeioslave/news.docbook | 20 +++++ doc/tdeioslave/nfs.docbook | 39 +++++++++ doc/tdeioslave/nntp.docbook | 41 ++++++++++ doc/tdeioslave/pop3.docbook | 13 +++ doc/tdeioslave/pop3s.docbook | 14 ++++ doc/tdeioslave/print.docbook | 170 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ doc/tdeioslave/rlan.docbook | 11 +++ doc/tdeioslave/rlogin.docbook | 31 +++++++ doc/tdeioslave/sftp.docbook | 19 +++++ doc/tdeioslave/smb.docbook | 56 +++++++++++++ doc/tdeioslave/smtp.docbook | 16 ++++ doc/tdeioslave/tar.docbook | 18 +++++ doc/tdeioslave/telnet.docbook | 17 ++++ doc/tdeioslave/thumbnail.docbook | 28 +++++++ doc/tdeioslave/webdav.docbook | 65 +++++++++++++++ doc/tdeioslave/webdavs.docbook | 17 ++++ 42 files changed, 1470 insertions(+) create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/CMakeLists.txt create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/Makefile.am create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/bzip.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/bzip2.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/cgi.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/data.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/file.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/finger.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/fish.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/floppy.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/ftp.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/gopher.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/gzip.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/help.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/http.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/https.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/imap.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/imaps.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/index.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/info.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/lan.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/ldap.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/mac.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/mailto.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/man.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/mrml.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/news.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/nfs.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/nntp.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/pop3.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/pop3s.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/print.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/rlan.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/rlogin.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/sftp.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/smb.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/smtp.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/tar.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/telnet.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/thumbnail.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/webdav.docbook create mode 100644 doc/tdeioslave/webdavs.docbook (limited to 'doc/tdeioslave') diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/CMakeLists.txt b/doc/tdeioslave/CMakeLists.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..5446ddbea --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/CMakeLists.txt @@ -0,0 +1,12 @@ +################################################# +# +# (C) 2010-2011 Serghei Amelian +# serghei (DOT) amelian (AT) gmail.com +# +# Improvements and feedback are welcome +# +# This file is released under GPL >= 2 +# +################################################# + +tde_create_handbook( DESTINATION tdeioslave ) diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/Makefile.am b/doc/tdeioslave/Makefile.am new file mode 100644 index 000000000..085981d9b --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/Makefile.am @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ + +KDE_LANG = en +KDE_DOCS = AUTO + diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/bzip.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/bzip.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..e4e7d1bff --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/bzip.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,29 @@ +
+bzip + + +&Lauri.Watts; &Lauri.Watts.mail; + + + + +bzip is a compression program. It is rarely +used today, having been replaced with bzip2, which offers much better +compression. + +The bzip tdeioslave is not directly usable, and is intended for use +as a filter. For example, the tar tdeioslave can filter a file through +the bzip tdeioslave, in order to display the contents of a tar.bz file directly in a &konqueror; +window. + +If you click on a file compressed with a bz extension in &konqueror;, this tdeioslave is +used to uncompress it and display it as a normal (uncompressed) +file. + +If you are a developer, and would like to use the bzip filter, +you can find documentation on using tdeioslaves at http://developer.kde.org + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/bzip2.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/bzip2.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..ecc2b2e29 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/bzip2.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,29 @@ +
