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stringlengths 3
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class Tile
attr_writer :revealed, :flagged
attr_accessor :neighbors, :bomb, :position
def initialize()
@bomb = false
@revealed = false
@flagged = false
@position = nil
@neighbors = []
end
def inspect
inspect_hash = {
bomb: bomb?,
flagged: flagged?,
revealed: revealed?,
position: position,
neighbors: neighbors.map(&:position)
}.inspect
end
def bomb?
@bomb
end
def revealed?
@revealed
end
def reveal
if revealed?
p self
raise "Already revealed!"
end
self.revealed = true
if !bomb? && self.neighbor_bomb_count == 0
neighbors.each { |el| el.reveal unless el.flagged? || el.revealed? }
end
end
def flagged?
@flagged
end
def display_val
if revealed?
if bomb?
'B'
else
if neighbor_bomb_count > 0
neighbor_bomb_count.to_s
else
'_'
end
end
elsif flagged?
'F'
else
'*'
end
end
def neighbor_bomb_count
bomb_count = 0
neighbors.each do |neighbor|
bomb_count += 1 if neighbor.bomb?
end
bomb_count
end
end
|
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The present article comprises the full texts of a discussion in Chess Notes during its final year as a magazine.
‘Jeremy Silman’s claim that “chess” was being played at the beginning of the Persian civilization six thousand years ago sounds – leaving aside gimmick – fascinating and absurd.
Though it is now sufficiently proved and accepted that the game of “chess” originated around 570 A.D., the origin of “chaturanga” – from which “chess” is descended – remains obscure.
As a sequel to the partition of India in 1947 all the important sites of the Indus Civilization went over to Pakistan. Hence arose the necessity of finding Harappan (Indus Civilization) sites within the present borders of India. A systematic survey of the Ghaggar (Sarasvati) Valley in the North and the Kathiawar peninsula in the South was undertaken by the Archaeological Survey of India between 1953 and 1958. The exploration resulted in the location of more than two dozen Harappan sites by Dr A. Ghosh in the Bikaner Division of Rajasthan and nearly 100 sites by Dr S.R. Rao and Dr P.P. Pandya in Gujarat (including Kutch and Kathiawar). Among them, Lothal is most important, especially because it was a port city contemporary with Harappa and Mohenjo-daro.
The site was discovered in 1954 and excavated on most scientific lines between 1955 and 1962. Lothal is situated at the head of the Gulf of Cambay at a distance of 80 kilometres south-west of Ahmedabad.
A fact of particular pride to chess lovers is that Dr S.R. Rao discovered some “chaturanga” pieces during excavations at Lothal. With carbon tests they are dated 2,500 B.C.
‘In C.N. 1783 Louis Blair quoted J. Silman as saying that chess is “the world’s oldest board game” and that it “was being played” in Persia circa 4000 B.C. Mr V.D. Pandit calls the latter idea “absurd”. I would add that such statements as Silman’s are unconscionable if they are made without presentation of proofs of error in accepted historical records.
There is written evidence of chess from the sixth century A.D. I don’t know of anything earlier. Allegedly older chess pieces have been found – although I haven’t heard claims for anything before the second century A.D. (except mistaken ones for pieces of Egyptian games which were not chess) – and they don’t prove anything. There are questions both of dating and of identification of the pieces.
There is plenty of substantial evidence that other board games are older. Boards for one were found in tombs at Ur, dated circa 3000 B.C. They were not chess boards, and we don’t know the rules of the game. Of games that are still played, however, Nine Men’s Morris (The Mill, or merels) goes back to at least 1400 B.C., and Wei Chi (Go) was played in the seventh century B.C.
Mr Pandit gives factual information about the important 1950s-60s Indian excavations of sites of the Harappa/Mohenjo-daro culture. I’ve been interested in archaeology as well as chess history, and in 1971 I first read about Mr S.R. Rao’s excavations at Lothal, where Mr Pandit says there were “chaturanga pieces” dated to 2500 B.C.
My understanding is that there were two Lothal cultures, Lothal A (2500-1500 B.C.) and Lothal B (1500-1000 B.C.). Lothal A was called “highly organized”, a port with a brick dockyard which was certainly ahead of its time. But it would be extraordinary if the only “chaturanga pieces” found there would be dated back to the town’s very beginning.
What is a “chaturanga piece”? What do those found at Lothal look like, and why were they so identified? In fact, what does Mr Pandit consider “chaturanga” to have been?
When Mr Pandit states that chess is “descended” from chaturanga, and that the supposed Lothal chaturanga pieces prove “that chaturanga was in vogue in India some 4,500 years ago” he is inviting the same description of “absurd” that he applied to Mr Silman’s statement.
Why? Because he is simply ignoring the conclusions of H.J.R. Murray, whose 1913 A History of Chess remains the basic source for chess history, and those conclusions should either be accepted or individually refuted. They should not be ignored.
Mr Pandit’s statements are nothing new. They are essentially the old Cox-Forbes theory (i.e. that chaturanga, a four-handed chess game, played with dice, goes back to circa 3000 B.C.). That theory was discredited by Murray. There is no proof of it. “Chaturanga” was used long ago as a word for army. The 64-square board was used long ago for a race game played with dice or cowries; it was nothing like chess. When chess was put on the 64-square “ashtapada” board it was logical to call it “chaturanga”, the army game. Written proof of a four-handed chess game, or chess played with dice, wasn’t seen until well after the sixth century A.D.
