@Ungeheuer An absolute pathname is a pathname that starts with a /. A pathname can contain any character apart from the nul character (since it's a string terminator in the C language). So, a regular expression that matches an absolute path should only need to match a / in front of a string, i.e. ^/ (there is no need to add .* after taht).
The issue with pathnames, though, is that they also may contain newlines. Regular expressions are generally used for matching string in lines of text. Lines are delimited from each other using newlines.
This means that an absolute pathname containing one newline would probably be detected as an absolute pathname followed by (possibly) a relative pathname, if the regular expression works line by line.
please help to understand what is meaning of below statement "stop cpf control plane mequal to demote to prevalidated DoDdone state". what is meaning of this stop operation? Is this stop operation in just like abort operation?
@Kusalananda this stop operation in Ixia network API call to stop people clients. I'm searching for abort operation to terminate pppoe clients. As I can interprate CPF as control plane function but not clearity about complete phrase
"[mouse] trackpad": 31 search results. /me wonders whether it's worth posting a Meta, about adding a "trackpad" tag as a synonym of the "touchpad" tag. I can't just vote on a tag synonym, as I don't have any points in [touchpad].
@Fabby It's on topic since an answer can be written with a Unix or Linux explanation (as Gilles did). The actual solution is a Windows solution, but Gilles explains what could possibly be done from Linux.