/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/ap/gpl/timemachine/openssl-0.9.8e/engines/ |
H A D | makeengines.com | 33 $! Set the names of the engines we want to build 158 $! Check if the module we want to compile is actually there.
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/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/src/linux/linux-2.6/arch/cris/arch-v32/kernel/ |
H A D | kgdb_asm.S | 23 ;; Now we are free to use ACR all we want.
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/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/ap/gpl/dnsmasq-2.15/contrib/dnslist/ |
H A D | dnslist.pl | 293 if you want it, that you can change the software or use pieces of it 311 Also, for each author's protection and ours, we want to make certain 314 want its recipients to know that what they have is not the original, so 552 If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest 607 library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library General
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/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/ap/gpl/dnsmasq-2.33/contrib/dnslist/ |
H A D | dnslist.pl | 293 if you want it, that you can change the software or use pieces of it 311 Also, for each author's protection and ours, we want to make certain 314 want its recipients to know that what they have is not the original, so 552 If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest 607 library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library General
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/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/ap/gpl/samba-3.0.13/examples/LDAP/smbldap-tools-0.8.7/doc/ |
H A D | smbldap-migrate-unix-accounts | 357 and want to change their structural objectClass.
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/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/src/router/busybox-1.x/applets/ |
H A D | applets.c | 24 #warning If you still want to do it, remove -Wl,--gc-sections 311 * We may want to simply ignore such lines in case they 601 /* we want "<argv[0]>: applet not found", not "busybox: ..." */
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/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/ap/gpl/timemachine/db-4.7.25.NC/perl/DB_File/ |
H A D | DB_File.pm | 247 Fcntl->import(@O); # first we import what we want to export 677 If you want to make use of the new features available in Berkeley DB 779 values when you only want to change one. Here is an example: 905 The DB_BTREE format is useful when you want to store data in a given 958 There are a few point to bear in mind if you want to change the 1011 want to manipulate a BTREE database with duplicate keys. Consider this 1760 want to make the same transformation to all keys and/or values in a 1866 "12345". If you actually want the key to be stored in the DBM database 1947 say "A" and "B", both want to update the same B<DB_File> database
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/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/src/linux/linux-2.6/drivers/firewire/ |
H A D | fw-cdev.c | 273 size_t want = get_info->rom_length; local 277 min(want, have)))
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/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/src/linux/linux-2.6/arch/x86_64/boot/ |
H A D | setup.S | 280 # tell BIOS we want to go to long mode 455 # Now we want to move to protected mode ...
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/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/src/linux/linux-2.6/arch/cris/arch-v10/kernel/ |
H A D | entry.S | 357 ;; Since we dont really want to have two epilogues (one for system calls 446 ;; now we have a 4-word SBFS frame which we do not want to restore 738 ;; since *not* doing that saves us from re-entrancy checks. We don't want 739 ;; to get here again due to possible subsequent NMIs; we want the watchdog
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H A D | head.S | 315 ;; If we boot this from Flash, we want to keep the ROM filesystem in 316 ;; the flash, we want to copy the text and need to copy the data to DRAM. 472 ;; We want to copy it to the end of the BSS
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/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/ap/gpl/samba-3.0.13/examples/LDAP/smbldap-tools-0.8.7/ |
H A D | smbldap-useradd | 472 For Samba users, rid is '2*uidNumber+1000', and sambaPrimaryGroupSID is '$SID-2*gidNumber+1001', where $SID is the domain SID. Thus you may want to use :
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/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/ap/gpl/curl-7.23.1/lib/ |
H A D | http.c | 279 * ones available and the ones we want. 286 /* only deal with authentication we want */ 287 long avail = pick->avail & pick->want; 641 if(authhost->want && !authhost->picked) 644 want one, and if this is one single bit it'll be used instantly. */ 645 authhost->picked = authhost->want; 647 if(authproxy->want && !authproxy->picked) 649 far by a proxy round-trip. Then we set the picked one to the want one, 651 authproxy->picked = authproxy->want; 720 * Here we check if we want th [all...] |