Anyone who wants to prove otherwise should refer to Murray’s History, and prove that he was mistaken.
There have also been claims that chess originated in China or Central Asia. My opinion is that so far no-one has proven that Murray was wrong when he said evidence indicates that it started in India in the sixth century A.D. Mr Pandit knows that. Our difference is my opinion that the chess of the sixth century A.D. was chaturanga, and that prior to that time there was no such thing as chaturanga except for non-chessic use of the word.
‘Hindu mythology believes that the game of Chaturanga – of which, I repeat, chess is the descendant – was invented by Mandodari, the Queen of King Ravana of Lanka (now Sri Lanka) to amuse her ever ambitious and warring husband. The recent excavations at Lothal (Gujarat) lead us to think that after all this does not seem to be a mere myth.
The first version of Ramayana (basically an epic of war between King Ravana and Lord Rama wherein Ravana was demolished by Lord Rama) was composed during 800 B.C. But scholars differ about the period of Ramayana. In any case, it is, however, older than 1000 B.C. But the pieces found at Lothal are from 2500 B.C. It seems possible then that the prosperous and civilized Dravidians, who ruled India, knew the game and Mandodari, a Dravidian Queen, did not actually invent the game but taught Ravana the game already in vogue. Newly wed Mandodari was not happy with Ravana’s habit of frequently going out on wars leaving her behind all alone. With a view to promoting acquaintance between the two, she taught him the game.
However, any newly-wed bride will not invent a game wherein two “intruders” will be required. (Chaturanga is played among four players, but can also be played between two.) So it is more logical that Mandodari knew this game and after seeing Ravana’s thirst for warfare she introduced the game to him so that he might be induced to curtail his war activities and to spend more time with her.
Mandodari should then perhaps be given credit for discovering not only Chaturanga but the Simulation Technique as well (which is so widely used these days in Operations Research).
‘After being told that I shouldn’t criticize a system for ranking chessplayers because I’m not a mathematician, now I’m told that knowledge of Sanskrit and of Hindu philosophy are prerequisites for writing about chess history.
‘The Lothal “chess” pieces are the most important historical item to be publicized in chess literature. It would also seem that these pieces have been radio-carbon dated, and if the dates as given are in any way sound, then the accepted evolutionary theory of chess is incorrect.
4. The “glass paste” pieces in the Cairo Museum. (See Eco Scacco, October/November 1978, by Chicco.) Reputed to be 1500 B.C. It is doubtful that these can be radio-carbon dated, but an examination cries out to be made.
As Richard Eales rightly puts it, “archaeology and conjecture”. We need to take steps to date the above four finds and then do some theorizing on the origin of chess. For example, number four above looks absurd. Place it alongside the Lothal pieces and it looks logical. With respect to all chess historians, we all seem to love a good debate at the expense of archaeological finds. There may well be no written evidence earlier than 600 A.D., but that does not mean that chess or its parents cannot be tracked back further as suggested.
I suspect that criticism of H.J.R. Murray lies at the base of the problem. His great work seems to be built on the premise that chess was invented in the sixth century A.D. Yet in the whole book this is probably the weakest link in his conclusions simply because he dismissed archaeological evidence. Even his later opinions almost 40 years after the great work was published in 1913 brooked no debate. Yet sometimes he was wrong. On page 86 of The Book of Chessmen, Alex Hammond, admittedly in hearsay, wrote that H.J.R.M. considered that the Lewis chessmen were from the years 1600-1650 A.D. Yet Michael Taylor, in a brilliant 1978 booklet of analytical deduction (sadly no radio-carbon dating) called The Lewis Chessmen, published by the British Museum, concluded that they dated from the period 1135-1170 A.D., almost 500 years earlier than Murray.
We regret that we have received no further contribution from Mr Pandit. For other material on this debate, see the Quotes and Queries column in the December 1989 BCM.
Latest update: 24 February 2019. |
/* Copyright (C) 2010 Ion Torrent Systems, Inc. All Rights Reserved */
#ifndef TMAP_MAIN_H
#define TMAP_MAIN_H
/*!
Main TMAP Function
*/
typedef int (*tmap_command_func)(int argc, char *argv[]);
/*!
* The type of command.
*/
enum {
TMAP_COMMAND_NONE=0, /*!< no affiliation; do not output in the help message */
TMAP_COMMAND_PREPROCESSING=1, /*!< a preprocessing command */
TMAP_COMMAND_SERVER=2, /*!< a server command */
TMAP_COMMAND_MAPPING=3, /*!< a mapping command */
TMAP_COMMAND_UTILITIES=4, /*!< a utility command */
TMAP_COMMAND_DEBUG=5, /*!< a debug command */
};
/*!
* The command structure.
