with different Jewish & Israelis scenes in each side of it.The herewith photo shows each of the four sides of the dreidel. Take a look at it to get an idea of this beautifully made papier mache sevivon!The four letters which appear on the four sides of the dreidel alude to the miracle of Hanukkah.They spell out: Nes (N-miracle)¸ next player spins the dreidel.GIMEL - player takes all tokens in the pot.HEY - player takes half of the pot.PEY/SHIN - player must put one token into the pot.Players use pennies¸
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Hey again,Today, we're going to take a look at a quirky little command (The use of the term quirky is my personal bias creeping in ;) called pidof that you can, absolutely, find on RedHat ES versions 4 and up. It's probably on lots of other distro's, too, but I can only afford to muck with what's in the free-server-pool at any given moment. This command is actually very interesting and, given that RHEL3 boasts the pgrep command, I was quite surprised when I bumped into it. I'm not sure if it seemed contradictory or complementary; just unexpected.pidof, as the name would suggest, is a program that will find the process id (PID) of a running program (or the PID's of programs). Again, just like its name, it finds the pid of a running process. I'm just repeating this over and over again because the name is so self explanatory is seems contrary to everything I've come to expect from Linux and Unix (od, bc, dc, nm, ar, etc.. &;-- Literally etcetera. There's no program, that I know of, named etc yet ;)Normally, I would blow a command like this off and stick with what I know; relegating it to that place in the back of my mind so cluttered with mental detritus that it's bound to all crumble apart sooner or later ;) As luck, or a fate I couldn't possibly avoid, would have it, this command does have some interesting (if not puzzling) features and an even more interesting lineage (skip to the bottom of the post for the most bizarre thing about it ;).In it's basic form, you use it much like you might use pgrep. For instance:host # pidof dsmadmc27937 27927 27921 27918 24324 15596 11970 17360the output format is somewhat different (horizontal rather than vertical) and more limited, but the results are relatively equal. You've just pulled a list of PID's that have, in this case, the string dsmadmc in them. It should be noted that pidof's standard mode of operation is like using pgrep with the -x option. It only returns exact matches and not substring matches. It should also be noted that, unlike pgrep, you can specify more than one program on the command line without making any major changes. Of course, the output is cryptic enough that this may or may not be a good idea:host # pidof dsmadmc sshd27937 27927 27921 27918 24324 15596 11970 17360 20657 20651 31593host # pidof sshd20657 20651 31593 <-- As you can see, the PID groups follow each other in order, but you have no way of knowing - at least from the straight output - where the PID's from your first named program stop and the PID's from your next named program begin!This seems like it would be a great way to line up and knock down zombie processes, but, unfortunately, it won't match them (at least not the ways I tried):host # ps -efl|grep ZF S UID PID PPID C PRI NI ADDR SZ WCHAN STIME TTY TIME CMD4 Z root 20992 20989 0 79 0 - 0 exit 00:00 ? 00:00:00 [sh] <defunct>host # pidof Zhost # pidof defuncthost # pidof See full article here (link)
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