+bzip2 + + +&Lauri.Watts; &Lauri.Watts.mail; + + + + +Bzip2 is a compression program + +The bzip2 tdeioslave is not directly usable, and is intended for use +as a filter. For example, the tar tdeioslave can filter a file through +the bzip2 tdeioslave, in order to display the contents of a tar.bz2 file directly in a &konqueror; +window. + +If you click on a file compressed with a .bz2 in &konqueror;, this tdeioslave is used to +uncompress it and display it as a normal (uncompressed) file. + +If you are a developer, and would like to use the bzip2 filter, +you can find documentation on using tdeioslaves at http://developer.kde.org + + See the manual: bzip2. + + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/cgi.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/cgi.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..5df94da13 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/cgi.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,24 @@ +
+cgi + + +&Lauri.Watts;&Lauri.Watts.mail; + + + + +The CGI slave provides a way to execute +CGI programs without the need to have a running web +server. This can for example be used for local testing of +CGI programs or for using search engines that only +provide a CGI frontend like the one from +Doxygen. + +The slave implements the cgi: protocol. It +uses the filename from the given &URL; and searches a configurable +list of folders. If it finds an executable with the given name it +executes it, passes the arguments of the &URL; and sets the +environment variables needed by CGI +programs. + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/data.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/data.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..ca0e4e9a5 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/data.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,47 @@ +
+Data URLs + + + +LeoSavernik +
l.savernik@aon.at
+
+ +
+ +2003-02-06 + + +
+ +Data URLs allow small document data to be included in the URL itself. +This is useful for very small HTML testcases or other occasions that do not +justify a document of their own. + +data:,foobar +(note the comma after the colon) will deliver a text document that contains +nothing but foobar + + +The last example delivered a text document. For HTML documents one +has to specify the MIME type text/html: +data:text/html,<title>Testcase</title><p>This +is a testcase</p>. This will produce exactly the same +output as if the content had been loaded from a document of its own. + + +Specifying alternate character sets is also possible. Note that 8-Bit +characters have to be escaped by a percentage sign and their two-digit +hexadecimal codes: +data:;charset=iso-8859-1,Gr%FC%DFe aus Schl%E4gl +results in +Grüße aus Schlägl +whereas omitting the charset attribute might lead to something like +Gr??e aus Schl?gl + + +IETF +RFC2397 provides more information. + +
+ diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/file.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/file.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..6d19b0436 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/file.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,20 @@ +
+file + + +&Ferdinand.Gassauer; &Ferdinand.Gassauer.mail; + + + + + +The file protocol is used by all &tde; applications to +display locally available files. + + +Entering +file:/directoryname in &konqueror; + lists the files of this folder. + + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/finger.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/finger.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..b3678fc4d --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/finger.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,33 @@ +
+finger + + +&Lauri.Watts;&Lauri.Watts.mail; + + + + +Finger is a program to display information about users. + +If finger is enabled on the remote machine, you may be given +information on the user's real name, if they are currently logged in, if +they have mail and the text of their .plan file in +their home folder. + +Finger is normally associated with a user@hostname address, which +may or may not be the same as a users email address. + +Most Internet Service Providers no longer allow finger access, so, +you may find that you get no useful answer for most people. + +Other people use their local .plan file to +hold such information as PGP keys, the fact they are +on vacation, and all sorts of information. + +Use the finger tdeioslave like this: +finger://username@hostname + + See the manual: finger. + + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/fish.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/fish.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..577199e8b --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/fish.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,66 @@ +
+fish + + +&Joerg.Walter; &Joerg.Walter.mail; +&Brad.Hards; &Brad.Hards.mail; + + + +2005-02-29 +1.1.2 + + + +Allows you to access another computer's files using the SEcure Shell (SSH) protocol. The remote computer needs to be running the SSH daemon, but the remainder of the protocol uses standard commandline tools as discussed below. + +You can use the fish tdeioslave like this: +fish://hostname or fish://username@hostname. + +You need to use double forward slashes. + +You can omit the username (and the trailing +@ symbol) if you have the same username on both computers. + +You can add a password in the format: +fish://username:password@hostname +but it is not necessary as you will be prompted for one if it is not +supplied. + +If you are running the SSH daemon on a non-standard +port, you can specify that port using the normal &URL; syntax as shown +below: +fish://hostname:portnumber. + +Fish should work with any roughly POSIX compatible +&UNIX; based remote computer. It uses the shell commands +cat, chgrp, +chmod, chown, +cp, dd, +env, expr, +grep, ls, +mkdir, mv, +rm, rmdir, +sed, +and wc. Fish starts +/bin/sh as its shell and expects it to be a +Bourne shell (or compatible, like bash). +If the sed and +file commands are available, as well as a +/etc/apache/magic file with &MIME; type +signatures, these will be used to guess &MIME; types. + + +If Perl is available on the remote +machine, it will be used instead. Then only env and +/bin/sh are needed. Using +Perl has the additional benefit of being +faster. + +Fish may even work on &Windows; machines, if tools like +Cygwin are installed. All the above +utilities must be in the system PATH, and the initial +shell must be able to process the command echo +FISH:;/bin/sh correctly. + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/floppy.