From f83b3ef6895c61d6018278f901c3947bae4ca751 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Joerg Kohne Date: Tue, 31 May 2011 14:01:03 +0000 Subject: h-source: fix typos and tabs --- h-source/Application/Views/Help/index.php | 817 +++++++++++++++--------------- 1 file changed, 409 insertions(+), 408 deletions(-) (limited to 'h-source/Application/Views/Help/index.php') diff --git a/h-source/Application/Views/Help/index.php b/h-source/Application/Views/Help/index.php index 94e82c5..43af50a 100644 --- a/h-source/Application/Views/Help/index.php +++ b/h-source/Application/Views/Help/index.php @@ -37,411 +37,412 @@ -

Wiki Syntax

- -

List of -Wiki Tags

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
NameTagResultDescription
boldtext [b]bold[/b]text boldtext bold
italictext [i]italic[/i]text italictext italic
deltext [del]deleted[/del]text deletedtext deleted
underlinetext [u]underlined[/u]text underlinedtext underlined
head 1[h1]heading[/h1] -
- heading
-
head 1
head 2[h2]heading[/h2] -
- heading
-
head 2
head 3[h3]heading[/h3] -
- heading
-
head 3
paragraph…[p]new paragraph[/p]… - -

new paragraph

-
new paragraph
Ordered Lists
    -
  • [list]
  • -
    • -
    • [*]first item[/*]
    • -
    • [*]second item[/*]
    • -
    -
  • -
  • [/list]
  • -
-
    -
  • first item
  • -
  • second item
  • -
-
make a list of items
Numbered List
    -
  • [enum]
  • -
    • -
    • [*]first item[/*]
    • -
    • [*]second item[/*]
    • -
    -
  • -
  • [/enum]
  • -
-
    -
  1. first item
  2. -
  3. second item
  4. -
-
make a numbered list of items
list item[*]item[/*]
    -
  • item
  • -
-
add an item to a list
code[code]some code[/code]
some code
-
some code
simple link[a]url[/a]urlsimple link
link with text[a]url|text[/a]textlink with text
notebook[notebook]id[/notebook]idlink to the notebook with the identifier equal to id (the identifier of each device model is written in the - page of the device itself, next to the model name)
wifi[wifi]id[/wifi]idlink to the wifi with the identifier equal to id (the identifier of each device model is written in the page - of the device itself, next to the model name)
videocard[videocard]id[/videocard]idlink to the videocard with the identifier equal to id (the identifier of each device model is written in the - page of the device itself, next to the model name)
- -

 

- -

Compatibility classes

- -

Notebooks

-
-
Class A (Platinum)
-
All the notebook devices work with a very good performance.
-
Example: all the devices work, the 3D acceleration is supported
-
Class B (Gold)
-
All the notebook devices work but not at full performance.
-
A typical example: all the devices work, but the 3D acceleration is not supported
-
Class C (Silver)
-
One main device is not supported.
-
Example: the internal wifi card does not work. You need an external USB card
-
Class D (Bronze)
-
More than one device is not supported
-
Class E (Garbage)
-
The notebook does not work with free software
-
- -

Printers

-
-
Class A (Full)
-
All device functions and features are supported
-
Class B (Partial)
-
Printing supported but possibly at limited speed or print quality; scanning and/or faxing on some multifunction - devices may not be supported
-
Class C (None)
-
The printer does not work with free software
-
- -

Scanners

-
-
Class A (Full)
-
All device functions and features are supported
-
Class B (Partial)
-
Scanning supported but possibly at limited speed or quality; some other features may not be supported
-
Class C (None)
-
The scanner does not work with free software
-
- -

 

- -

Discover your hardware

- -

(Thanks lluvia)

- -

In order to know the details of your hardware you can carry out the following actions:

-
-
How to discover the model name of your notebook
-
See below your notebook or netbook
-
How to discover the model name of your device (if it is not a notebook)
-
If the device is integrated (example: a video card)
-
Open a terminal and type the following command:
-
lspci -vmm
-
-
or
-
lspci -vmm > FILENAME          # output to a file
-
- -
You will obtain the list of your PCI devices, similar to the one written below
-
Slot:03:00.0
-Class:Network controller
-Vendor:Broadcom Corporation
-Device:BCM4311 802.11b/g WLAN
-  SVendor:Hewlett-Packard Company
-  SDevice:Device 1375
-Rev:02
-
-Slot:07:05.0
-Class:FireWire (IEEE 1394)
-Vendor:Ricoh Co Ltd
-Device:R5C832 IEEE 1394 Controller
-  SVendor:Hewlett-Packard Company
-  SDevice:Device 30cf
-Rev:05
-ProgIf:10
-
-
Note: The name of each device is written at the "Device" row, after the colon (see the text - in bold in the above list)
-
If the device is an USB device (example: an external USB wifi card)
-
Open a terminal and type the following command:
-
lsusb -v
-
-
or
-
lsusb -v > FILENAME          # output to a file
-
-
where "filename" is the name of the file
-
You will obtain the list of your USB devices, similar to the one written below
-
Bus 001 Device 002: ID 0846:4260 NetGear, Inc. WG111v3 54 Mbps Wireless [realtek RTL8187B]
-  Device Descriptor:
-  bLength                18
-  bDescriptorType         1
-  bcdUSB               2.00
-  bDeviceClass            0 (Defined at Interface level)
-  bDeviceSubClass         0
-  bDeviceProtocol         0
-  bMaxPacketSize0        64
-  idVendor           0x0846 NetGear, Inc.
-  idProduct          0x4260 WG111v3 54 Mbps Wireless [realtek RTL8187B]
-
-  bcdDevice            2.00
-  iManufacturer           1
-  iProduct                2
-  iSerial                 3
-  ...
-  ...
-
-Bus 002 Device 003: ID 08ff:2580 AuthenTec, Inc. AES2501 Fingerprint Sensor
-Device Descriptor:
-  bLength                18
-  bDescriptorType         1
-  bcdUSB               1.10
-  bDeviceClass          255 Vendor Specific Class
-  bDeviceSubClass       255 Vendor Specific Subclass
-  bDeviceProtocol       255 Vendor Specific Protocol
-  bMaxPacketSize0         8
-  idVendor           0x08ff AuthenTec, Inc.
-  idProduct          0x2580 AES2501 Fingerprint Sensor
-  bcdDevice            6.23
-  iManufacturer           0
-  iProduct                1 Fingerprint Sensor
-  iSerial                 0
-  bNumConfigurations      1
-  ...
-  ...
-
-
Note: The name of each device is written at the row starting with "idProduct" (see the text - in bold in the above list)
-
-
How to discover the year of commercialization of your notebook
-
Open a terminal and type the following command:
-
sudo dmidecode| grep "Release Date"
- -
How to discover the kernel libre version you are using
-
Open a terminal and type the following command:
-
uname -r
-
-
How to discover the name of your video card
-
Open a terminal and type the following command:
-
sudo lspci
-
-
Then look for the row containing the string VGA or Display controller. You can also try one of - the following commands:
-
lspci | grep "Display controller"
-
-
or
-
lspci | grep "VGA"
-
-
How to discover the VendorID and the ProductID of your device (VendorID:ProductID - code)
-
(Thanks Michał - Masłowski and Julius22)
-
If the device is integrated (example: a video card)
-
Open a terminal and type the following command:
-
sudo lspci -nnk
-
You should obtain a list of hardware similar to the one written below
-
03:00.0 Network controller [0280]: Broadcom Corporation BCM4311 802.11b/g WLAN [14e4:4311] (rev 02)
-        Kernel driver in use: b43-pci-bridge
-        Kernel modules: ssb
-05:00.0 VGA compatible controller [0300]: nVidia Corporation G86 [GeForce 8400M GS] [10de:0427] (rev a1)
-        Kernel modules: nouveau, nvidiafb
-
-
The strings in bold and placed inside the square brackets (in the above list) are the code you are - looking for. The first set of digits (before the colon) are the VendorID, the second set of digits are - the ProductID. In the above example: the VendorID:ProductID code of the wifi card (note the strings - "Network controller" and "WLAN") is 14e4:4311 while the VendorID:ProductID code of the video card (note - the string "VGA") is 10de:0427
-
If the device is an USB device (example: an external USB wifi card)
-
Open a terminal and type the following command:
-
sudo lsusb
-
-
You should obtain a list of hardware similar to the one written below
-
Bus 001 Device 002: ID 0846:4260 NetGear, Inc. WG111v3 54 Mbps Wireless [realtek RTL8187B]
-Bus 001 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0002 Linux Foundation 2.0 root hub
-Bus 002 Device 003: ID 08ff:2580 AuthenTec, Inc. AES2501 Fingerprint Sensor
-
-
The strings in bold (in the above list) are the code you are looking for. The first set of digits - (before the colon) are the VendorID, the second set of digits are the ProductID. In the above - example: the VendorID:ProductID code of the external USB wifi card (note the strings "Wireless") is - 0846:4260
-
How to discover if the video card works
-
Install rss-glx by means of the package manager of - your distribution or compiling it from source and try some screensavers (for example Skyrocket or - Solarwinds). Check if you can play the screensaver (and/or if you can play it smoothly)
-
How to discover if the 3D acceleration works
-
Try to enable compiz
-
How to discover the name of your wifi card
-