*/
typedef struct {
tmap_command_func func; /*!< the main-like function associated with this command */
char *name; /*!< the name of the command */
char *help; /*!< the help message for this command */
int32_t type; /*! the command type */
} tmap_command_t;
extern int
tmap_index(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_server_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_map1_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_map2_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_map3_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_map4_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_map_vsw_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_map_all_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_refseq_fasta2pac_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_bwt_pac2bwt_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_sa_bwt2sa_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_seq_io_sff2fq_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_seqs_io_sff2sam_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_refseq_refinfo_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_refseq_pac2fasta_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_bwt_bwtupdate_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_index_size(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_sam2fs_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
samtools_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
bcftools_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_sw_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
#ifdef ENABLE_TMAP_DEBUG_FUNCTIONS
extern int
tmap_fsw_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_index_speed(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_bwt_check(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_bwt_compare(int argc, char *argv[]);
extern int
tmap_vswbm_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
#endif
#endif
|
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Image Title: Create A Cozy Space With Glass Subway Tiles Soifer Center Regard To Tile 3x6 Plan 8. Filename: create-a-cozy-space-with-glass-subway-tiles-soifer-center-regard-to-tile-3x6-plan-8.jpg. Image Dimension: 1000 x 662 pixels. Images Format: jpg/jpeg. Publisher/Author: Winston Hoppe. Uploaded Date: Saturday - February 09th. 2019 14:35:14 PM. Category: Architecture. Image Source: digsdigs.com.
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It is that sane and glorious time when the nation's capital dispenses its human cargo to places of origin and locations of respite.
There is, indeed, great parking, as well as less traffic. With the political contingent largely gone, the Hill is as quiet as a morning after and "normal" people are dining out.
Most awesome: One has time to think.
August, often viewed as the end of things summer, vacation, camp and children underfoot marks for Washingtonians the arrival of peace. The usual, rapid chatter becomes a low, slow hum. Fewer sirens stab the air and the ever-present helicopters finally buzz off.
In this near-sudden silence, one realizes that Washington is more often Fallujah than Paris a war zone where armies of reporters, pundits and politicos wage war with words in theaters of green rooms and bunkers of makeup.
What's that sound? Ah, cicadas. Would that Washington would burrow beneath the toil of urgent matters and keep quiet for years at a time. August is good for dreaming, too.
Look at me. I buried the lede and almost forgot everyone's favorite part of all: Journalists leave town, too. When the three branches of government shutter the windows and lock the doors, what's left to do?
Alas, where Trump goes, the media go. Rumor has it he's heading to Iowa, so it's off to the Hawkeye State we go. Friday morning, Chuck Todd of "Meet the Press" was reporting from the Iowa State Fairgrounds in a groundhoggian image of what these days we call "authentic." The real people of America will soon enough let us know what they think of all this and that.
Personally, I wonder what they think of all those Trump buses stationed in Wal-Mart parking lots around the state sans The Donald? For Trump, you see, Being There isn't actually required. The name is all.
Look, Trump's in town! Even when he's not, really. When he does materialize, equal parts Liberace and P.T. Barnum, folks will show up if only to lay eyes on the real McCoy. Will Trump press the flesh? What a disgusting thought for a reputed germaphobe. Will he kiss babies, those messy little bundles of orificial emissions?
Such are the musings of an August morn and a clear indication that my own vacation begins in just a few sentences more. For your indulgence and patience, I will share a secret I've kept mostly to myself the past year or so. It has to do with my absence for several months last summer and fall, which some of you may have noticed. If not, you are forgiven.
My syndicate issued an explanation to my then-500 papers that I'd had an accident and would be taking a break to recover. I wasn't eager to share the details for reasons that will become apparent. Basically, I slipped and fell down a steep staircase in May 2014, which resulted in a concussion more aptly named a traumatic brain injury that put me out of work and circulation. It was, indeed, traumatic, as well as terrifying. Thanks to months of therapy and many helping hands, it is over.
My mentioning it now has to do with two things: One, I'm back to my old self, more or less. My goal was to return to two columns a week and to reappear on news shows before I admitted that for a long time I didn't know who I was. My editors, Alan Shearer, with the Washington Post Writers Group, and Fred Hiatt, editorial page editor of The Post, were both anchor and sail, keeping the boat afloat and buoying my spirits until the brain had finished its business.
Two, I'm about to enjoy time off that I can consciously experience. Last year, I had bought a book titled "No Time to Think." And then suddenly I could neither read nor think. This time, I can and shall do both.
I will also continue work on a book I'm writing about what happened to me. My hope is that others might benefit from what I experienced and from what I learned about friends and family, seasons and time, rhythms and essence. It was quite a trip, about which more to come in good time.
Meanwhile, enjoy the cicadas because you can. |
/* Quickicon rules */
div.cpanel div#plg_quickicon_attachment span {
margin-left: 6px; /* force line break */
margin-right: 6px;
line-height: 115%;
}
|
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The Isle of Mull is the second largest of the inner Hebridean islands. It is a wonderful wild place with stunning mountain scenery and dramatic coastline, the accommodation has views of Ben More, Mulls highest mountain at 3169ft.
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'use strict'
import { transitionOnce } from './lib'
const _data = {}
const animation = {
/**
* transition
* @param {string} ref [description]
* @param {obj} config [description]
* @param {string} callbackId [description]
*/
transition: function (ref, config, callbackId) {
let refData = _data[ref]
const stylesKey = JSON.stringify(config.styles)
const weexInstance = this
// If the same component perform a animation with exactly the same
// styles in a sequence with so short interval that the prev animation
// is still in playing, then the next animation should be ignored.
if (refData && refData[stylesKey]) {
return
}
if (!refData) {
refData = _data[ref] = {}
}
refData[stylesKey] = true
const component = this.getComponentManager().getComponent(ref)
return transitionOnce(component, config, function () {
// Remove the stylesKey in refData so that the same animation
// can be played again after current animation is already finished.
