I see that "beagle" is part of FC5 and has generated a lot of files but I can't find any way to make it do anything? Entering "beagle" goes no where, "bash: beagle: command not found"
I don't find a "man page" for it. Perhaps I could simply remove it via yum? Or is there some trick to getting it to do something? Google has not helped.
Any help appreciated.
Bob Goodwin, Zuni, Virginia w2bod
Bob Goodwin bobgoodwin@wildblue.net writes:
I see that "beagle" is part of FC5 and has generated a lot of files but I can't find any way to make it do anything? Entering "beagle" goes no where, "bash: beagle: command not found"
I don't find a "man page" for it. Perhaps I could simply remove it via yum? Or is there some trick to getting it to do something? Google has not helped.
Any help appreciated.
Bob Goodwin, Zuni, Virginia w2bod
Bob,
You need to start *beagled* before you can do anything with beagle. There is no beagle command actually. After you start `beagled', type `beagle-search' to use it. If you don't start beagled, you will get `Search service not running' error.
On 5/1/06, Leon sdl.web@gmail.com wrote:
Bob Goodwin bobgoodwin@wildblue.net writes:
I see that "beagle" is part of FC5 and has generated a lot of files but I can't find any way to make it do anything? Entering "beagle" goes no where, "bash: beagle: command not found"
I don't find a "man page" for it. Perhaps I could simply remove it via yum? Or is there some trick to getting it to do something? Google has not helped.
Any help appreciated.
Bob Goodwin, Zuni, Virginia w2bod
Bob,
You need to start *beagled* before you can do anything with beagle. There is no beagle command actually. After you start `beagled', type `beagle-search' to use it. If you don't start beagled, you will get `Search service not running' error.
-- Leon
Where does documentation for Beagle exit? Why would it be useful? If I don't want it (which I suspect is the case), how do I disable and/or uninstall it?
-- Bob Rowlands rowlands.bob@gmail.com
On 01/05/06, Bob Rowlands rowlands.bob@gmail.com wrote:
If I don't want it (which I suspect is the case), how do I disable and/or uninstall it?
# yum remove beagle cheers, e.
-- Non è vero che usando Linux eviti ogni contatto con il malware. Per esempio, mia suocera continua a venire a trovarci ogni Domenica.
On Mon, 2006-05-01 at 10:26 -0400, Bob Rowlands wrote:
On 5/1/06, Leon sdl.web@gmail.com wrote:
Bob Goodwin bobgoodwin@wildblue.net writes:
I see that "beagle" is part of FC5 and has generated a lot of files but I can't find any way to make it do anything? Entering "beagle" goes no where, "bash: beagle: command not found"
I don't find a "man page" for it. Perhaps I could simply remove it via yum? Or is there some trick to getting it to do something? Google has not helped.
Any help appreciated.
Bob Goodwin, Zuni, Virginia w2bod
Bob,
You need to start *beagled* before you can do anything with beagle. There is no beagle command actually. After you start `beagled', type `beagle-search' to use it. If you don't start beagled, you will get `Search service not running' error.
-- Leon
Where does documentation for Beagle exit? Why would it be useful? If I don't want it (which I suspect is the case), how do I disable and/or uninstall it?
-- Bob Rowlands rowlands.bob@gmail.com
http://www.antezeta.com/beagle-fedora.html
Try this, I found it interesting.
Nik
Howdy,
On Mon, 2006-05-01 at 10:26 -0400, Bob Rowlands wrote:
On 5/1/06, Leon sdl.web@gmail.com wrote:
Bob Goodwin bobgoodwin@wildblue.net writes:
I see that "beagle" is part of FC5 and has generated a lot of files but I can't find any way to make it do anything? Entering "beagle" goes no where, "bash: beagle: command not found"
I don't find a "man page" for it. Perhaps I could simply remove it via yum? Or is there some trick to getting it to do something? Google has not helped.
Any help appreciated.
Bob Goodwin, Zuni, Virginia w2bod
Bob,
You need to start *beagled* before you can do anything with beagle. There is no beagle command actually. After you start `beagled', type `beagle-search' to use it. If you don't start beagled, you will get `Search service not running' error.
-- Leon
Where does documentation for Beagle exit? Why would it be useful? If I don't want it (which I suspect is the case), how do I disable and/or uninstall it?
