08-09-2006
What OS is this? Unix 5.4 doesn't give much of a clue.
You may want to try booting from cd (if you don't tell us what OS, we can't give you specific information).
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hey !
I am running EWS-UX/V (Rel 4.2) on NEC EWS/4800/330 station and I am having problems rebooting my station : I am getting the following message on display : BOOT : PANIC : File size out of range.
According to user guide, this error is occuring when a file exceeding the limit and/or... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: fredo
2 Replies
2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi folks,
I have written down a UNIX script which actually FTP the file to other server. What is happening now , this script is not working only for 1 server , as it is working for 32 different FTP server .
In this particular server , we are getting message “FTp:550 access denied”... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: khan1978
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3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
SunOS 5.6
I have a remote test system (test T1/T3, etc) that runs SunOS 5.6. I rebooted the system for no other reason than that it had been up for over 300 days. It failed to boot completely.
I have an ok prompt and when I type boot, I see the following messages..
Boot device:... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: forbin24
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4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
i am sending mails from my unix server to my mail id
i used sendmail option
previously it ran successfully
now it is not sending mails
what might be the problem
this is the message i am getting in /var/mail/abcdev file
how to rectify this?
----- The following addresses had permanent... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: trichyselva
1 Replies
5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
i am basically DWH professional.
I want to
write a script such that whenver the file size is greather than 0 the script fails
plz help me in this (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: er_zeeshan05
1 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
When my script deals with large input files like 22Gb or 18 GB the basic commands like sort or join fails when run from inside the shell scripts. Can there be any specific reason for this?
For e.g.
sort -u -t "," -k1,1 a.csv > a.csv.uniq"
sort -u -t "," -k1,1 b.csv > b.csv.uniq"
The... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: esha
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7. Solaris
In a Solaris9 environment I'm trying to restore flash archive (flar) with SVM mirrored devices to same server via jumpstart server and it is failing to create boot file and drops down to a command prompt in single user mode, metastat -i and metastat -p output looks good when compared to the ones... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: mbak
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8. Red Hat
Hi all,
We have a disk array that has the boot drive on an OCZ SSD on a PCIe card. Well, the motherboard died and we got a new motherboard. We moved the controllers, NICs, etc, to the exact same slots on the new motherboard, except now it won't boot. I guess it doesn't recognize the OS on the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: glowe57
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9. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
HI !!
I have this setup where I have Windows machine and a UNIX based DUT .
I try to make a https connection from my Win to the DUT giving its IP.
But,it is not working (It should do).
What do u think the problem is ?? I checked the logs , they flag some writesocket:broken pipe error in... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: leghorn
1 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
I am trying to connect to Windows server via Linux server through a script and run two commands " cd and ls " But its giving me error saying " could not start the program" followed by the command name i specify e g : "cd"
i am trying in this manner "
ssh username@servername "cd... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: sunil seelam
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LEARN ABOUT OPENSOLARIS
plot
plot(4B) SunOS/BSD Compatibility Package File Formats plot(4B)
NAME
plot - graphics interface
DESCRIPTION
Files of this format are interpreted for various devices by commands described in plot(1B). A graphics file is a stream of plotting
instructions. Each instruction consists of an ASCII letter usually followed by bytes of binary information. The instructions are executed
in order. A point is designated by four bytes representing the x and y values; each value is a signed integer. The last designated point in
an l, m, n, or p instruction becomes the ``current point'' for the next instruction.
m Move: the next four bytes give a new current point.
n Cont: draw a line from the current point to the point given by the next four bytes. See plot(1B).
p Point: plot the point given by the next four bytes.
l Line: draw a line from the point given by the next four bytes to the point given by the following four bytes.
t Label: place the following ASCII string so that its first character falls on the current point. The string is terminated by a NEW-
LINE.
a Arc: the first four bytes give the center, the next four give the starting point, and the last four give the end point of a circular
arc. The least significant coordinate of the end point is used only to determine the quadrant. The arc is drawn counter-clockwise.
c Circle: the first four bytes give the center of the circle, the next two the radius.
e Erase: start another frame of output.
f Linemod: take the following string, up to a NEWLINE, as the style for drawing further lines. The styles are ``dotted,'' ``solid,''
``longdashed,'' ``shortdashed,'' and ``dotdashed.'' Effective only in plot 4014 and plot ver.
s Space: the next four bytes give the lower left corner of the plotting area; the following four give the upper right corner. The plot
will be magnified or reduced to fit the device as closely as possible.
Space settings that exactly fill the plotting area with unity scaling appear below for devices supported by the filters of plot(1B).
The upper limit is just outside the plotting area.
In every case the plotting area is taken to be square; points outside may be displayable on devices whose face is not square.
4014 space(0, 0, 3120, 3120);
ver space(0, 0, 2048, 2048);
300, 300s space(0, 0, 4096, 4096);
450 space(0, 0, 4096, 4096);
SEE ALSO
graph(1), plot(1B)
SunOS 5.11 18 Feb 2003 plot(4B)