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/floppy.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..5a75ba25c --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/floppy.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,51 @@ +
+Floppy + + +&Alexander.Neundorf; &Alexander.Neundorf.mail; + + + + + +The floppy ioslave gives you easy access to the floppy disk drives +installed on your system. + + + +The drive letter becomes the first subdirectory +in the floppy &URL;. Let's say there is a file logo.png on your floppy +disk in drive A, then the &URL; will be floppy:/a/logo.png + + + +If you want to access drive B, floppy:/b will do it. +floppy:/ is a shortcut for floppy:/a. + + +Note that floppy:/logo.png means you have a disk drive +named logo.png. + + +To use it you need to have the mtools package +installed, and the floppy ioslave supports everything the various mtools +command line utilities support. You don't have to mount your floppy disks, +simply enter floppy:/ in any &tde; 3.x app and you will be able to +read from and write to your floppy drive. + + +It also works with USB sticks, ZIP and JAZ drives. +You can use floppy:/u for the USB stick and floppy:/z for the zip drive, for example. +To make this work, you might need to adjust your /etc/mtools file. See the manpage +for documentation. + + +The ioslave gives read and write access to the floppy drive, but not +simultaneously. While you can read and write to the floppy during the same +session, reading and writing have to happen one after the other, not at the same +time. + +Author: Alexander Neundorf neundorf@kde.org + +
+ diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/ftp.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/ftp.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..eb9e7056c --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/ftp.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,43 @@ +
+&FTP; + + +&Lauri.Watts; &Lauri.Watts.mail; + + + + + +&FTP; is the Internet service used to transfer a data file from the disk of +one computer to the disk of another, regardless of the operating system type. + + + Similar to other Internet applications, &FTP; uses the +client-server approach — a user invokes an &FTP; program on the +computer, instructs it to contact a remote computer, and then requests +the transfer of one or more files. The local &FTP; program becomes a +client that uses TCP to contact an &FTP; server +program on the remote computer. Each time the user requests a file +transfer, the client and the server programs cooperate to send a copy +of the data across the Internet. + + &FTP; servers which allow anonymous &FTP; permit +any user, not only users with accounts on the host, to browse the +ftp archives and download files. Some &FTP; servers are +configured to allow users to upload files. + + +&FTP; is commonly used to retrieve information and obtain software stored in +files at &FTP; archive sites throughout the world. + + + + +Source: Paraphrased from +http://tlc.nlm.nih.gov/resources/tutorials/internetdistlrn/ftpdef.htm + + + See the manual: ftp. + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/gopher.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/gopher.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..29e418faf --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/gopher.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,39 @@ +
+gopher + + +&Lauri.Watts; &Lauri.Watts.mail; + + + + + +gopher began as a distributed campus information service +at the University of Minnesota. Gopher allows the user to access information +on Gopher servers running on Internet hosts. + + +Gopher is an Internet information browsing service that uses a menu-driven +interface. Users select information from menus, which may return another +menu or display a text file. An item may reside on a Gopher server you +originally queried, or it may be on another Gopher server (or another host). +Gopher can tunnel from one Gopher to another without the +user knowing that the server and/or host machine have changed. Gopher keeps +the exact location of computers hidden from the user, providing the +illusion of a single, large set of interconnected menus. + + + +Gopher permits the user to record an item's location in a +bookmark thereby allowing users to follow a +bookmark directly to a particular item without +searching the menu system. Gopher menus are not standardized, inasmuch as +each Gopher server is individually determined. + + + +Source: + http://tlc.nlm.nih.gov/resources/tutorials/internetdistlrn/gophrdef.htm + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/gzip.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/gzip.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..03a6b9964 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/gzip.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,30 @@ +
