Hi,
This is my first post here - I'm hoping I can get some help! I have searched these forums and othersand not getting anything that works.
I am trying to extract a single file from a tar archive to a diffierent location than it will default to.
For example my tar log shows me ...
a... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I want to view/display the contents of one file in tar file.
For example if the tar file is sam.tar.gz and one of the file inside is E1.txt, how do i view the contents of this E1.txt file.
Olso if I want to extract the E1.txt file only from sam.tar.gz how can i do that.
Thanks in... (7 Replies)
Hi All,
By accident, i deleted some files. Fortunately I have a backup backup.tar.gz files (750GB). It's too big for me to untar to get the file
Is it possible that i could get the selected files in backup.tar.gz if i know exactly where the files are located.
Thanks.
Ken (1 Reply)
Dear friends,
My requirement below-
1] I have a zip file on unix server - ETL_Extracts_20100218175009.zip which is composed of various entity extracts namely... ENTITY1.txt, ENTITY2.txt, ENTITY3.txt etc....
How do I unzip only a single file ..say ENTITY2.txt from this zip file.
CAn you... (2 Replies)
I have a tar file that contains multiple .Z files. Hence I need to issue a tar command followed by a gzip command to fully extract the files. How do I do it in a single command?
What I'm doing now is
tar xvf a.tar (this will output 1.Z and 2.Z)
gzip -d *.Z (to extract 1.Z and 2.Z) (9 Replies)
Hi,
I need to extract a single file from a tar file to another directory.
So far I have this:
This one extract a single file to same directory:
tar -xvf filename.tar ./file.txt
I tried this but its not working
tar -xvf filename.tar /home/dir ./file.txt
or this: (6 Replies)
Hi all,
this is my first and i can't speak english well, so please be kind !
Here is my problem :
I want to unzip a list of .zip files stored in one directory, so I though about using that : unzip '*.zip'
Thing is that all of my zipped folders contain a file with the unique same name :... (6 Replies)
Hi All,
First of all I don't know whether this is possible. or no. Thought of getting experts thought.
I am having a tar file which contains zipped file in it . I tried individual command with extraction and it worked
tar -tvf TRANS_279.tar
-rw-rw-r-- qqa00 1394 2016-10-03 10:39:19... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: arunkumar_mca
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
procsystime
procsystime(1m) USER COMMANDS procsystime(1m)NAME
procsystime - analyse system call times. Uses DTrace.
SYNOPSIS
procsystime [-acehoT] [ -p PID | -n name | command ]
DESCRIPTION
procsystime prints details on system call times for processes, both the elapsed times and on-cpu times can be printed.
The elapsed times are interesting, to help identify syscalls that take some time to complete (during which the process may have slept). CPU
time helps us identify syscalls that are consuming CPU cycles to run.
Since this uses DTrace, only users with root privileges can run this command.
OPTIONS -a print all data
-c print syscall counts
-e print elapsed times, ns
-o print CPU times, ns
-T print totals
-p PID examine this PID
-n name
examine processes which have this name
EXAMPLES
Print elapsed times for PID 1871,
# procsystime -p 1871
Print elapsed times for processes called "tar",
# procsystime -n tar
Print CPU times for "tar" processes,
# procsystime -on tar
Print syscall counts for "tar" processes,
# procsystime -cn tar
Print elapsed and CPU times for "tar" processes,
# procsystime -eon tar
print all details for "bash" processes,
# procsystime -aTn bash
run and print details for "df -h",
# procsystime df -h
FIELDS
SYSCALL
System call name
TIME (ns)
Total time, nanoseconds
COUNT Number of occurrences
DOCUMENTATION
See the DTraceToolkit for further documentation under the Docs directory. The DTraceToolkit docs may include full worked examples with ver-
bose descriptions explaining the output.
EXIT
procsystime will sample until Ctrl-C is hit.
AUTHOR
Brendan Gregg [Sydney, Australia]
SEE ALSO dtruss(1M), dtrace(1M), truss(1)version 1.00 Sep 22, 2005 procsystime(1m)