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Full Discussion: Processes
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Processes Post 302104411 by Krrishv on Thursday 25th of January 2007 05:22:21 AM
Old 01-25-2007
Processes

I have a file like this.

No. State Query Times User Processed Syslog
1 ready idle 973s 0 /Application/ugsvols/bldata01/logs/imanscript1562.syslog
2 ready idle 803s 83997 13 /Application/ugsvols/bldata01/logs/imanscript1542.syslog
3 ready idle 2954s 106641 5 /Application/ugsvols/bldata01/logs/imanscript24717.syslog
4 ready idle 5674s 82692 15 /Application/ugsvols/bldata01/logs/imanscript16618.syslog
5 ready idle 12626s X035077 5 /Application/ugsvols/bldata01/logs/imanscript27216.syslog
6 ready idle 16088s X038493 19 /Application/ugsvols/bldata01/logs/imanscript16795.syslog
7 ready idle 19069s 105837 14 /Application/ugsvols/bldata01/logs/imanscript8563.syslog

the final number before .syslog is the process id.

for eg: in the above if you take 7th one 8563 is the PID.

Now what i want to achieve is if the user name is null in the users column all
the process should be killed. then it should check for all users. if the users idle time that is $4 is greater than 20000 secs it should kill those process. Please let me know how to acheive this.

i tried the below command for $4 > 200000s but it's not printing correctly.

cat procs.txt|awk '{if( $4 > 200000s ) print $4,$7 }

Last edited by Krrishv; 01-25-2007 at 06:29 AM..
 

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syslog.conf(4)						     Kernel Interfaces Manual						    syslog.conf(4)

NAME
syslog.conf - syslogd configuration file SYNOPSIS
facility.severity destination Where: Is part of the system generating the message, specified in /usr/include/sys/syslog_pri.h. See also the syslogd(8) reference page. The severity level, which can be emerg, alert, crit, err, warning, notice, info, or debug. See /usr/include/sys/syslog_pri.h. The syslogd daemon logs all messages of the specified severity level plus all messages of greater severity. For example, if you specify level err, all messages of levels err, crit, alert, and emerg or panic are logged. A local file pathname to a log file, a host name for remote logging or a list of users. In the latter case the users will receive messages when they are logged in. An asterisk (*) causes a message to be sent to all users who are currently logged in. DESCRIPTION
The /etc/syslog.conf file is a system file that enables you to configure or filter events that are to be logged by syslogd. You can specify more than one facility and its severity level by separating them with semicolons. You can specify more than one facility logs to the same file by separating the facilities with commas, as shown in the EXAMPLES section. The syslogd daemon ignores blank lines and lines that begin with an octothorpe (#). You can specify # as the first character in a line to include comments in the file or to disable an entry. The facility and severity level are separated from the destination by one or more tab characters. If you want the syslogd daemon to use a configuration file other than the default, you must specify the file name with the following com- mand: # syslogd -f config_file Daily Log Files You can specify in the /etc/syslog.conf file that the syslogd daemon create daily log files. To create daily log files, use the following syntax to specify the path name of the message destination: /var/adm/syslog.dated/ { file} The file variable specifies the name of the log file, for example, mail.log or kern.log. If you specify a /var/adm/syslog.dated/file path name destination, each day the syslogd daemon creates a sub-directory under the /var/adm/syslog.dated directory and a log file in the sub-directory, using the following syntax: /var/adm/syslog.dated/ date / file Where: The date variable specifies the day, month, and time that the log file was created. The file variable specifies the name of the log file you previously specified in the /etc/syslog.conf file. The syslogd daemon automatically cre- ates a new date directory every 24 hours and also when you boot the system. The current directory is a link to the latest date directory. To get the latest logs, you only need to reference the /var/adm/syslog.dated/current directory. EXAMPLES
The following is a sample /etc/syslog.conf file: # # syslogd config file # # facilities: kern user mail daemon auth syslog lpr binary # priorities: emerg alert crit err warning notice info debug # kern.debug /var/adm/syslog.dated/kern.log user.debug /var/adm/sys- log.dated/user.log daemon.debug /var/adm/syslog.dated/daemon.log auth.crit;syslog.debug /var/adm/syslog.dated/syslog.log mail,lpr.debug /var/adm/syslog.dated/misc.log msgbuf.err /var/adm/crash.dated/msgbuf.savecore kern.debug /var/adm/messages kern.debug /dev/console *.emerg * FILES
/etc/syslog.conf /etc/syslog.auth - Authorization file for remote logging. /usr/include/sys/syslog_pri.h - Common components of a syslog event log record. RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: /usr/sbin/syslogd(8), /usr/sbin/binlogd(8) System Administration delim off syslog.conf(4)
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