Open a terminal and type the following command:

-
-
sudo lspci
-
-
Then look for the row containing the string Wireless or Network controller. You can also try - one of the following commands:
-
lspci | grep "Wireless" 
-
-
or
-
lspci | grep "Network" 
-
-
How to discover the printer driver you are using
-
If you are using cups
-
Open a terminal and type the following command:
-
dpkg-query -W -f '${Version}\n' cups
-
-
How to discover the architecture of your notebook
-
Open a terminal and type the following command:
-
dpkg --print-architecture
-
-
-

 

-

List of fully free GNU/Linux distributions

-

h-node is not responsible for the content of other web sites, or how -up-to-date their content is.

- -

Following are the GNU/Linux distributions we know of which have a firm policy -commitment to only include and only propose free software. They reject non-free applications, non-free programming -platforms, non-free drivers, or non-free firmware “blobs”. If by mistake they do include any, they remove it. To -learn more about what makes for a free GNU/Linux -distribution, see GNU Guidelines for -Free System Distributions.

- -

All of the distributions that follow are installable to a computer's hard drive and most can be run -live.

- -

(listed in alphabetical order)

- - - -
- +

Wiki Syntax

+ +

List of + Wiki Tags

+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
NameTagResultDescription
boldtext [b]bold[/b]text boldtext bold
italictext [i]italic[/i]text italictext italic
deltext [del]deleted[/del]text deletedtext deleted
underlinetext [u]underlined[/u]text underlinedtext underlined
head 1[h1]heading[/h1] +
+ heading
+
head 1
head 2[h2]heading[/h2] +
+ heading
+
head 2
head 3[h3]heading[/h3] +
+ heading
+
head 3
paragraph…[p]new paragraph[/p]… + +

new paragraph

+
new paragraph
Ordered Lists
    +
  • [list]
  • +
    • +
    • [*]first item[/*]
    • +
    • [*]second item[/*]
    • +
    +
  • +
  • [/list]
  • +
+
    +
  • first item
  • +
  • second item
  • +
+
make a list of items
Numbered List
    +
  • [enum]
  • +
    • +
    • [*]first item[/*]
    • +
    • [*]second item[/*]
    • +
    +
  • +
  • [/enum]
  • +
+
    +
  1. first item
  2. +
  3. second item
  4. +
+
make a numbered list of items
list item[*]item[/*]
    +
  • item
  • +
+
add an item to a list
code[code]some code[/code]
some code
+
some code
simple link[a]url[/a]urlsimple link
link with text[a]url|text[/a]textlink with text
notebook[notebook]id[/notebook]idlink to the notebook with the identifier equal to id (the identifier of each device model is written in the + page of the device itself, next to the model name)
wifi[wifi]id[/wifi]idlink to the wifi with the identifier equal to id (the identifier of each device model is written in the page + of the device itself, next to the model name)
videocard[videocard]id[/videocard]idlink to the videocard with the identifier equal to id (the identifier of each device model is written in the + page of the device itself, next to the model name)
+ +