delete refData[stylesKey]
weexInstance.sender.performCallback(callbackId)
})
}
}
const meta = {
animation: [{
name: 'transition',
args: ['string', 'object', 'function']
}]
}
export default {
init: function (Weex) {
Weex.registerApiModule('animation', animation, meta)
}
}
|
Colourful and exuberant, Madame Owl is the singer. A musical doll all in pink, she wears a yellow dot cotton tutu lined with tulle. Her big eyes watch over her friends in the enchanted wood and her wide wings envelop them in softness. The music is triggered by pulling on the sequinned tab on the side. |
(function($){
function F() {}
if (typeof Object.create !== 'function') {
Object.create = function (o) {
F.prototype = o;
return new F();
};
}
return $.plugin = function(name, object) {
$.fn[name] = function(options) {
if (!this.length) return this;
return this.each(function() {
if (!$.data(this, name)) {
$.data(this, name, Object.create(object).init(this, options));
}
});
};
};
})(jQuery); |
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'use strict';
import _ from 'underscore';
import {LOGIN_USER, LOGOUT_USER} from '../constants/LoginConstants';
import AppDispatcher from '../dispatchers/AppDispatcher';
export default class BaseService {
constructor() {
this.token = localStorage.getItem('jwt');
this._dispatchToken = AppDispatcher.register(action => {
switch (action.actionType) {
case LOGIN_USER:
this.token = action.data.token;
break;
case LOGOUT_USER:
delete this.token;
break;
}
});
}
getHeaders(includeToken) {
let h = new Headers();
h.set('Content-Type', 'application/json');
if (includeToken && this.token) {
h.set('Authorization', `JWT ${this.token}`);
}
if (window.csrf_token) {
h.set('X-CSRFToken', window.csrf_token);
}
h.set('Accept', `application/json`);
return h;
}
handleError(e) {
if (e.status === 403) {
return;
}
console.error(e);
}
expandUrl() {
return `/api/${_.compact(Array.from(arguments)).join('/')}/`;
}
makeRequest(url, method = 'GET', data = null, includeToken = true) {
const headers = this.getHeaders(includeToken);
let context = {
method,
headers,
credentials: 'same-origin',
};
if (data) {
context.body = JSON.stringify(data);
}
return fetch(url, context);
}
}
|
Is Salary Transparency in the Workplace Right for your Company?
It takes one glance at social media to realize our lives are shifting on the edge of transparency. We openly share our phone numbers, engagements and marriages (and breakups and divorces), religious and political views, workouts, hobbies, travels… You name it, and there’s probably an app you can use to connect and share it with the social network of your choice.
There’s still one area of our lives kept relatively in the dark, however: our income. Thanks to online shopping and the ubiquitous “share” button, our spending can be, well, shared very easily. The money we make, though, remains private. Many companies currently limit what employees can divulge about their salaries to outsiders, and while employees are legally allowed to discuss – both in person and on social media – personal salaries with other coworkers, there are regulations in place to keep this information from flowing too freely. Salary information has to be given by the employee in question – not another coworker, personnel files, paystubs, or the human resources department – outside of work hours, and these discussions can’t occur between employees and their supervisors. But as we embrace transparency in other aspects of our lives, will companies start opening up the doors on salaries?
Some companies already have. Buffer and SumAll, two tech startups, both have complete salary transparency;. Buffer has even gone a step further and published those salaries – and the formula for how those salaries were derived – on their blog for anyone to see. The push for salary transparency is gaining momentum, but does it have a place in your company? Here are the upsides and downsides of open salaries.
The main argument for salary transparency is that it creates an environment of honesty, openness, and trust. If employees know their salaries are fair and comparable to those of their colleagues, they can more easily trust their managers and company. They can also see just how valuable they and their jobs are to the company. Even if employees aren’t happy with how their salaries stack up, it can open up a productive dialogue as to why those salary differences exist and what employees can do to earn raises, thereby making your employees more productive.
While happier, more trusting employees will lead to better work and productivity, research has shown another big benefit for employers. Open salaries force companies to examine any underlying biases or discrimination in pay, especially those between men and women. The Institute for Women’s Policy Research has shown that the pay gap in the public sector, where salaries are public record, is only 11%. The pay gap as a whole, between both public and private sector, is at 23%. When salaries are private, it’s harder for women to draw attention to this issue and it can be harder for companies to take notice of. Posting your salaries publicly makes it easier to notice and correct any discrepancies before any workers take legal action.
While no company wants to be accused of discrimination, is it really fair to pay all similarly-positioned employees the same salary? Are any two employees completely identical, deserving of exactly equal salaries? Do they put in the same workload, undertake equal amounts of work, or produce equal products? Probably not – and that’s okay. It’s illegal to pay different amounts based upon discriminatory factors or protected classes, such as gender or race, but to pay different salaries based upon other measurable factors – like longevity, productivity, experience, or other work-related qualities – is completely legal and arguably fair. But will your employees see it as such? With open salaries, companies might have to consider shifting their pay scale for the role, not the person. Otherwise, accusations of fairness and favoritism may come into play.
If salaries are really unequal, it might create resentment, even across different sectors or positions. Since salary transparency isn’t mandated for privately-held companies, exact numbers are hard to pin down, but the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO) estimates that CEOs make, on average, 354 times what the average employee makes. Your company might not have such wide-sweeping pay ranges, but if your top-earning employees are significantly out-earning your average employees, even the hard-working ones, there may be some bitterness about those numbers – and you may need to provide an answer.
