This section of the DSAC Help System explains how to get help using the Zoo and also describes how you can give DSAC feedback about the Zoo.
Linux
Linux support is available from a number of sources:
- Documentation for Red Hat Linux, the operating system installed on all but two of the Zoo machines, can be found at Red Hat's web site, www.redhat.com [http://www.redhat.com].
- The Linux Documentation Project, at www.tldp.org [http://www.tldp.org] maintains a repository of support resources for a variety of applications and utilities.
- From the console, you can type
man
command, where command is the name of a command you'd like to learn more about. For example, man man
will give you an explanation of the man program itself. Manual pages are organized into different, searchable sections -- man 2 strtok
, for example, will tell those of you who are writing C code about the strtok function, which lives in section 2 (where a lot of other C library calls live, too, hint hint!).
Windows
Documentation for Microsoft Windows 2000, which is installed on the two non-Linux machines, can be found at Microsoft's Windows 2000 web site,
www.microsoft.com/windows2000/ [
http://www.microsoft.com/windows2000/]
Who to Contact
If you want to email an actual person, there are two addresses that you should know by heart. They are:
- dsac@zoo.cs.yale.edu [dsac@zoo.cs.yale.edu] - All members of DSAC
- requests@cs.yale.edu [requests@cs.yale.edu] - Facility Requests (also use this address when DSAC is unavailable, e.g., during vacations or inter-semester recess)
Write to DSAC to report software-related problems with the Zoo, such as a crashed node or a downed printer, as well as to get information about Majors accounts and information about the Computer Science curriculum.
If there is a terrible disaster in the Zoo (for example, if a pipe breaks and the Zoo gets flooded), you can call the
Facility Hotline. If nobody answers the phone, leave your name, the time, and a brief but detailed message of the problem. The number is
432-1257.