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Operating Systems AIX /etc/syslog.conf file and warnings Post 302214661 by jeffpas on Monday 14th of July 2008 02:47:09 PM
Old 07-14-2008
bakunin,

This appears to be a question that will never die.

I have since found a way (by creating a daemon that checks the logfile for any changes, every 20 seconds or so) to rig a solution, but everyone involved in the project keeps bringing up this trigger mechanism again and again.
It seems they are determined that I do it that way.

All I can say is one of the techs played around with this briefly and suggested creating a fifo pipe file. This is something I have never done, or been told to do, in about a decade and a half of UNIXing. Sorry, it just has never come up.

Apparently it works something like this:

#!/usr/bin/sh
exec 0 < log_pipe #log_pipe is a pipe made using the mkfifo cmd
while :
do
while read LINE
sleep 1
done


The only thing I can possibly understand about a fifo file is that it simply sits with the contents of one action and waits for another, such as:

ls | pg

you can mkfifo pipe_listing then:

ls > pipe_listing

then pg < pipe_listing sometime later.

Any of this make any sense?

Everyone says that they can't understand why I am not going htis route, but no one can say how................can't figure it out for anything................

SmilieSmilieSmilieSmilieSmilie
 

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MKFIFO(3)						     Linux Programmer's Manual							 MKFIFO(3)

NAME
mkfifo - make a FIFO special file (a named pipe) SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/stat.h> int mkfifo(const char *pathname, mode_t mode); DESCRIPTION
mkfifo() makes a FIFO special file with name pathname. mode specifies the FIFO's permissions. It is modified by the process's umask in the usual way: the permissions of the created file are (mode & ~umask). A FIFO special file is similar to a pipe, except that it is created in a different way. Instead of being an anonymous communications chan- nel, a FIFO special file is entered into the file system by calling mkfifo(). Once you have created a FIFO special file in this way, any process can open it for reading or writing, in the same way as an ordinary file. However, it has to be open at both ends simultaneously before you can proceed to do any input or output operations on it. Opening a FIFO for reading normally blocks until some other process opens the same FIFO for writing, and vice versa. See fifo(7) for nonblocking handling of FIFO special files. RETURN VALUE
On success mkfifo() returns 0. In the case of an error, -1 is returned (in which case, errno is set appropriately). ERRORS
EACCES One of the directories in pathname did not allow search (execute) permission. EDQUOT The user's quota of disk blocks or inodes on the file system has been exhausted. EEXIST pathname already exists. This includes the case where pathname is a symbolic link, dangling or not. ENAMETOOLONG Either the total length of pathname is greater than PATH_MAX, or an individual filename component has a length greater than NAME_MAX. In the GNU system, there is no imposed limit on overall filename length, but some file systems may place limits on the length of a component. ENOENT A directory component in pathname does not exist or is a dangling symbolic link. ENOSPC The directory or file system has no room for the new file. ENOTDIR A component used as a directory in pathname is not, in fact, a directory. EROFS pathname refers to a read-only file system. CONFORMING TO
POSIX.1-2001. SEE ALSO
mkfifo(1), close(2), open(2), read(2), stat(2), umask(2), write(2), mkfifoat(3), fifo(7) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.53 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. GNU
2013-01-27 MKFIFO(3)
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