Even salary transparency devotees have to acknowledge that startups have fewer problems in adopting open salaries. In the beginning, most companies have a set salary formula or equation, usually a result of a limited budget. Salaries are more likely to be closer in range, too, even for CEOs and average employees. As companies earn more money, create more jobs, and hire more people, equations or formulas may not be used anymore, and salaries may come about from negotiations or raises. If you publish numbers and employees have questions, it may be harder to answer how or why one employee makes a certain amount while another one doesn’t.
That doesn’t mean that large companies can’t adopt open salary policies. Whole Foods has successfully implemented an open salary policy for over 25 years. Admittedly, the company was significantly smaller back then; however, the policy has remained in effect throughout and is one of the biggest benefits that current and former employees tout. Whole Foods currently employs nearly 60,000 people, and all of their employees have access to salary information for all other employees.
Established companies looking to make a shift toward more transparency don’t have to take an all-or-nothing approach. Instead of citing exact salaries for every employee, companies can give salary ranges or average salaries based upon any number of factors, such as titles, longevity, department, or performance. General statistics for many of these factors are available on the Internet, but your company can provide its employees with company-specific statistics, far more useful than those found on the Internet. These numbers can help give your employees a basic idea of where they stand and what they can expect from you going forward. This will offer most of the benefits of total transparency without any of the drawbacks.
Irelis Arias is a Human Resources Director who specializes in employee relations, leadership and employee development, recruitment, training, compensation, and benefits. In her role, Irelis draws from 20 years of HR compliance and employment law experience, including 12 years working for a top national labor and employment law firm. Irelis has been instrumental in helping to identify areas in need of improvement and implement successful action plans. When she’s not helping others seek career success, Irelis devotes her time and attention to her three active sons. She enjoys spending time with her family and working out to stay healthy. |
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/*
* wicked client ifcheck action and utilities
*
* Copyright (C) 2010-2014 SUSE LINUX Products GmbH, Nuernberg, Germany.
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
* (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
* with this program; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/> or write
* to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor,
* Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
*
* Authors:
* Olaf Kirch <[email protected]>
* Marius Tomaschewski <[email protected]>
* Pawel Wieczorkiewicz <[email protected]>
*
*/
#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
#include "config.h"
#endif
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdarg.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <getopt.h>
#include <wicked/netinfo.h>
#include <wicked/logging.h>
#include <wicked/fsm.h>
#include "wicked-client.h"
#include "appconfig.h"
#include "ifcheck.h"
static ni_bool_t opt_quiet;
/*
* ifcheck utilities
*/
ni_bool_t
ni_ifcheck_device_configured(ni_netdev_t *dev)
{
ni_client_state_t *cs;
if (!dev || !(cs = dev->client_state) || ni_string_empty(cs->config.origin))
return FALSE;
return TRUE;
}
ni_bool_t
ni_ifcheck_device_is_up(ni_netdev_t *dev)
{
return dev && !!(dev->link.ifflags & NI_IFF_DEVICE_UP);
}
ni_bool_t
ni_ifcheck_device_link_is_up(ni_netdev_t *dev)
{
return dev && !!(dev->link.ifflags & NI_IFF_LINK_UP);
}
ni_bool_t
ni_ifcheck_device_network_is_up(ni_netdev_t *dev)
{
return dev && !!(dev->link.ifflags & NI_IFF_NETWORK_UP);
}
ni_bool_t
ni_ifcheck_device_is_persistent(ni_netdev_t *dev)
{
ni_client_state_t *cs = dev ? dev->client_state : NULL;
return cs && cs->control.persistent;
}
ni_bool_t
ni_ifcheck_device_link_required(ni_netdev_t *dev)
{
ni_client_state_t *cs = dev ? dev->client_state : NULL;
ni_tristate_t link_required = NI_TRISTATE_DEFAULT;
if (cs && ni_tristate_is_set(cs->control.require_link))
link_required = cs->control.require_link;
else if (dev)
link_required = ni_netdev_guess_link_required(dev);
return !ni_tristate_is_disabled(link_required);
}
ni_bool_t
ni_ifcheck_worker_device_exists(ni_ifworker_t *w)
{
return w && w->device;
}
ni_bool_t
ni_ifcheck_worker_device_enabled(ni_ifworker_t *w)
{
#if 0
/* Hmm... STARTMODE=manual|off */
if (!w || !w->control.enabled)
return FALSE;
#endif
return TRUE;
}
ni_bool_t
ni_ifcheck_worker_device_link_required(ni_ifworker_t *w)
{
ni_tristate_t link_required = NI_TRISTATE_DEFAULT;
if (w && ni_tristate_is_set(w->control.link_required))
link_required = w->control.link_required;
else if (w && w->device)
link_required = ni_netdev_guess_link_required(w->device);
return !ni_tristate_is_disabled(link_required);
}
ni_bool_t
ni_ifcheck_worker_device_is_persistent(ni_ifworker_t *w)
{
return w && w->control.persistent;
}
ni_bool_t
ni_ifcheck_worker_config_exists(ni_ifworker_t *w)
{
return w && w->config.node;
}
ni_bool_t
ni_ifcheck_worker_config_matches(ni_ifworker_t *w)
{
ni_netdev_t *dev;
if (ni_ifcheck_worker_config_exists(w) && (dev = w->device)) {
ni_client_state_t *cs = dev->client_state;
return cs &&
ni_uuid_equal(&cs->config.uuid, &w->config.meta.uuid);
}
return FALSE;
}
ni_bool_t
ni_ifcheck_worker_not_in_state(ni_ifworker_t *w, ni_fsm_state_t state_val)
{
ni_fsm_state_t state_dev;
ni_assert(w);
/* FIXME: add state mapping */
state_dev = NI_FSM_STATE_NONE;
if (state_val < NI_FSM_STATE_DEVICE_EXISTS && state_dev > state_val)
return TRUE;
if (state_dev < state_val)
return TRUE;
return FALSE;
}
static void
if_printf(const char *dev, const char *flag, const char *fmt, ...)