+gzip + + +&Lauri.Watts; &Lauri.Watts.mail; + + + + +gzip is a compression program + +The gzip tdeioslave is not directly usable, and is intended for use +as a filter. For example, the tar tdeioslave can filter a file through +the gzip tdeioslave, in order to display the contents of a tar.gz file directly in a &konqueror; +window. + +If you click on a file compressed with a gz extension in &konqueror;, this tdeioslave is +used to uncompress it and display it as a normal (uncompressed) +file. + +If you are a developer, and would like to use the gzip filter, you +can find documentation on using tdeioslaves at http://developer.kde.org + + See the manual: gzip. + + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/help.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/help.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..43b806de8 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/help.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,17 @@ +
+help + + +&Ferdinand.Gassauer;&Ferdinand.Gassauer.mail; + + + + + +The help system of &tde; + + + See The &khelpcenter;. + + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/http.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/http.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..535370b66 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/http.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,25 @@ +
+http + + +&Lauri.Watts; &Lauri.Watts.mail; + + + + +http is the +HyperText +Transfer Protocol. + +The http tdeioslave is used by all &tde; applications to handle +connections to http servers, that is, web servers. The most common +usage is to view web pages in the &konqueror; web browser. + +You can use the http tdeioslave in &konqueror; by giving it a +URL. +http://www.kde.org. + + See the manual: http. + + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/https.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/https.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..bbaa1b0a3 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/https.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,21 @@ +
+https + + +&Ferdinand.Gassauer; &Ferdinand.Gassauer.mail; + + + + +HTTPS is +HTTP + encapsulated in an SSL/TLS stream. + + +SSL is the Secure Sockets Layer protocol, a security protocol that provides communications privacy over the Internet. The protocol allows client/server applications to communicate in a way that is designed to prevent eavesdropping, tampering, or message forgery. + + +TLS stands for Transport Layer Security + + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/imap.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/imap.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..8778877ce --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/imap.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,31 @@ +
+imap + + +&Michael.Haeckel; &Michael.Haeckel.mail; + + + +2001-08-07 + + + + +The IMAP4rev1 protocol (Internet Message Access Protocol) allows +access to messages in mail folders on a server. Unlike POP3, which is designed +to download the mails and delete them from the server, the purpose of IMAP is +to store all mails on the server to be able to access these mails from +everywhere. Messages can be stored on the server, retrieved from there or +moved between folders. + +This plugin is currently mainly used by KMail, but you can also use it +in any other KDE application that uses tdeioslave plugins. + +For example in &konqueror;, simply type +imap://username@your.mail.server/ to get your IMAP +folders listed. You can then deal with the folders and mails like with folders +and files on a local file system. +IMAP URLs are defined in RFC 2192. + + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/imaps.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/imaps.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..fc046944c --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/imaps.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,17 @@ +
+imaps + + +&Michael.Haeckel; &Michael.Haeckel.mail; + + + +2001-08-07 + + + + +IMAPS is the IMAP protocol +encrypted via SSL. + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/index.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/index.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..8a9672a5a --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/index.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,93 @@ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +TDEPrint"> +FerdinandGassauer'> +f.gassauer@aon.at'> + + +]> + + +IO-Slaves +&kio-bzip; +&kio-bzip2; +&kio-cgi; +&kio-data; +&kio-file; +&kio-finger; +&kio-fish; +&kio-floppy; +&kio-ftp; +&kio-gopher; +&kio-gzip; +&kio-help; +&kio-http; +&kio-https; +&kio-imap; +&kio-imaps; +&kio-info; +&kio-lan; +&kio-ldap; +&kio-mailto; +&kio-mac; +&kio-man; +&kio-mrml; +&kio-news; +&kio-nfs; +&kio-nntp; +&kio-pop3; +&kio-pop3s; +&kio-print; +&kio-rlan; +&kio-rlogin; +&kio-sftp; +&kio-smb; +&kio-smtp; +&kio-tar; +&kio-telnet; +&kio-thumbnail; +&kio-webdav; +&kio-webdavs; + + + diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/info.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/info.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..1ea645c33 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/info.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,36 @@ +
