Server :: Can't Read Korean - Can't Create File With A Korean Name
Feb 9, 2010
I'm using Centos 5.4 and have problem relate to the server's font. We installed Korean fonts on the server, but I can't read korean on the server, and I can't create file with a korean name.
I am new with CentOS. I've installed CentOS 5.4 and now trying to create a directory with Korean name but it displays incorrectly.Please help give me some instructions to solve this problem.I could not find out the solution by searching document from internet.
How do u add languages in 10.04? I went to System -> Pref -> Keyboard and added Korean and nothing happened for me found a few instructions but were way too dated
I have been having multiple problems setting up my friends computer to type korean. I installed Smart Common Input Method but none of the hot keys seem to register. If you need more info about the computer or installation just ask!
I'd like to use Korean but have an English keyboard, an English environment, and need to input via this method. It appears that there is currently no way to use ibus and have the functionality of the "hangul-romaja" tables that SCIM had. For example, it used to be, using Hangul-romaja, that I could type the letters "g" and "a" to get the Korean "가" (ga).
Now, the moment I type "g" it automatically writes. Typing "g" and "a" produces: Am I just doing something wrong? Using Anthy in Japanese works just fine...typing "g" and "a" produces a "が" just like it's supposed to. Anyone out there know what to do to get Hangul-romaja (or something similar!) working in ibus? Am I stuck having to just guess at the Korean keyboard layout or memorize it somewhere? Might there already be an ibus-compatible solution for this?
I was able to find a multitude of different keyboard fonts through preferences>keyboard>korean. However, the Korean keyboard is English only, and there's no Korean font. I would like to have access to the Korean font.
After I've upgraded to 10.04, the Korean text has become unreadable or very hard to read, on both KDE/Qt and Gnome/GTK apps. The text appears thiner and some characters/symbols are not fully rendered.
Has anyone encountered the same issue?
Update: In Dolphin and Nautilus the text is not rendered clearly, in Konsole is displayed just fine.
Have 2 FC 14 servers. On both of them set system default language to German (de_DE), reboot, and all is as expected -- all menus and messages in German. Then changed system default back to English, reboot, both are back in English. Then changed system default to Korean (ko_KR), reboot. One server comes up in Korean as expected, but the other comes up in English.
/etc/sysconfig/i18n is ko_KR.utf8 as expected. SSH terminal and execute 'locale' and all variables set to 'ko_KR.UTF8' as expected. Start a GNOME session (thru VNC), open a terminal and 'locale' shows 'ko_KO.UTF8'. Changed default language back to German, reboot, everything comes up in German. Change it to Korean, reboot, and we're back to English (not even German). (Note: LANG=en_US is set as kernel boot option, do that's probably why not German here.) Have trolled through DMESG and /var/log/messages but do not see any error message.Tried 'yum groupremove "Korean Support"' to clear everything out, then re-installed it. Still the same result.
I originally made this post in Linux-General, but only one person was really answering the question and now he hasn't been responding, so I've come here since Scim is also Slackware related.Simply put, I need to be able to use Scim to input the Korean language.Here's the original thread:[URL]
My goal is when test should be drawn using mono, sans serif family fonts, Korean font should be picked up.I have added below entry in fonts.conf and the font is also installed under fonts directory.
Using FC_DEBUG flag, I checked that score for this font is not coming the "Best Score".I am not sure what the problem is, If I expect fontconfig to just replace sans with my font, it should take that.
I have a keyboard layout built in Korean language, and when i installed openSUSE 11.3 by network installation i keep keyboard layout to Korean. But after installation can't write Korean but still see Korean font in Firefox, cuz i added its font on firefox configuration settings. What shall i do? I want installed in English but still need to use Korean fonts to write something.
I am going to install a computer for multi-language support for English and the Korean Hangul written language. I would like to configure the input from the keyboard to switch from English to Korean. I have keyboard with English and Korean and I would like to configure one of the keyboard buttons to switch the input language similar to how Microsoft multi-language support works. What applications and configuration changes are necessary to implement this.