H A D | urldata.h | 1086 long want; /* Bitmask set to the authentication methods wanted by the app member in struct:auth
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H A D | transfer.c | 252 about to restart a new transfer and thus we want to avoid inadvertently 400 might be pipelining and then someone else might want to read what 524 /* We have a new url to load, but since we want to be able 1289 /* we want header and/or body, if neither then don't do this! */ 1467 /* Init the SSL session ID cache here. We do it here since we want to do it 1482 data->state.authhost.want = data->set.httpauth; 1483 data->state.authproxy.want = data->set.proxyauth; 1949 * following isn't what anyone would want! */ 2087 /* We got no data, we attempted to re-use a connection and yet we want a 2347 /* we want heade [all...] |
H A D | ftp.c | 1330 /* If we have selected NOBODY and HEADER, it means that we only want file 1707 * We don't want to rely on a former host lookup that might've expired 1809 /* We want "seamless" FTP operations through HTTP proxy tunnel */ 1812 * conn->proto.http; we want FTP through HTTP and we have to change the 3008 /* We want "seamless" FTP operations through HTTP proxy tunnel */ 3011 * conn->proto.http; we want FTP through HTTP and we have to change the 3368 char want = (char)(ascii?'A':'I'); local 3370 if(ftpc->transfertype == want) { 3375 PPSENDF(&ftpc->pp, "TYPE %c", want); 3379 ftpc->transfertype = want; [all...] |
H A D | url.c | 838 /* remember we want this enabled */ 844 /* set a list of cipher we want to use in the SSL connection */ 924 * We want to sent data to the remote host. If this is HTTP, that equals 988 * We want to upload and append to an existing file. 1483 * If the proxy is set to "" we explicitly say that we don't want to use a 1786 * What range of the file you want to transfer 2364 external inputs and want to restrict what protocol(s) to deal 2637 data->state.authhost.want; 2643 data->state.authproxy.want; 3030 ((data->state.authhost.want [all...] |
/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/ap/gpl/timemachine/db-4.7.25.NC/perl/BerkeleyDB/t/Test/ |
H A D | Builder.pm | 190 are. You usually only want to call one of these methods. 363 # $test might contain an object which we don't want to accidentally 585 You'll want to avoid qr// if you want your tests to work before 5.005. 1216 can erase history if you really want to. 1339 for the $TODO variable. If you want to be sure, tell it explicitly 1444 # We don't want to muck with death in an eval, but $^S isn't
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/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/src/linux/linux-2.6/arch/frv/kernel/ |
H A D | sleep.S | 126 # - we want it to be be cacheline aligned so we can lock it into the icache easily
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/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/src/linux/linux-2.6/arch/m68k/fpsp040/ |
H A D | skeleton.S | 83 | will probably want to clear the pending exception.
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/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/ap/gpl/minidlna/ffmpeg-0.5.1/libavcodec/x86/ |
H A D | x86inc.asm | 460 ; I often want to use macros that permute their arguments. e.g. there's no
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/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/ap/gpl/timemachine/zlib-1.2.3/contrib/masmx86/ |
H A D | gvmat32.asm | 25 ; if you want include both longest_match_7fff and longest_match_686
37 ; if you are not interresed in old cpu performance and want the smaller
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/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/src/linux/linux-2.6/arch/arm/mm/ |
H A D | proc-xscale.S | 434 @ Handle the X bit. We want to set this bit for the minicache
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/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/ap/gpl/minidlna/zlib-1.2.3/contrib/masmx86/ |
H A D | gvmat32.asm | 25 ; if you want include both longest_match_7fff and longest_match_686
37 ; if you are not interresed in old cpu performance and want the smaller
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/netgear-WNDR4500-V1.0.1.40_1.0.68/ap/gpl/iproute2/doc/ |
H A D | ip-cref.tex | 90 with the \verb|'\'| character. This is convenient when you want to 1897 In some circumstances we want to route packets differently depending not only 2501 \verb|OBJECT-LIST| is the list of object types that we want to monitor. 2530 tables may be huge. If we want to classify or to account for the packets 2532 want to distinguish the packets not only by their destination, but 2815 By the way, you may also want to look at 2891 If you only want to translate selected ports (f.e.\ http) 3005 \# you want to increase the timeout.\\ 3250 \# you want to increase the timeout.\\
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