+Info + + +&Lauri.Watts; &Lauri.Watts.mail; + + Nicolas + Goutte + goutte@kde.org + + + + + +Info is a type of documentation. The documents are in a file +format called texinfo, and can be read on the command line with the +info program. + +The Info ioslave allows you to read the info pages installed on +your system, from within &konqueror;. You can use it very easily: + +info:gcc + +This would show you the top level node of the Info documentation +for the &gcc; compiler. + +Info is a &GNU; replacement for +man, but is not widely used outside of +&GNU; software. + +You can quite easily browse the info documentation you have +installed from within the &khelpcenter; application, or you can use the +info ioslave directly from within both &konqueror; and the +mini-cli. + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/lan.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/lan.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..ad75ce385 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/lan.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,23 @@ +
+lan + + +&Ferdinand.Gassauer; &Ferdinand.Gassauer.mail; + + + + + +This protocol is intended to provide a kind of network +neighborhood but only relying on the TCP/IP protocol stack and with +the ability to use other protocols than just SMB. + +The lan tdeioslave can use &FTP;, &HTTP;, SMB, +NFS, and FISH + +It must first be configured in &kcontrol;, +NetworkLAN-Browsing + and for more information see the +Lan Browsing manual. + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/ldap.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/ldap.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..48515751d --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/ldap.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,23 @@ +
+ldap + + +&Lauri.Watts; &Lauri.Watts.mail; + + + + +ldap is the lightweight directory access +protocol. It provides access to an X.500 directory, or to a stand-alone +LDAP server. + +You can use the ldap tdeioslave as follows: + +ldap://host:port/ou=People,o=where,c=de??sub +for a subtree-query + +or +ldap://host:port/cn=MM,ou=People,o=where,c=de??base +for a complete branch. + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/mac.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/mac.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a0ea6d691 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/mac.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,53 @@ +
+mac + + +JohnathanRiddelljr@jriddell.org + + + + + +The mac ioslave lets you read an HFS+ partition from &konqueror; +or any other &tde; file dialog. It uses hfsplus +tools, so you will need these installed for it to work. + +Enter mac:/ into &konqueror; and you +should see the contents of your &MacOS; partition. If you have not +used kio-mac before, you will probably get an error message saying you +have not specified the right partition. Enter something like +mac:/ to specify +the partition (if you don't know which partition &MacOS; is on, you +can probably guess by changing hda2 to hda3 and so on or use the print +command from mac-fdisk). This partition will be +used the next time, so you do not have to specify it each time. + +Hfsplus tools let you see the file and copy +data from the HFS+ partition, but not to copy data to it or change the +filenames. + +HFS+ actually keeps two files for every one you see (called +forks), a resource fork and a data fork. The default copy mode when +you are copying files across to your native drive is raw data, which +means it only copies the data fork. Text files are copied in text mode +(same as raw format but changes the line endings to be &UNIX; friendly +and gets rid of some extra characters - strongly advised for text +files), unless you specify otherwise. You can also copy the files +across in Mac Binary II format or specify text or raw format with +another query: +mac:/ or +mac:/. See the +hpcopy man page for more. + +Note that you need permissions to read your HFS+ partition. How +you get this depends on your distribution. + +For some reason some folders in &MacOS; end in a funny tall +f character. This seems to confuse hfstools. + +
+ diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/mailto.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/mailto.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..ac7fddd46 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/mailto.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,17 @@ +
+mailto + + +&Ferdinand.Gassauer; &Ferdinand.Gassauer.mail; + + + +The mailto tdeioslave is used when you click on a mailto link in an +HTML page. &konqueror; will open the preferred mail +client you have configured, with a composer window. Any information +supplied in the URL will be filled in for you. + + +See the manual: mailto. + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/man.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/man.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..8f3324ff1 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/man.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,86 @@ +
+Man + + +&Lauri.Watts; &Lauri.Watts.mail; + + Nicolas + Goutte + goutte@kde.org + + + + + + +Using the man ioslave you are able to read the man pages installed +on your system. It is easy to use: + + + + +man: + +See the sections of the manual, click to find the rest. + + + + +man:fopen + +See the man page of fopen. + + + + +man:fopen(3) + +See the man page of fopen in section 3. + + + + +man:(3) + +See the index of section 3. + + + + +man:intro(3) + +See the introduction of section 3. + + + + + +If there are more than one man page of the name that you +have entered, you will get a list where you can choose the man page +that you want to see. + + +There is also a shortcut: #fopen, +which has the same effect as above. + + + +If you do not find all your man pages, adjust the configuration file +/etc/manpath.config +(or a file of a similar name depending on your distribution) +or adjust the environment variables +MANPATH and MANSECT. + + + +As with any other &tde; ioslave, it is possible to enter a &URL;, like +man:socket in any +&tde; application. Try it in &kwrite; and you will see the man page in +&HTML; format. + + + +Contact mailing list: kde-devel@kde.org + + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/mrml.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/mrml.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..6dcde8bd6 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/mrml.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,26 @@ +
