Which of the following can you use to change this and other user X preferences?
The system bell sound is annoying you.
Which of the following can you use to change this and other user X preferences?
Which of the following actions is the best one to be used in order to identify and fix the problem?
The Linux kernel is loaded successfully by the boot loader.
However, straight after the kernel mounts the root filesystem, the boot process stops and an error message regarding init is shown.
Which of the following actions is the best one to be used in order to identify and fix the problem?
What single command will show you the running color depth while in X?
X is running okay but you’re concerned that you may not have the right color depth set.
What single command will show you the running color depth while in X?
Which of the following commands will print the necessary information?
You are working on a server that has multiple ethernet network interfaces, and you wish to find out the IP address assigned to the ethl interface.
Which of the following commands will print the necessary information?
What needs to be done to enable usage of this module?
A pre-compiled module has been moved to /lib/modules/<kernel-version>, but ‘modprobe -a <modulename>’ fails to load it.
What needs to be done to enable usage of this module?
What environment variable must be set for this to happen?
Messages from programs are not appearing in the user’s native language.
What environment variable must be set for this to happen?
Which xorg.conf section must be edited to specify the correct values for several variables?
When installing XWindows the monitor wasn’t recognised but now a data sheet with its specification is available.
Which xorg.conf section must be edited to specify the correct values for several variables?
What file should you edit to change the default background for it?
You have just set up the X Display Manager (XDM) as your default display manager.
What file should you edit to change the default background for it?
Which system administration command you can use to update ld.so.cache after the installation of new shared lib
Which system administration command you can use to update ld.so.cache after the installation of new shared libraries?
What is most likely the cause of this?
You are preparing a new set of shared libraries in /usr/local/applib and you have written and compiled some code that uses these libraries.
You have already performed an ldconfig, however the system still cannot find the shared libraries.
What is most likely the cause of this?