{
va_list ap;
if (opt_quiet)
return;
if (!ni_string_empty(dev)) {
printf("%-15s", dev);
} else {
printf("%-6s", "");
}
if (!ni_string_empty(flag) && !ni_string_empty(fmt)) {
printf(" %-22s = ", flag);
va_start(ap, fmt);
vprintf(fmt, ap);
va_end(ap);
}
printf("\n");
}
static inline void
set_status(int *status, unsigned int code)
{
if (NI_WICKED_ST_OK == *status)
*status = code;
}
/*
* ifcheck action
*/
int
ni_do_ifcheck(int argc, char **argv)
{
enum { OPT_HELP, OPT_QUIET, OPT_IFCONFIG, OPT_MISSED, OPT_CHANGED, OPT_STATE, OPT_PERSISTENT };
static struct option ifcheck_options[] = {
{ "help", no_argument, NULL, OPT_HELP },
{ "quiet", no_argument, NULL, OPT_QUIET },
{ "ifconfig", required_argument, NULL, OPT_IFCONFIG },
{ "missed", no_argument, NULL, OPT_MISSED },
{ "changed", no_argument, NULL, OPT_CHANGED },
{ "state", required_argument, NULL, OPT_STATE },
{ "persistent", no_argument, NULL, OPT_PERSISTENT },
{ NULL }
};
static ni_ifmatcher_t ifmatch;
ni_string_array_t opt_ifconfig = NI_STRING_ARRAY_INIT;
ni_string_array_t ifnames = NI_STRING_ARRAY_INIT;
ni_uint_array_t checks = NI_UINT_ARRAY_INIT;
ni_stringbuf_t sb = NI_STRINGBUF_INIT_DYNAMIC;
const char *opt_state = NULL;
ni_bool_t multiple = FALSE;
ni_fsm_t *fsm;
unsigned int i, opt_state_val;
int c, status = NI_WICKED_RC_USAGE;
fsm = ni_fsm_new();
ni_assert(fsm);
fsm->readonly = TRUE;
/* Allow ifcheck on persistent, unconfigured interfaces */
memset(&ifmatch, 0, sizeof(ifmatch));
ifmatch.require_configured = FALSE;
ifmatch.allow_persistent = TRUE;
ifmatch.require_config = FALSE;
optind = 1;
while ((c = getopt_long(argc, argv, "", ifcheck_options, NULL)) != EOF) {
switch (c) {
case OPT_IFCONFIG:
ni_string_array_append(&opt_ifconfig, optarg);
break;
case OPT_MISSED:
ni_uint_array_append(&checks, OPT_MISSED);
break;
case OPT_CHANGED:
ni_uint_array_append(&checks, OPT_CHANGED);
break;
case OPT_STATE:
if (!ni_ifworker_state_from_name(optarg, &opt_state_val)) {
ni_error("Invalid device state \"%s\"", optarg);
goto usage;
}
ni_uint_array_append(&checks, OPT_STATE);
opt_state = optarg;
break;
case OPT_PERSISTENT:
ni_uint_array_append(&checks, OPT_PERSISTENT);
break;
case OPT_QUIET:
opt_quiet = TRUE;
break;
case OPT_HELP:
status = NI_WICKED_RC_SUCCESS;
/* fall through */
default:
usage:
ni_client_get_state_strings(&sb, NULL);
fprintf(stderr,
"wicked [options] ifcheck [ifcheck-options] <ifname ...>|all\n"
"\nSupported ifcheck-options:\n"
" --help\n"
" Show this help text.\n"
" --ifconfig <filename>\n"
" Read interface configuration(s) from file\n"
" --quiet\n"
" Do not print out errors, but just signal the result through exit status\n"
" --missed\n"
" Check if the interface is missed\n"
" --changed\n"
" Check if the interface's configuration is changed\n"
" --state <state-name>\n"
" Check if the interface is in the given state. Possible states:\n"
" %s\n"
" --persistent\n"
" Check if the interface is in persistent mode\n"
, sb.string);
ni_stringbuf_destroy(&sb);
goto cleanup;
}
}
if (optind >= argc) {
goto usage;
} else for (c = optind; c < argc; ++c) {
if (ni_string_empty(argv[c]))
goto usage;
}
if (opt_ifconfig.count == 0) {
const ni_string_array_t *sources = ni_config_sources("ifconfig");
if (sources && sources->count)
ni_string_array_copy(&opt_ifconfig, sources);
if (opt_ifconfig.count == 0) {
ni_error("ifup: unable to load interface config source list");
status = NI_WICKED_RC_NOT_CONFIGURED;
goto cleanup;
}
}
if (!ni_ifconfig_load(fsm, opt_global_rootdir, &opt_ifconfig, TRUE, TRUE)) {
status = NI_WICKED_RC_NOT_CONFIGURED;
goto cleanup;
}
if (!ni_fsm_create_client(fsm)) {
/* Severe error we always explicitly return */
status = NI_WICKED_RC_ERROR;
goto cleanup;
}
if (!ni_fsm_refresh_state(fsm)) {
/* Severe error we always explicitly return */
status = NI_WICKED_RC_ERROR;
goto cleanup;
}
status = NI_WICKED_ST_OK;
if (0 == checks.count)
ni_uint_array_append(&checks, OPT_MISSED);
/* nmarked = 0; */
while (optind < argc) {
ni_ifworker_array_t marked = { 0, NULL };
const char *ifname = argv[optind++];
ifmatch.name = ifname;
if (ni_fsm_get_matching_workers(fsm, &ifmatch, &marked) == 0) {
if_printf(ifname, "device exists", "no");