+mrml + + +&Carsten.Pfeiffer; &Carsten.Pfeiffer.mail; + + + + +2003-01-08 + + + + +MRML stands for Multimedia Retrieval Markup Language. MRML is an XML-based +protocol to provide standardized access to Multimedia retrieval software. +See http://www.mrml.net for more information. + + +kio_mrml is used for the Image Finding feature in &tde; + +⪚ type mrml:/ or mrml:/some.other.server in &konqueror; to start searching for +images. + + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/news.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/news.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..d13f2b715 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/news.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,20 @@ +
+news + + +&Lauri.Watts; &Lauri.Watts.mail; + + + + + +The news tdeioslave is used when you click on a news link on a web +page. It will open &knode;, and if the group referred to in the news +link is available from your server, it will subscribe you to the group, in +the first available account you have configured in &knode; + +You can unsubscribe from within &knode; if you decide you don't +want to read the group, by right clicking and +selecting Unsubscribe from Group. + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/nfs.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/nfs.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..bbe9bb625 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/nfs.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,39 @@ +
+nfs + + +&Lauri.Watts; &Lauri.Watts.mail; + + + + +Sun's NFS protocol provides transparent remote access to +shared file systems across networks. The NFS protocol is +designed to be machine, operating system, network architecture, and +transport protocol independent. This independence is achieved through the +use of Remote Procedure Call (RPC) primitives built on +top of an eXternal Data Representation (XDR). + + + +The supporting MOUNT protocol performs the operating system-specific +functions that allow clients to attach remote folder trees to a point +within the local file system. The mount process also allows the server to +grant remote access privileges to a restricted set of clients via export +control. + + +The Lock Manager provides support for file locking when used in the +NFS environment. The Network Lock Manager +(NLM) protocol isolates the inherently stateful aspects +of file locking into a separate protocol. + + +Source: + +http://www.networksorcery.com/enp/protocol/nfs.htm + + + See the manual: nfs. + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/nntp.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/nntp.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..20de8e952 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/nntp.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,41 @@ +
+nntp + + +&Lauri.Watts; &Lauri.Watts.mail; + + + +The nntp tdeioslave accesses NNTP servers +directly. + +This tdeioslave can not be used with servers that do not implement +the GROUP command, including some versions of the +popular INN news server which is often used +by ISPs. It does work with +leafnode, which many people use to keep an +offline cache of news articles on their own hard drive or within their +LAN. + +You can use the nntp tdeioslave by typing +nntp://yourserver/groupname into the &konqueror; +URL bar. + +If you enter a group name, as above, and the group is available, +you will see the messages stored for that group as icons in +&konqueror;. + +Clicking on a message will display it as plain text, including all +headers. This could be useful for debugging a news client to news +server connection, for example, to ensure that your new +leafnode server is working correctly. + +If you don't enter a group name, and only the server name, you +will see a list of available groups. + +Please be aware that this could take an enormous amount of time, and +will cause a lot of network traffic. Some commercial usenet servers +have 60,000 or more groups available, and doing such a thing may +cause your desktop to freeze. + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/pop3.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/pop3.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..1c956a1cd --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/pop3.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,13 @@ +
+pop3 + + +&Ferdinand.Gassauer; &Ferdinand.Gassauer.mail; + + + + +The Post Office Protocol (POP3) allows a user's workstation to access mail from a mailbox server. + + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/pop3s.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/pop3s.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..856709e80 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/pop3s.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,14 @@ +
+pop3s + + +&Ferdinand.Gassauer; &Ferdinand.Gassauer.mail; + + + + +POP3S is the POP3 protocol encrypted via SSL. + + + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/print.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/print.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..fa102c3af --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/print.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,170 @@ +
