oz | Automated installation for guest images
kandi X-RAY | oz Summary
kandi X-RAY | oz Summary
Oz is a set of programs and classes to do automated installations of operating systems. It is useful for creating virtual machine disk images containing an operating systems and, optionally, programs. The best way to install it is to make an RPM out of it by running "make rpm" or "make srpm", and then installing the resulting RPM on the target machine. Once you have the RPM installed, you will need to build up TDL files to feed as input into the building process. Please see the examples directory to get an idea of what a TDL file looks like.
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Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA
- Modify the cfg file
- Generate the full path to auto installation
- Return the path to the auto path
- Return True if self auto_file is the default file
- Parse command XML
- Creates data from a file
- Download a file via http
- Check if the URL is valid
- Return HTTP header
- Collects the information from the libvirt service
- Collects all necessary setup setup
- Get kernel from fetch url
- Collects the information from the libvirt
- Create a development release
- Send a request
- Generate install media
- Install custom repositories
- Check that the pvd file is supported
- Collects all of the information needed for the setup
- Modify the autoinst
- Modify the ISO
- Copy the pre seed file
- Generate the install media
- Check that the primary volume is supported
- Get kernel from txt
- Modify the config file
oz Key Features
oz Examples and Code Snippets
Community Discussions
Trending Discussions on oz
QUESTION
I have a permutation of different electrodes (25x25=625) from frontal to parietal.
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 16:45We can use unique
in the levels
argument of factor
as unique
returns the unique values from the first occurrence of that element, thus it maintains the same order of occurrence as in the original data
QUESTION
I'd like to dynamically update one column value in a table based on the user input in a different column. The user-editable column is quantity, and I'd like to multiply that by a price value (id = 'pmvalue') to display total price (id 'totalpmvalue') as an output.
I don't understand what javascript to use here - I've tried searching for solutions online, but haven't been able to find something that exactly corresponds to my use case (and I'm not experienced enough to understand how to adapt solutions for slightly different use cases). Any tips are greatly appreciated!
Here's my code:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-14 at 20:12If you are going to have multiple rows, you should be using class
, not id
, the id
attribute needs to be unique in a document.
Once you fix that, you can create a listener:
QUESTION
I am new to python . i am trying to run the below code but the results are not as expected:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Jun-06 at 21:17There is no need for the nested loop.
QUESTION
I am using the following code to scrape content from a webpage with the end goal of writing to a CSV. On the first iteration I had this portion working, but now that my data is formatted differently it writes the data in a way that gets mangled when I try to view it in excel.
If I use the code below the "heading.text" data is correctly put into one cell when viewed in excel. Where as the contents of "child.text" is packed into one cell rather then being split based on the commas. You will see I have attempted to clean up the content of "child.text" in an effort to see if that was my issue.
If I remove "heading.text" from "z" and try again, it writes in a way that has excel showing one letter per cell. In the end I would like each value that is seperated by commas to display in one cell when viewed in excel, I believe I am doing something (many things?) incorrectly in structuring "z" and or when I write the row.
Any guidance would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-May-05 at 06:03csv.writerow()
takes an iterable, each element of which is separated by the writer's delimiter i.e. made a different cell.
First let’s see what’s been happening with you till now:
- (heading.text, child.text) has two elements i.e. two cells, heading.text and child.text
- (child.text) is simply child.text (would be a tuple if it was (child.text**,**)) and a string's elements are each letter. Hence each letter made its own cell.
To get different cells in a row we need separate elements in our iterable so we want an iterable like [header.text, child.text line 1, child.text line 2, ...]. You were right in splitting the text into lines but the lines weren’t being added to it correctly. Tuples being immutable I’ll use a list instead:
- We know heading.text is to take a single cell so we can write the following to start with
QUESTION
The object within an object contains variables such as "name", "amount", "amountType", and "cal". The strings on those variables should be transferred through loop as several row in the given HTML table. Each variable should be on its own cell.
I already made one row and made 4 cell for the name, amount, amount type, and calorie columns. Then, I tried to transfer the objects elements inside the cell using the index of the object.
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-May-31 at 07:11You're treating the mealObj
as an array
while it's an object
and also you're not looping, so your code only runs once.
Below you can find a code that works for the first Menu (Steak). You might need to account for multiple meals by creating multiple tables.
QUESTION
On the function "createIngrList", it should take all the ingredient names, such as "Butter", "Beef", "Onion", etc., and turn it into buttons. So each button should have a text with the name of an ingredient written on it. As of now, there is just 4 buttons with "undefined" written on it. If possible, all the repeating ingredients such as "Onion" should not be made into button twice. Once is enough.
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-May-31 at 00:33I think this may be what you are looking for... Though you mention not parsing ingredients that are listed twice, though each food, only has an ingredient listed in your object once. Correct me if I am wrong I will refine answer.
You can use for/in loops to get the nested ingredients and their foods. Then use the obj.name
to get the name. Through the first for/in loop the key -> i
will be the name of the food, then use the second key along witht he first to get the actual .name
=> obj[i][k].name
this will give you the ingredient name.
I also created a couple of divs to palce the food and its buttons wrapped in divs for styling, etc...
You can use conditionals to filter by food if you want to only show a certain type of foods ingredients as buttons.
NOTE: your obj key for the first value is uppercase, this will cause issues when parsing obj[index][key].name
, likely that is just a typo...
QUESTION
Hi Sorry if you didn't understand what I want to achieve in the Question title but what I want to do is split a word into letters then changing the letter from English to Arabic for example
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-May-19 at 19:07You could keep it as dictionary
QUESTION
Given the following dict (part of very long list of dicts):
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-May-13 at 15:09here you go
QUESTION
I'm trying to replace backslashes (from this polyline) with double backslashes.
My Script:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-May-07 at 20:54The basic problem is that there are no backslashes in your string. Your source code has backslashes, but they are all escape signals. If you want to retain the backslashes in "WYSIWYG" style, use raw
string mode:
QUESTION
I try to filter some results data from mongodb with mongoose in javascript.
This is my json structure:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-May-04 at 15:55Here's a quick way of how to achieve this using $map
Community Discussions, Code Snippets contain sources that include Stack Exchange Network
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Install oz
You can use oz like any standard Python library. You will need to make sure that you have a development environment consisting of a Python distribution including header files, a compiler, pip, and git installed. Make sure that your pip, setuptools, and wheel are up to date. When using pip it is generally recommended to install packages in a virtual environment to avoid changes to the system.
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