set_status(&status, NI_WICKED_RC_NO_DEVICE);
continue;
}
if (ni_string_eq(ifmatch.name, "all"))
multiple = TRUE;
for (i = 0; i < marked.count; ++i) {
ni_ifworker_t *w = marked.data[i];
ni_netdev_t *dev = w->device;
ni_client_state_t *cs = dev ? dev->client_state : NULL;
unsigned int j;
if (ni_string_array_index(&ifnames, w->name) != -1)
continue;
multiple = ifnames.count ? TRUE : multiple;
ni_string_array_append(&ifnames, w->name);
for (j = 0; j < checks.count; j++) {
switch (checks.data[j]) {
ni_bool_t changed, not_in_state, persistent;
default:
case OPT_MISSED:
if_printf(w->name, "device exists", (dev ? "yes" : "no"));
if (!dev)
set_status(&status, NI_WICKED_RC_NO_DEVICE);
break;
case OPT_CHANGED:
changed = FALSE;
if (ni_ifcheck_device_configured(dev) ||
(ni_ifcheck_worker_config_exists(w) &&
ni_ifcheck_worker_device_exists(w)))
changed = !ni_ifcheck_worker_config_matches(w);
if_printf(w->name, "configuration changed",
(changed ? "yes" : "no"));
if (changed) {
ni_debug_wicked("%s: config file uuid is %s", w->name,
ni_uuid_print(&w->config.meta.uuid));
ni_debug_wicked("%s: system dev. uuid is %s", w->name,
cs ? ni_uuid_print(&cs->config.uuid) : "NOT SET");
set_status(&status, NI_WICKED_ST_CHANGED_CONFIG);
}
break;
case OPT_STATE:
not_in_state = ni_ifcheck_worker_not_in_state(w, opt_state_val);
if_printf(w->name, "queried state", "%s (%s)",
(not_in_state ? "no" : "yes"), opt_state);
if (not_in_state)
set_status(&status, NI_WICKED_ST_NOT_IN_STATE);
break;
case OPT_PERSISTENT:
persistent = ni_ifcheck_device_is_persistent(dev);
if_printf(w->name, "persistent", (persistent ? "yes" : "no"));
if (persistent)
set_status(&status, NI_WICKED_ST_PERSISTENT_ON);
break;
}
}
if (opt_quiet && status)
goto cleanup;
}
}
cleanup:
ni_string_array_destroy(&opt_ifconfig);
ni_string_array_destroy(&ifnames);
ni_uint_array_destroy(&checks);
return status;
}
|
You can now pre-order your phone in-store at the Apple Store, AT&T, and Best Buy. Walmart is still not on the list but it doesn’t mean you can’t take advantage. Many online pre-orders have already been maxed out so it’s best to head into your local store if you’re desperate to get one.
McDonald’s, Subway, Whole Foods and Apple retail stores are among the retailers that will accept Apple Pay when it launches next month. McDonald’s said all U.S. locations will accept Apple Pay after it is live. |
Is Obama telling the truth about U.S. oil reserves?
When he was running for the Oval Office four years ago amid $4-a-gallon gasoline prices, then-Sen. Barack Obama dismissed the idea of expanded oil production as a way to relieve the pain at the pump.
“Even if you opened up every square inch of our land and our coasts to drilling,” he said. “America still has only 3% of the world’s oil reserves.” Which meant, he said, that the U.S. couldn’t affect global oil prices.
It’s the same rhetoric President Obama is using now, as gas prices hit $4 again, except now he puts the figure at 2%.
The claim makes it appear as though the U.S. is an oil-barren nation, perpetually dependent on foreign oil and high prices unless we can cut our own use and develop alternative energy sources like algae.
But the figure Obama uses — proved oil reserves — vastly undercounts how much oil the U.S. actually contains. In fact, far from being oil-poor, the country is awash in vast quantities — enough to meet all the country’s oil needs for hundreds of years.
The U.S. has 22.3 billion barrels of proved reserves, a little less than 2% of the entire world’s proved reserves, according to the Energy Information Administration. But as the EIA explains, proved reserves “are a small subset of recoverable resources,” because they only count oil that companies are currently drilling for in existing fields.
At least 86 billion barrels of oil in the Outer Continental Shelf yet to be discovered, according to the government’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management.
About 24 billion barrels in shale deposits in the lower 48 states, according to EIA.
Up to 2 billion barrels of oil in shale deposits in Alaska’s North Slope, says the U.S. Geological Survey.