+print + + +&Kurt.Pfeifle; &Kurt.Pfeifle.mail; + + + + +2002-06-23 +1.00.00 + + + +The print KIOSlave gives quick access to browse +different &tdeprint; sections via virtual folders. +These folders provide some information about and quick access to your print +subsystem. + +print:/ represents one more of those useful +KIOSlaves implemented by &tde;. To access it, just type print:/ + into the address field of &konqueror;. print:/ + doesn't purely provide read-only access to + your print subsystem, but it also allows you to change settings + of your printers, of your print system and lets you create new printers + and classes. + +You are asked for the Administrator or root password, if you are +not allowed a view or an operation as a normal user. + +You can bookmark frequently used shortcuts like + print:/manager + +Valid syntax is either +print:/[path-to-virtual-folder] or +print:[path-to-virtual-folder] + +Note, that some of the views and actions offered do heavily + depend on the print subsystem that is installed on your box and presently +activated for &tde;. Pages showing printer information display only +those parts that are valid for the &tde; selected print subsystem. +(So if you normally run CUPS, but switched temporarily to + + + Generic UNIX LPD Printing, which is possible, you will see +less printer info, because LPD is not capable of using the same amount of +print settings as are possible in CUPS). + +Valid syntax to access different virtual folders +and a short explanation of what they represent: + + +Some examples + + +print:/ (&ie; the root of +print-tdeioslave) + + virtual root for browsing your print subsystem. + It displays subfolders Classes, + Jobs, + Manager, Printers, + and Specials + + + + +print:/classes or +print:classes + + view your printer classes + (supported by and useful for CUPS only) + + + + + + +print:/classes/class_name or + print:classes/class_name +view all members of the named + printer class (supported by and useful only + for CUPS) + + + + + +print:/jobs +or print:jobs + + lists the current and pending jobs. + + + + +print:/printers +or print:printers + + lists all your printers. Clicking + on a printer name shows more info about that printer. + + + + + +print:/printers/printer_name +or print:printers/printer_name + +displays useful info about the named + printer + + + + +print:/manager or +print:manager + +opens a page very similar to the &tdeprint; + Manager module inside the &tde; Control Center. + Switch to a different printing system here or do every + other administrative task. +This is the most important of access points to your printing + system. + + + + +print:/specials or +print:specials + +lists all presently available special printers: + Likely you'll see: + + + The two that let you save a printfile to disk, in + &PostScript; or PDF format. + + + One that sends it as a PDF attachment via +&kmail;. + + + And last, send it via fax, if you have one of the + supported fax backends active, +Hylafax or +efax. + + + + + + + +You can also put print:/manager + or similar as the command in + the Quick Command utility (started via +&Alt;F2) + +You can learn more about printing and &tdeprint;'s powerful abilities +by reading the &tdeprint; Handbook +locally or at the &tdeprint; +Website where there are documents online (HTML and +PDF),containing +Tutorials, + as well as FAQs and + Tips and Tricks related to printing in general. + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/rlan.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/rlan.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..b0d358aa0 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/rlan.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +
+rlan + + +The &tde; team + + + +Not yet documented + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/rlogin.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/rlogin.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..54e834e9f --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/rlogin.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,31 @@ +
+rlogin + + +ChristianBunting + + + +Using &konqueror; you can start up an rlogin +session with a server hosting the rlogin service. + +To use this tdeioslave feature, in the &konqueror; +URL bar, type +rlogin:/host_to_connect_to + +This will initialize &konsole; with an rlogin +session, prompting you for your password. + +The rlogin tdeioslave uses the username of the +account you are currently using in &tde;. + +After you have successfully entered your password, you can begin +your remote session. + + See the manual: rlogin. + + + + + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/sftp.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/sftp.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..ff2770a47 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/sftp.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,19 @@ +
+sftp + + +&Ferdinand.Gassauer; &Ferdinand.Gassauer.mail; + + + +SFTP is a Secure file transfer protocol. +sftp is an interactive file transfer program, +similar to ftp, but it performs all operations over an encrypted +ssh transport. It may use many of the features of +ssh, including public key authentication and +compression. + + See the manual: sftp. + + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/smb.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/smb.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..ef7e9ac98 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/smb.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,56 @@ +
