06-11-2008
so do you, is your job making people read man pages
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi! I'm very new to unix, so please keep that in mind with the level of language used if you choose to help :D Thanks!
When attempting to use sudo on and AIX machine with oslevel 5.1.0.0, I get the following error:
exec(): 0509-036 Cannot load program sudo because of the following errors:... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Chloe123
1 Replies
2. AIX
Sudo In AIX, how to find out what commands have been run after a user sudo to another user? for example, user sam run 'sudo -u robert ksh' then run some commands, how can I (as root) find what commands have been run?
sudo.log only contains sudo event, no activity logging. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jalite19
3 Replies
3. Solaris
what is the configuration file for sudo? can we edit it as like other file or will it create any adverse effect on editing that file?
thanks in advance
dinu (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: dinu
1 Replies
4. HP-UX
Dear folks.
Considering PCIDSS standards, i have requirment to use sudo(ers) to log everything a certain user executes with root privileges.
Now, for an admin it's just a pain in the ass to prefix every command with sudo.
Only way i can think of is making .aliases and with some awk magic... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Peasant
6 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
I am writing a BASH script to update a webserver and then restart Apache. It looks basically like this:
#!/bin/bash
rsync /path/on/local/machine/ foo.com:path/on/remote/machine/
ssh foo.com sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 reloadrsync and ssh don't prompt for a password, because I have DSA encryption... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: fluoborate
9 Replies
6. Linux
Hi Unix.com people! :)
My question, I think, it's easy to understand.
I want to configure my sudoers file (/etc/sudoers) in order
to hide automatically, some repetitive and annoying commands
to be listed on auth.log (/var/log/auth.log).
Anyone know something, or know where I can... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: fefafefa
0 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All,
I running a unix command using sudo option inside shell script. Its working well. But in crontab the same command is not working and its throwing
"sudo: sorry, you must have a tty to run sudo". I do not have root permission to add or change settings for my userid. I can not even ask... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: Apple1221
9 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi, Have a need to run the below command as a "karuser" from a java class which will is running as "root" user. When we are trying to run the below command from java code getting the below error.
Command:
sudo -u karuser -s /bin/bash /bank/karunix/bin/build_cycles.sh
Error:
sudo: sorry,... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Satyak
8 Replies
9. Solaris
I'm looking for some suggestions to accomplish what a specific user needs, without adding them to the "sudoers" group. I have X user, that is requesting to be able to change file permissions on items owned by others and search directories where X user doesn't have access. I'm open to any... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Nvizn
2 Replies
10. Red Hat
All,
I need to disable "sudo -i" and "su - " for all servers in our environment, We want to make sure no one run commands or delete files across environment using switching to root account. can you guys please lets me know if this is achievable.
Thanks and Regards
shekar (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: shekar777
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENDARWIN
qstat
QSTAT(1) User Contributed Perl Documentation QSTAT(1)
NAME
qstat - display job/partition information in a familiar pbs format
SYNOPSIS
qstat [-f] [-a|-i|-r] [-n [-1]] [-G|-M] [-u user_list] [-? | --help] [--man] [job_id...]
qstat -Q [-f]
qstat -q
DESCRIPTION
The qstat command displays information about jobs.
OPTIONS
-a Displays all jobs in a single-line format. See the STANDARD OUTPUT section for format details.
-i Displays information about idle jobs. This includes jobs which are queued or held.
-f Displays the full information for each selected job in a multi-line format. See the STANDARD OUTPUT section for format details.
-G Display size information in gigabytes.
-M Show size information, disk or memory in mega-words. A word is considered to be 8 bytes.
-n Displays nodes allocated to a job in addition to the basic information.
-1 In combination with -n, the -1 option puts all of the nodes on the same line as the job id.
-r Displays information about running jobs. This includes jobs which are running or suspended.
-u user_list
Display job information for all jobs owned by the specified user(s). The format of user_list is: user_name[,user_name...].
-? | --help
brief help message
--man
full documentation
STANDARD OUTPUT
Displaying Job Status
If the -a, -i, -f, -r, -u, -n, -G, and -M options are not specified, the brief single-line display format is used. The following items are
displayed on a single line, in the specified order, separated by white space:
the job id
the job name
the job owner
the cpu time used
the job state
C - Job is completed after having run E - Job is exiting after having run. H - Job is held. Q - job is queued, eligible to run or
routed. R - job is running. T - job is being moved to new location. W - job is waiting for its execution time (-a option) to be
reached. S - job is suspended.
the queue that the job is in
If the -f option is specified, the multi-line display format is used. The output for each job consists of the header line: Job Id: job
identifier followed by one line per job attribute of the form: attribute_name = value
If any of the options -a, -i, -r, -u, -n, -G or -M are specified, the normal single-line display format is used. The following items are
displayed on a single line, in the specified order, separated by white space:
the job id
the job owner
the queue the job is in
the job name
the session id (if the job is running)
the number of nodes requested by the job
the number of cpus or tasks requested by the job
the amount of memory requested by the job
either the cpu time, if specified, or wall time requested by the job, (in hh:mm)
the job state
The amount of cpu time or wall time used by the job (in hh:mm)
EXIT STATUS
On success, qstat will exit with a value of zero. On failure, qstat will exit with a value greater than zero.
perl v5.14.2 2012-04-10 QSTAT(1)