I plugged in my USb drive into my computer yesterday and tried to delete a folder. I was unable to do so and got the following message
Cannot move file to trash, do you want to delete immediately? The file "my file" cannot be moved to the trash. Show Details Unable to create trashing info file: Read-only file system
So when I click on delete I get another error message:
Error while deleting. There was an error deleting Case Study Database. Show Details Error removing file: Read-only file system
At this point I can only click on Skip, Skip All, or Cancel.
I have not changed anything on the stick recently so I dont know what is causing the problem.
All my torrents go to my home/username/Download/ folder, I could read/write yesterday but now I cant even copy the files to a flash drive.The error i get is "Cannot create regular file '/home/username/Download/file' : Read only file system.
I've found myself in the situation where I need to create a menu in gnome/kde for a directory structure full of documents.The directory structure looks like this:
Can windows read files from a home file server with an ext4 file system? or do I have to partition the drive with the server (ext4) and an ntfs partition with the files on?
What are the possible problem when Windows access the file from Ubuntu got Read Only even though have a full permission to read, write and execute the file? Ubuntu to Ubuntu accessing the file there is no problem only Windows got a problem.
More of a "Knowledge" question... Is their a limit to the number of reads a single file can take? Say for example I have a file named config.xml in an htdocs directory and a XMLReader function from PHP reads some value(s) out of this file for every connection of Apache or NGinx. Now suppose my site receives a gigantic spike in traffic (but Apache stays opertational through it all)... Is their a point at which the underlying system would simply not be able to open+read config.xml anymore??
I am new in perl, i have a question i.e 'How to read individual logs from linux server into another log file using perl script', I need to capture the individual logs from different paths and output the result of those log files and store to a file in another location.These Logs are generated in Linux Server..
I am trying to set up an ampache server using apache as the webserver. The instructions have the following line as one of the requirments: Your webserver has read access to the /sql/ampache.sql file and the /config/ampache.cfg.php.dist file..I have essentially zero experience with apache, and I'm not sure how to grant read access to a file.
I have a videos server here at work running Mandriva 2009 Spring and I need to copy a 10 gig file from it to a USB drive. The drive needs to be readable and writable from Windows. The file size rules out FAT, and when I try to write to it when formatted as NTFS I get an error about it being a read-only file system. How can I get NTFS support up and running?
I restore tape backup on my Linux server. At the time of booting the server it cannot able to read the filesystems.
I am getting the following message, Code: Your system appears to have shutdown uncleanly Forcing file system integrity check due to default setting Checking root filesystem fsch.ext3: file system has unsupported features (S) (/) e2fsck: Get a never version of e2fsck! (FAILED) *** An error occurred during the file system check. *** Dropping you to a shell; the system will reboot *** when you leave the shell. Give root password for maintenance (or type Control-D to continue):
For my project, it's absolutely necessary to have a read-only root partition system. I have a writable /opt/project partition.But, I also need to start x server. startx This tries to write to some temporary files and fails as / is readonly. Is there any how-to on how to move this temporary files to the writable portions of the file system.
I've been a Xubuntu/Ubuntu/Lubuntu hobby user for about 18 months now. I started using Linux as a way to revive older computers provide a backup and expand my knowledge of computing. The command line was something new to me but as long as I can find detailed directions on how to do what I want I can usually manage. I set up a Samba server for my home shared network and now I'd like to make the shared drives of that server accessible from outside my network. Via ssh or ftp or some program of the like. I'd like to have it user name and password protected. Configurable user rights would be nice. (read/write/delete/etc) As well as novice user friendly.
My end goal is a server with read/write capability that I will be able to access from work or a friends house or anywhere with an Internet connection and my laptop. I understand about port forwarding and have done so with my home network behind an AT&T U-verse router/modem. I've researched openssh and some ftp setups but they seem like they can be difficult. Now for the questions. Is this task something that can be accomplished without a degree in computer networking? Is there a program(s) that would make this a simpler task? Is this more complex than its worth? How would I go about setting up such a thing?