Up to 12 billion barrels in ANWR, according to the USGS.
As much as 19 billion barrels in the Utah tar sands, according to the Bureau of Land Management.
Then, there’s the massive Green River Formation in Wyoming, which according to the USGS contains a stunning 1.4 trillion barrels of oil shale — a type of oil released from sedimentary rock after it’s heated.
[…]All told, the U.S. has access to 400 billion barrels of crude that could be recovered using existing drilling technologies, according to a 2006 Energy Department report.
When you include oil shale, the U.S. has 1.4 trillion barrels of technically recoverable oil, according to the Institute for Energy Research, enough to meet all U.S. oil needs for about the next 200 years, without any imports.
Please share this article, because it is unlikely that Obama’s Solyndra-supporting buddies in the mainstream media will report the facts on domestic energy production.
Obama claims that production of oil, gas and coal is up since he took office. It’s true that areas under state control are producing more, but what about energy production on federal lands? That’s the part of the country that Obama is responsible for.
Let’s see what two recent studies from the Energy Information Administration and the Institute for Energy Research found.
The updated EIA report revealed a 12 percent decline in production for coal, oil, and natural gas on federal and Indian lands from fiscal 2003 through fiscal 2011.
During this same period, production on state and private lands has increased, boosting overall production numbers for the United States. That’s a point even President Obama will acknowledge: “Under my Administration, domestic oil and natural gas production is up,” he said upon announcing his rejection of the Keystone XL pipeline.
Obama is correct. He just can’t rightfully claim the credit, since the vast majority of America’s new oil and gas production is happening on private lands in states like North Dakota, Alaska and Texas.
Withdrew areas offered for 77 oil and gas leases in Utah that could cost American taxpayers millions in lost lease bids, production royalties, new jobs and the energy needed to offset rising imports of oil and natural gas.
Cancelled lease sales in the Western Gulf of Mexico, the Atlantic coast and delayed exploration off the coast of Alaska and kept other resource-rich areas off-limits.
Finalized rules, first announced by Secretary Salazar on January 6, 2010, to establish more government hurdles to onshore oil and natural gas production on federal lands.
Withdrew 61 oil and natural gas leases in Montana as part of a lawsuit settlement over climate change.
That’s the real story behind Obama’s claims about higher energy production. He’s doing his best to block energy production in the areas under his control. His energy plan is Solyndra, Solyndra, Solyndra – paying off his rich Democrat buddies with taxpayer money.
The CBC — the mega-corporation that is demanding yet another $1.1-billion bailout from taxpayers this year, just like it demanded a $1.1-billion bailout from us last year — is panicking.
For weeks it’s been sweating about a parliamentary investigation into its bad behaviour, including its violation of the Access to Information law. That’s an important law to allow taxpayers to scrutinize how government agencies spend our money.
The non-partisan information commissioner has given the CBC a grade of “F” for its secrecy — but it still violates her order for it to disclose the truth. It’s spending millions in legal expenses to hide how it’s spending billions in other expenses.
This bad behaviour was coming to a head last week when Parliament was going to turn over some rocks and see what was going to go scurrying.
On the eve of the Parliamentary inquiry, it used part of its $1.1 billion — money that is supposed to go to journalism — to launch a crazy, personal attack on the president of Quebecor and QMI Agency, Pierre Karl Peladeau, one of Canada’s most successful private-sector media entrepreneurs.
Unlike the CBC, Peladeau built his company honestly and with his own efforts. He took a newspaper company started by his father, Pierre Peladeau, and turned it into Quebec’s most successful media company, Quebecor — and then joined with English-Canada’s biggest newspaper company, Sun Media Corp. And then he built the Sun News Network.
All without a billion-dollar-a-year bailout.
And so last week, the night before Peladeau’s testimony to Parliament, the CBC freaked out.
In an unprecedented move, it issued what can only be called an attack ad against Peladeau. It wasn’t a news story. It was a false and defamatory attack on our company, as vengeance for our questions about how the CBC spends taxpayer money.
If any other government department had done something like this, whoever responsible would be fired immediately. It wasn’t just unprofessional. It wasn’t just outside of its mandate of what it is given its government money for. It was an attempt to destroy a private-sector competitor.
Why is this interesting? Because it shows what happens when the government oversteps its bounds and starts to compete with the private sector in areas that are totally unrelated to its enumerated powers and specific responsibilities. Not only will you find corruption in nationalized corporations, but massive waste as well. Private sector companies face competitive pressures that government monopolies do not face. That forces them to root out corruption and waste, because there is always the firm next door looking to serve the customer better – with higher quality and at a lower cost.
We need to be very careful about handing money to people in government who simply don’t care as much about the needs of their customers. Do you think that the CBC could ever favor tax cuts or spending cuts or even more choices for taxpayers? Of course not. They have to tell people whatever causes them to vote for bigger government, because that’s where their money comes from. |
New Zealand may as well be called a land of opportunities with the forecast of continual growth in employment. According to the latest labour market statistics released by Statistics New Zealand, employment, wage and labour force participation growth remain strong. In fact, in the past quarter alone, the employment rate rose to 66.9 percent, a full 2 points increase from the previous year. Salary and wage rates also went up in both private and public sectors. What’s even better is that there are plenty of job offers across all industries that could easily become viable career paths.
If you think it’s time to move onto greener pastures, the first step is to get a New Zealand work visa. |
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