09-15-2006
At a guess, your system is doing a lot of swapping...vmstat may turn out to be more useful.
4 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Dear Sun gurus,
I have Sun Fire V240 server with its StorEdge 3300 disk-array. Following are its disks appeared in format command. I have prepared its partitions thru format and metainit & metattach (may be i have made wrong steps, causing the errors below because I have done thru some document... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: shafeeq
1 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hey there,
I am starting a Computer Science Foundation year at the end of this month and am trying to get a little bit ahead of the game. I have always wanted to learn Unix and am currently struggling with creating a boot disc to run Solaris (I have chosen to study this) from as opposed to... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jupiter
0 Replies
3. Solaris
I am new to Sun.
I brought Sun Fire 280R to practice UNIX. What are the requirements for the monitor/CRT? Will it burn out old non-Sun CRTs? Does it need LCD monitor?
Thanks. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: bramptonmt
3 Replies
4. Solaris
Hi all,
I have application running on sun server T5440 4x8x1.4 GHz, 64 GB RAM, application running very slow though load average too low. when I install my application on another server SUN M3000 (One CPU 1x8x2.5GHz, 8GB RAM), application run smoothly.
Here is my server T5440 info:
... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: insatiable1610
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
glob_match
GLOB_MATCH(9) libata Core Internals GLOB_MATCH(9)
NAME
glob_match - match a text string against a glob-style pattern
SYNOPSIS
int glob_match(const char * text, const char * pattern);
ARGUMENTS
text
the string to be examined
pattern
the glob-style pattern to be matched against
DESCRIPTION
Either/both of text and pattern can be empty strings.
Match text against a glob-style pattern, with wildcards and simple sets:
? matches any single character. * matches any run of characters. [xyz] matches a single character from the set: x, y, or z. [a-d] matches a
single character from the range: a, b, c, or d. [a-d0-9] matches a single character from either range.
The special characters ?, [, -, or *, can be matched using a set, eg. [*] Behaviour with malformed patterns is undefined, though generally
reasonable.
SAMPLE PATTERNS
"SD1?", "SD1[0-5]", "*R0", "SD*1?[012]*xx"
This function uses one level of recursion per '*' in pattern. Since it calls _nothing_ else, and has _no_ explicit local variables, this
will not cause stack problems for any reasonable use here.
RETURNS
0 on match, 1 otherwise.
AUTHOR
Jeff Garzik
Author.
COPYRIGHT
Kernel Hackers Manual 3.10 June 2014 GLOB_MATCH(9)