+SMB + + +&Alexander.Neundorf; &Alexander.Neundorf.mail; + + + + +The smb ioslave enables you to browse the shares of a &Windows; (or Samba) +network. + + + +To see the workgroups, enter +smb:/. + + +smb://a_workgroup +will list the hosts in this workgroup. + + +To see the shares of a host, enter +smb://the_host +or +smb:/a_workgroup/the_host. + + +To access a share directly enter +smb://the_host/the_share +or +smb:/a_workgroup/the_host/the_share + + + +The smb ioslave requires that you have libsmbclient to use this ioslave. + + + +You can set your default user name and password in the &kcontrol; in +NetworkWindows +Shares. This is especially useful if you are a +member of a &Windows; NT domain. There you can also set your +workgroup name, but in most cases this is not required. The tdeioslave will ask for your username and password if a default is not set. + + + +This ioslave is tested and developed using mainly Samba 2.0.7, but other +versions of Samba should work too. + + + +Author: Alexander Neundorf neundorf@kde.org + +
+ diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/smtp.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/smtp.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..2aa2c7dbf --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/smtp.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,16 @@ +
+smtp + + +&Ferdinand.Gassauer; &Ferdinand.Gassauer.mail; + + + + +A protocol to send mail from the client workstation to the mail server. + + + See : Simple Mail Transfer Protocol . + + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/tar.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/tar.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..8a5405198 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/tar.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,18 @@ +
+tar + + +&Ferdinand.Gassauer; &Ferdinand.Gassauer.mail; + + + + +An archiving program designed to store and extract files from an archive +file known as a tarfile. A tarfile may be made on a tape drive, however, it +is also common to write a tarfile to a normal file. + + + See the manual: tar. + + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/telnet.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/telnet.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..9d2131e84 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/telnet.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,17 @@ +
+telnet + + +&Ferdinand.Gassauer; &Ferdinand.Gassauer.mail; + + + + +The network terminal protocol (TELNET) allows a user to log in on any other computer on the network supporting TELNET. + + + + See the manual: telnet. + + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/thumbnail.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/thumbnail.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..fb07fe5ac --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/thumbnail.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,28 @@ +
+thumbnail + + +&Carsten.Pfeiffer; &Carsten.Pfeiffer.mail; + + + +The thumbnail tdeioslave is used by &tde; for network transparent +and persistent generation of thumbnails. + +The thumbnail tdeioslave uses plugins to generate the actual +thumbnails. You can enable viewing of these thumbnails from the +View +Preview submenu, available in +&konqueror; in file manager mode. + +The thumbnail tdeioslave is not directly useful to a user, but if +you are a developer, you can use it within your own applications to +create file previews. + +See the documentation in the sources for more information. You +will find these at +$TDEDIR/include/tdeio/thumbcreator.h or +in the source folder tdebase/tdeioslave/thumbnail + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/webdav.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/webdav.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..8f46546b0 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/webdav.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,65 @@ +
+webdav + + +&Hamish.Rodda; &Hamish.Rodda.mail; + + + +2002-01-21 + + +WebDAV is a Distributed +Authoring and Versioning +protocol for the World Wide Web. It allows for easy management of +documents and scripts on a http server, and has +additional features designed to simplify version management amongst +multiple authors. + +Usage of this protocol is simple. Type the location you want to +view, similar to a http URL except for the +webdav:// protocol name at the start. An example is +webdav://www.hostname.com/path/. +If you specify a folder name, a list of files and folders will be +displayed, and you can manipulate these folders and files just as you +would with any other filesystem. + + +WebDAV Features + +Locking + +File locking allows users to lock a file, informing others that they +are +currently working on this file. This way, editing can be done without fear +that +the changes may be overwritten by another person who is also editing the +same +document. + + + +Source file access + +WebDAV allows access to the script which is called +to +produce a specific page, so changes can be made to the script itself. + + + +Per-document property support + +Arbitrary properties may be set to assist identification of a +document, +such as the author. + + + + +To take advantage of these additional capabilities, you will need an +application which supports them. No application currently supports them +through +this tdeioslave. + +
diff --git a/doc/tdeioslave/webdavs.docbook b/doc/tdeioslave/webdavs.docbook new file mode 100644 index 000000000..23dde138c --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/tdeioslave/webdavs.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,17 @@ +
+webdavs + + +&Hamish.Rodda; &Hamish.Rodda.mail; + + + +2002-01-21 + + + + +WebDAVS is the WebDAV protocol +encrypted via SSL. + +
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