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<sect1 id="repo-ws-config">
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<title>Configuring Your Workstation</title>
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<para>
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Once your workstation has been installed, it is time for you
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to configure it. The configuration of your workstation
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consists on defining your workplace, download a working copy
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from &TCAR; and finally, run the <function>prepare</function>
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functionality of <command>centos-art.sh</command> script to
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install/update the software needed, render images, create
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links, and anything else needed.
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</para>
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<sect2 id="repo-ws-config-wp">
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<title>Define Your Workplace</title>
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<para>
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Once you've installed the workstation and it is up and
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running, you need to register the user name you'll use for
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working. In this task you need to use the commands
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<command>useradd</command> and <command>passwd</command> to
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create the user name and set a password for it, respectively.
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These commands require administrative privileges to be
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executed, so you need to login as <quote>root</quote>
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superuser for doing so.
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</para>
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<caution>
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<para>
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Do not use the <quote>root</quote> username for regular
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tasks inside your working copy of &TCAR;. This is dangerous
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and might provoke unreversable damages to your workstation.
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</para>
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</caution>
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<para>
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When you've registered your user name in the workstation, it
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provides an identifier for you to open a user's session in the
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workstation and a place to store the information you produce,
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as well. This place is known as your home directory and is
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unique for each user registered in the workstation. For
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example, if you register the user name john in your
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workstation, your home directory would be located at
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class="directory">/home/john/</filename>.
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</para>
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<para>
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At this point it is important to define where to download the
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working copy of &TCAR; inside your home directory. This
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desition deserves special attention and should be implemented
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carefully in order to grant a standard environment that could
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be distributed. Let's see some alternatives.
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</para>
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<sect3>
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<title>Different Absolute Paths</title>
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<para>
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Consider that you store your working copy under
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class="directory">/home/john/Projects/artwork/</filename> and
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I store mine under
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class="directory">/home/al/Projects/artwork/</filename>, we'll
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end up refering the same files inside our working copies
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through different absolute paths. This alternative generates
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a contradiction when files which hold path information inside
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are committed up to the central repository from different
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working copies. The contradiction comes from the question:
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which is the correct absolute path to use inside such files,
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yours or mine? (None of them is, of course.)
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</para>
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</sect3>
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<sect3 id="repo-ws-config-wp-OneUniqueAbsolutePath">
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<title>One Unique Absolute Path</title>
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<para>
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Another case would be that where you and I ourselves use one
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unique home directory (e.g.,
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class="directory">/home/centos/Projects/artwork/</filename>)
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to store the working copy of &TCAR; in our own workstations,
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but configure the subversion client to use different user
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names to commit changes up from the working copy to the
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central repository. This alternative might be not so good in
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situations where you and I have to share the same workstation.
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In such cases, it would be required that we both share the
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password information of the same system user (the
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<quote>centos</quote> user in our example) which, in
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addition, gives access to that user's subversion client
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configuration and this way provokes the whole sense of using
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different subversion credentials for committing changes to be
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lost.
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</para>
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</sect3>
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<sect3>
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<title>Different Absolute Paths Through Dynamic Expansion</title>
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<para>
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Most of the absolute paths we use inside the working copy are
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made of two parts, one dynamic and one relative fixed. The
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dynamic part is the home directory of the current user and its
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value can be retrived from the <envar>$HOME</envar>
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environment variable. The fixed part of the path is the one
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we set inside the repositroy structure itself as a matter of
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organization. What we need here is to find a way to expand
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variables inside files that don't support variable expansion.
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This alternative had worked rather fine when we produce
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produce PNG files from SVG files and XTHML from DocBook files,
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but the same is not true for absolute paths inside files that
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are used as in their permanent state inside the repository
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(e.g., CSS files and other files similar in purpose).
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</para>
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</sect3>
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</sect2>
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<sect2 id="repo-ws-config-wc">
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<title>Download Your Working Copy</title>
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<para>
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As convenction, to use the &TCAR;, you must register the user
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name <quote>centos</quote> in your workstation, do login with
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it, and download the working copy from the central repository
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using the following command:
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|
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</para>
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<screen>svn co https://projects.centos.org/svn/artwork /home/centos/Projects/artwork</screen>
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<para>
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The first time you download the working copy it contains no
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image files, nor documentation, or localized content inside
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it. This is because all the files provided in the working copy
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are source files (e.g., the files needed to produce other
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files) and it is up to you the action of render them to
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produce the final files (e.g., images and documentation) used
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to implement &TCPCVI;.
