My approach is as follows I noticed browsers always converts uppercases in domain names into lower cases, so i don't see what the [nc] flag is usueful for in this case. Nc is the wrong tool for this job (to a greater or lesser degree based on which version you have
The more appropriate ones have the option to fork a subprocess for each new incoming connection) Why is the nc flag necessary, when checking only the domain part I'm trying to convert a netcdf file to either a csv or text file using python
It's a dataset including latitude, longitude,. I am using nc command in my linux box like below to check if a port is listening I have combined it in a shell scr. How to create a tcp connection using nc which listens to multiple hosts
The old nc version doesn't allow using different usernames for the bastion and target server I'm trying to send a broadcast message using netcat I have firewalls open and sending a regular message like this works for me Echo hello | nc 192.
I heard that it can be done with 3 lines of code but i really don't know how I am running the mitgcm num. C:\netcat) open two cmd prompts and navigated to cd \netcat Note that i'm on a 32b windows7, for 64bit use nc64.exe
Test by typing hello in one command window and check if it is displayed in the other.