 

+ +

Compatibility classes

+ +

Notebooks

+
+
Class A (Platinum)
+
All the notebook devices work with a very good performance.
+
Example: all the devices work, the 3D acceleration is supported
+
Class B (Gold)
+
All the notebook devices work but not at full performance.
+
A typical example: all the devices work, but the 3D acceleration is not supported
+
Class C (Silver)
+
One main device is not supported.
+
Example: the internal wifi card does not work. You need an external USB card
+
Class D (Bronze)
+
More than one device is not supported
+
Class E (Garbage)
+
The notebook does not work with free software
+
+ +

Printers

+
+
Class A (Full)
+
All device functions and features are supported
+
Class B (Partial)
+
Printing supported but possibly at limited speed or print quality; scanning and/or faxing on some multifunction + devices may not be supported
+
Class C (None)
+
The printer does not work with free software
+
+ +

Scanners

+
+
Class A (Full)
+
All device functions and features are supported
+
Class B (Partial)
+
Scanning supported but possibly at limited speed or quality; some other features may not be supported
+
Class C (None)
+
The scanner does not work with free software
+
+ +

 

+ +

Discover your hardware

+ +

(Thanks lluvia)

+ +

In order to know the details of your hardware you can carry out the following actions:

+
+
How to discover the model name of your notebook
+
See below your notebook or netbook
+
How to discover the model name of your device (if it is not a notebook)
+
If the device is integrated (example: a video card)
+
Open a terminal and type the following command:
+
lspci -vmm
+
+
or
+
lspci -vmm > FILENAME          # output to a file
+
+ +
You will obtain the list of your PCI devices, similar to the one written below
+
Slot:03:00.0
+	Class:Network controller
+	Vendor:Broadcom Corporation
+	Device:BCM4311 802.11b/g WLAN
+		SVendor:Hewlett-Packard Company
+		SDevice:Device 1375
+	Rev:02
+	
+	Slot:07:05.0
+	Class:FireWire (IEEE 1394)
+	Vendor:Ricoh Co Ltd
+	Device:R5C832 IEEE 1394 Controller
+		SVendor:Hewlett-Packard Company
+		SDevice:Device 30cf
+	Rev:05
+	ProgIf:10
+
+
Note: The name of each device is written at the "Device" row, after the colon (see the text + in bold in the above list)
+
If the device is an USB device (example: an external USB wifi card)
+
Open a terminal and type the following command:
+
lsusb -v
+
+
or
+
lsusb -v > FILENAME          # output to a file
+
+ +
You will obtain the list of your USB devices, similar to the one written below
+
Bus 001 Device 002: ID 0846:4260 NetGear, Inc. WG111v3 54 Mbps Wireless [realtek RTL8187B]
+		Device Descriptor:
+		bLength								18
+		bDescriptorType				 1
+		bcdUSB							 2.00
+		bDeviceClass						0 (Defined at Interface level)
+		bDeviceSubClass				 0
+		bDeviceProtocol				 0
+		bMaxPacketSize0				64
+		idVendor					 0x0846 NetGear, Inc.
+		idProduct					0x4260 WG111v3 54 Mbps Wireless [realtek RTL8187B]
+	
+		bcdDevice						2.00
+		iManufacturer					 1
+		iProduct								2
+		iSerial								 3
+		...
+		...
+	
+	Bus 002 Device 003: ID 08ff:2580 AuthenTec, Inc. AES2501 Fingerprint Sensor
+	Device Descriptor:
+		bLength								18
+		bDescriptorType				 1
+		bcdUSB							 1.10
+		bDeviceClass					255 Vendor Specific Class
+		bDeviceSubClass			 255 Vendor Specific Subclass
+		bDeviceProtocol			 255 Vendor Specific Protocol
+		bMaxPacketSize0				 8
+		idVendor					 0x08ff AuthenTec, Inc.
+		idProduct					0x2580 AES2501 Fingerprint Sensor
+		bcdDevice						6.23
+		iManufacturer					 0
+		iProduct								1 Fingerprint Sensor
+		iSerial								 0
+		bNumConfigurations			1
+		...
+		...
+
+
Note: The name of each device is written at the row starting with "idProduct" (see the text + in bold in the above list)
+
+
How to discover the year of commercialization of your notebook
+
Open a terminal and type the following command:
+
sudo dmidecode| grep "Release Date"
+
+
How to discover the kernel libre version you are using
+