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eebdc3 |
</para>
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eebdc3 |
|
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</sect2>
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<sect2 id="repo-ws-config-sudoers">
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<title>Configure Administrative Tasks</title>
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<para>
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|
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Most of the administrative tasks you need to perform in your
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|
9c8948 |
working copy of &TCAR; are standardized inside the
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<function>prepare</function> functionality of
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9c8948 |
<command>centos-art.sh</command> script. Inside
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<command>centos-art.sh</command>
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script, all administrative task are invoked trough the
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9c8948 |
<command>sudo</command> command. Thus, in order for the
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9c8948 |
<command>centos-art.sh</command> script to perform
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9c8948 |
administrative tasks, you need to update the
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<command>sudo</command>'s configuration in a way that such
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administrative actions be allowed.
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9c8948 |
</para>
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<para>
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At time of this writing the <command>centos-art.sh</command>
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script implements just one administrative task, that is
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package management. Nevertheless, in the future, other
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administrative tasks might be included as well.
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</para>
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<para>
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To update the <command>sudo</command>'s configuration, execute
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|
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the <command>visudo</command> command as <quote>root</quote>.
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Later, uncoment the <varname>Cmnd_Alias</varname> related to
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9c8948 |
<quote>SOFTWARE</quote> and add a line for
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|
9c8948 |
<quote>centos</quote> username allowing software commands. This
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configuration is illustrated in
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linkend="repo-ws-config-sudoers-example" />.
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</para>
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|
eebdc3 |
|
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<example id="repo-ws-config-sudoers-example">
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9c8948 |
<title>The <filename>/etc/sudoers</filename> configuration file</title>
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9c8948 |
<screenshot>
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9c8948 |
<screeninfo><filename>/etc/sudoers</filename> configuration file</screeninfo>
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9c8948 |
<mediaobject>
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9c8948 |
<textobject>
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9c8948 |
<programlisting>
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## Installation and management of software
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9c8948 |
Cmnd_Alias SOFTWARE = /bin/rpm, /usr/bin/up2date, /usr/bin/yum
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9c8948 |
|
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|
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## Next comes the main part: which users can run what software on
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## which machines (the sudoers file can be shared between multiple
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9c8948 |
## systems).
|
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9c8948 |
## Syntax:
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9c8948 |
##
|
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9c8948 |
## user MACHINE=COMMANDS
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9c8948 |
##
|
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## The COMMANDS section may have other options added to it.
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9c8948 |
##
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## Allow root to run any commands anywhere
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root ALL=(ALL) ALL
|
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|
9c8948 |
|
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## Allow the centos user to run installation and management of
|
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|
9c8948 |
## software anywhere.
|
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|
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centos ALL=(ALL) SOFTWARE
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|
9c8948 |
</programlisting>
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|
9c8948 |
</textobject>
|
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|
9c8948 |
</mediaobject>
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|
9c8948 |
</screenshot>
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9c8948 |
</example>
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9c8948 |
|
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9c8948 |
</sect2>
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9c8948 |
|
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<sect2 id="repo-ws-config-runout">
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<title>Run Automation Tool</title>
|
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9c8948 |
<para>
|
|
|
9c8948 |
Once you've created the <quote>centos</quote> username, logged
|
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|
9c8948 |
in with it, downloaded a working copy from &TCAR; and
|
|
|
9c8948 |
configured the <command>sudo</command>'s configuration file,
|
|
|
9c8948 |
run the <function>prepare</function> functionality of
|
|
|
9c8948 |
<command>centos-art.sh</command> script to complete the
|
|
|
9c8948 |
configuration process using the following command:
|
|
|
9c8948 |
</para>
|
|
|
9c8948 |
|
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|
9c8948 |
<screen>/home/centos/Projects/artwork/trunk/Scripts/Bash/centos-art.sh prepare</screen>
|
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|
9c8948 |
|
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|
9c8948 |
<para>
|
|
|
9c8948 |
To know more about the <function>prepare</function>
|
|
|
9c8948 |
functionality of <command>centos-art.sh</command> script, see
|
|
|
9c8948 |
<xref linkend="scripts-bash-prepare" />.
|
|
|
9c8948 |
</para>
|
|
|
eebdc3 |
</sect2>
|
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|
eebdc3 |
|
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|
eebdc3 |
</sect1>
|