The following is a SUSE linux 10.0 description of beagle. Hope it helps ;-)
taharka@Khufu:~> rpm -qi beagle Name : beagle Relocations: (not relocatable) Version : 0.0.13.3 Vendor: SUSE LINUX Products GmbH, Nuernberg, Germany Release : 9.6 Build Date: Mon 24 Apr 2006 12:49:42 AM EDT Install date: Tue 25 Apr 2006 08:52:33 AM EDT Build Host: nelson.suse.de Group : Productivity/Other Source RPM: beagle-0.0.13.3-9.6.src.rpm Size : 1632097 License: X11/MIT, Apache Signature : DSA/SHA1, Mon 24 Apr 2006 10:30:05 AM EDT, Key ID a84edae89c800acaPackager : http://www.suse.de/feedback URL : http://www.gnome.org/projects/beagle/ Summary : Desktop search application Description : Beagle is a search tool that ransacks your personal information space to find whatever you're looking for. Beagle can search in many different domains: * documents
* emails
* web history
* IM/IRC conversations
* source code
* images
* music files
* applications
* ...and much more
Authors: -------- Jon Trowbridge trow@novell.com Nat Friedman nat@novell.com Todd Berman tberman@off.net Michael Levy mlevy@wardium.homeip.net Joe Gasiorek joe.gasiorek@gmail.com Arwed V. Merkatz v.merkatz@gmx.net Christopher Orr chris@protactin.co.uk Dave Camp dave@novell.com Veerapuram Varadhan vvaradhan@novell.com Michael Bayne mdb@samskivert.com Fredrik Hedberg fredrik.hedberg@hedbergs.com Robert Love rml@novell.com Joe Shaw joeshaw@novell.com Chris Lahey clahey@ximian.com Tuomas Kuosmanen tigert@tigert.priv Alex Graveley alex@beatniksoftware.com Adam Lofts adam@negligible.co.uk Lukas Lipka lukas@pmad.net Rafael Slinckx raf.raf@wol.be James Vipond james.vipond@ntlworld.com Carl-Emil Lagerstedt carl-emil@lagerstedt.net Distribution: SUSE LINUX 10.0 (i586)
Bob Rowlands rowlands.bob@gmail.com
taharka
Lexington, Kentucky U.S.A.
taharka wrote:
Howdy,
On Mon, 2006-05-01 at 10:26 -0400, Bob Rowlands wrote:
On 5/1/06, Leon sdl.web@gmail.com wrote:
Bob Goodwin bobgoodwin@wildblue.net writes:
I see that "beagle" is part of FC5 and has generated a lot of files but I can't find any way to make it do anything? Entering "beagle" goes no where, "bash: beagle: command not found"
I don't find a "man page" for it. Perhaps I could simply remove it via yum? Or is there some trick to getting it to do something? Google has not helped.
Any help appreciated.
Bob Goodwin, Zuni, Virginia w2bod
Bob,
You need to start *beagled* before you can do anything with beagle. There is no beagle command actually. After you start `beagled', type `beagle-search' to use it. If you don't start beagled, you will get `Search service not running' error.
-- Leon
Where does documentation for Beagle exit? Why would it be useful? If I don't want it (which I suspect is the case), how do I disable and/or uninstall it?
The following is a SUSE linux 10.0 description of beagle. Hope it helps ;-)
taharka@Khufu:~> rpm -qi beagle Name : beagle Relocations: (not relocatable) Version : 0.0.13.3 Vendor: SUSE LINUX Products GmbH, Nuernberg, Germany Release : 9.6 Build Date: Mon 24 Apr 2006 12:49:42 AM EDT Install date: Tue 25 Apr 2006 08:52:33 AM EDT Build Host: nelson.suse.de Group : Productivity/Other Source RPM: beagle-0.0.13.3-9.6.src.rpm Size : 1632097 License: X11/MIT, Apache Signature : DSA/SHA1, Mon 24 Apr 2006 10:30:05 AM EDT, Key ID a84edae89c800acaPackager : http://www.suse.de/feedback URL : http://www.gnome.org/projects/beagle/ Summary : Desktop search application Description : Beagle is a search tool that ransacks your personal information space to find whatever you're looking for. Beagle can search in many different domains: * documents
emails
web history
IM/IRC conversations
source code
images
music files
applications
...and much more
Authors:
Jon Trowbridge <trow@novell.com> Nat Friedman <nat@novell.com> Todd Berman <tberman@off.net> Michael Levy <mlevy@wardium.homeip.net> Joe Gasiorek <joe.gasiorek@gmail.com> Arwed V. Merkatz <v.merkatz@gmx.net> Christopher Orr <chris@protactin.co.uk> Dave Camp <dave@novell.com> Veerapuram Varadhan <vvaradhan@novell.com> Michael Bayne <mdb@samskivert.com> Fredrik Hedberg <fredrik.hedberg@hedbergs.com> Robert Love <rml@novell.com> Joe Shaw <joeshaw@novell.com> Chris Lahey <clahey@ximian.com> Tuomas Kuosmanen <tigert@tigert.priv> Alex Graveley <alex@beatniksoftware.com> Adam Lofts <adam@negligible.co.uk> Lukas Lipka <lukas@pmad.net> Rafael Slinckx <raf.raf@wol.be> James Vipond <james.vipond@ntlworld.com> Carl-Emil Lagerstedt <carl-emil@lagerstedt.net>Distribution: SUSE LINUX 10.0 (i586)
Bob Rowlands rowlands.bob@gmail.com
taharka
Lexington, Kentucky U.S.A.
Ok, "beagle-search" was the command I needed! I spent the last fifteen minutes messing with that and now I know that it's another learning effort. I will keep it and see what use I can make of it.
Thanks to all ...
Bob Goodwin Zuni, Virginia w2bod