--this shows you what is being written to, instead of grep -i write, you could try cache_hit or just leave out the grep stuff and filter later, this is the OSX command you want I believe. It is a spin off of the Solaris dtrace utility which reads real time system calls and what not. You will learn what to filter by looking at the unfiltered output first, if you want to know what a specific process is doing, writing, etc, then grep for it, you should see the process on the left and the files being touched on the right when it's writing to a plist which is what I assume you are trying to figure out.
hi...
i need pointers to books/website...
'm trytin to write a daemon that monitors files of particular type(eg. text or pdfs) copied onto the hard disk. the daemon should detect the above n write the file name (along with the absolute path) to a file.
please DO NOT give me the code... (2 Replies)
Hi Guys,
I am currently working on a script to find all the files that have not been accessed for the past 2 years. This, i guess has been discussed n number of times in this forum. Now, my requirement is to find all the files in the remote windows server. I have it mounted in unix.
I was... (1 Reply)
How can I search for files by last accessed time? I want to see files accessed in the last 24 hours, for example...or even less time, maybe in the last 3 hours?
Thank you in advance,
Trellot (4 Replies)
I'm almost brand new to UNIX, so I have no idea if how easy or difficult this would be, or if it's even possible.
I've been using FTP to copy a total of about 150gb of files to a remote drive. Since the directory being copied is so large, I've been trying to break it up into smaller chunks based... (0 Replies)
I have looked around on the internet and still i am no wiser as to how to show the number of files in a directory that have been accessed this week and also that as a percentage.
Any help would be much appreciated. (5 Replies)
hi,
I have a script which copy files by using scp command. when i run that script, i can see the process meter but I want to know how many files have been copied.
suppose, by using scp 10 files is being copied and I can see process meter for all 10 files. but i also want to see ... that 10... (0 Replies)
There is a process which copy files form unix a to unix b
I would like to check whether all files copied from a to b or not ,and list which are the missing files.
Is there a command to check like that (3 Replies)
I had copied 2 files to an FTP server which I deployed on my RHEL 5.8 server. The ownership I kept for the files are for the user, ftp. But, I do not see the files on the FTP location using either accessing through Windows explorer or the browser. The ftp location is ftp://10.101.17.80/incoming.... (7 Replies)
How can i track all the files accessed by script. The script is supposed to bring up my application and this script is just the main script which inturn calls another scripts and executable. I need to know all the the files this main script calls and the files accessed by all the other scripts... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I have about 100 servers that I'm looking to collect information regarding top files and processes accessed within a 168 hr (1 week) period. Each server has a different purpose and so different installed applications. All servers are running either unix or linux.
What would be a... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: umang2382
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
learn
learn(1) General Commands Manual learn(1)NAME
learn - Provides computer-aided instruction for the C shell
SYNOPSIS
learn [-directory] [subject] [lesson]
The learn command provides computer-aided instruction courses and practice in the use of Tru64 UNIX.
OPTIONS
Allows you to exercise a script in a nonstandard place.
DESCRIPTION
To get started, enter learn; if this is the first time that you are invoking the learn command, you are guided through a series of ques-
tions to determine what type of instruction you want to receive.
If you have used learn before and left your last session without completing a subject, the program uses information in $HOME/.learnrc to
start you up in the same place you left off.
To bypass questions, enter a subject or lesson. In order to enter a lesson, you must know the lesson number that you received in a previ-
ous learn command session. If you do not know the lesson number, enter the lesson number as a subject. The learn command searches for the
first lesson containing the subject you specified. If the lesson is a - (dash), learn prompts for each lesson; this is useful for debug-
ging.
You can specify the following subjects:
files editor vi morefiles macros eqn C
SUBCOMMANDS
There are a few special commands. The bye command terminates a learn session, and the where command tells you of your progress (where m
tells you more.) The again command redisplays the text of the lesson and again lesson lets you review lesson. The hint command prints the
last part of the lesson script used to evaluate a response, while hint m prints the entire lesson script. This is useful for debugging
lessons and might possibly give you an idea about what is expected.
EXAMPLES
To take the online lesson about files, enter: learn files
You are then prompted for further input.
FILES
Playpen directories. Start-up information.
SEE ALSO
Commands: csh(1), ex(1)learn(1)