Open a terminal and type the following command:
+
uname -r
+
+
How to discover the name of your video card
+
Open a terminal and type the following command:
+
sudo lspci
+
+
Then look for the row containing the string VGA or Display controller. You can also try one of + the following commands:
+
lspci | grep "Display controller"
+
+
or
+
lspci | grep "VGA"
+
+
How to discover the VendorID and the ProductID of your device (VendorID:ProductID + code)
+
(Thanks Michał + Masłowski and Julius22)
+
If the device is integrated (example: a video card)
+
Open a terminal and type the following command:
+
sudo lspci -nnk
+
You should obtain a list of hardware similar to the one written below
+
03:00.0 Network controller [0280]: Broadcom Corporation BCM4311 802.11b/g WLAN [14e4:4311] (rev 02)
+					Kernel driver in use: b43-pci-bridge
+					Kernel modules: ssb
+	05:00.0 VGA compatible controller [0300]: nVidia Corporation G86 [GeForce 8400M GS] [10de:0427] (rev a1)
+					Kernel modules: nouveau, nvidiafb
+
+
The strings in bold and placed inside the square brackets (in the above list) are the code you are + looking for. The first set of digits (before the colon) are the VendorID, the second set of digits are + the ProductID. In the above example: the VendorID:ProductID code of the wifi card (note the strings + "Network controller" and "WLAN") is 14e4:4311 while the VendorID:ProductID code of the video card (note + the string "VGA") is 10de:0427
+
If the device is an USB device (example: an external USB wifi card)
+
Open a terminal and type the following command:
+
sudo lsusb
+
+
You should obtain a list of hardware similar to the one written below
+
Bus 001 Device 002: ID 0846:4260 NetGear, Inc. WG111v3 54 Mbps Wireless [realtek RTL8187B]
+	Bus 001 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0002 Linux Foundation 2.0 root hub
+	Bus 002 Device 003: ID 08ff:2580 AuthenTec, Inc. AES2501 Fingerprint Sensor
+
+
The strings in bold (in the above list) are the code you are looking for. The first set of digits + (before the colon) are the VendorID, the second set of digits are the ProductID. In the above + example: the VendorID:ProductID code of the external USB wifi card (note the strings "Wireless") is + 0846:4260
+
How to discover if the video card works
+
Install rss-glx by means of the package manager of + your distribution or compiling it from source and try some screensavers (for example Skyrocket or + Solarwinds). Check if you can play the screensaver (and/or if you can play it smoothly)
+
How to discover if the 3D acceleration works
+
Try to enable compiz
+
How to discover the name of your wifi card
+

Open a terminal and type the following command:

+
+
sudo lspci
+
+
Then look for the row containing the string Wireless or Network controller. You can also try + one of the following commands:
+
lspci | grep "Wireless" 
+
+
or
+
lspci | grep "Network" 
+
+
How to discover the printer driver you are using
+
If you are using cups
+
Open a terminal and type the following command:
+
dpkg-query -W -f '${Version}\n' cups
+
+
How to discover the architecture of your notebook
+
Open a terminal and type the following command:
+
dpkg --print-architecture
+
+
+

 

+

List of fully free GNU/Linux distributions

+

h-node is not responsible for the content of other web sites, or how + up-to-date their content is.

+ +

Following are the GNU/Linux distributions we know of which have a firm policy + commitment to only include and only propose free software. They reject non-free applications, non-free programming + platforms, non-free drivers, or non-free firmware “blobs”. If by mistake they do include any, they remove it. To + learn more about what makes for a free GNU/Linux + distribution, see GNU Guidelines for + Free System Distributions.

+ +

All of the distributions that follow are installable to a computer's hard drive and most can be run + live.

+ +

(listed in alphabetical order)

+ + + +
+ + \ No newline at end of file -- cgit v1.2.3