Well the closest I have come is decreasing the time AIX takes to close sockets in the FIN_WAIT_2 state. setting tcp_keepintvl to 30 seconds with
is the best I can do for now I guess. According to IBM you cannot set it lower than 30 seconds. But that may be and probably is for the best. IBM seems to know what they're doing
I am trying to connect via DBACCESS and Informix server to a server on a different computer. When I execute the connect command from dbaccess I get the following message,
Exec format error cannot bind a name to the port.
As far as I know the port is not being used by another client.
How... (1 Reply)
Hi
Is there any way to restrict the TCP-IP port usage.
I want to restrict TCP-IP port 1500/1550 to the oracle osuser.
Tanks in advance.
Remi (2 Replies)
Hello. I would like to know how to close an existing tcp socket. I have read some stuff and learned how to create a socket and then close it but have not found anything about how to close an existing tcp socket created by another application. The situation is this: I have an ODBC server running and... (6 Replies)
I have multiple processes running the same program on my linux machine. For each process I want to be able to use a unique (available) TCP port. I have thought of using netstat to check which ports are available for use however, the time-window between checking and selecting might expose some race... (1 Reply)
Does anyone know if there is a C API call to get the status of a TCP port? As opposed to running netstat and parsing the results. At the moment I have to attempt to bind() and pick up on the address in use error which isn't very elegant
Thanks
---------- Post updated at 10:42 AM ----------... (0 Replies)
I am using c to send data to a socket with the following commands:
socket = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, ptrp->p_proto);
ioctl(socket, FIONBIO, (char *)&on);
connect(socket)
send(socket,data)
shutdown(socket, SHUT_WR);
recv(socket) //ready last of data waiting on the port
//note this is... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I use solaris Unix .
I find there is some problem in application and it generate many "close-wait" tcp connect and stay in the server . it is generate by process id 7740
root@XX # netstat -an | grep CLOSE_WAIT | wc -l
285
root@XX # netstat -an | grep CLOSE_WAIT
10.158.35.4.34805 ... (2 Replies)
I have an issue with port 7331 on our Unix box that is hung, It is stuck in a listen status:
ukh-o2-jcaps1:/tstjcaps6/apptest2> netstat -a|grep 7331
tcp4 1019 0 ukh-o2-jcaps1.7331 10.230.6.7.59010 CLOSE_WAIT
tcp4 1019 0 ukh-o2-jcaps1.7331 10.230.6.7.59215 ... (7 Replies)
i want to kill a tcp connection by killing its pid
with netstat -an i got the tcp ip connection on port 5914
but when i type ps -a or ps-e there is not such process running on port 5914
is it possible that because i do not log on with proper user account i can not see that process running? (30 Replies)
Good morning, I need your help please
After Restarting Aps or connection, these are connections
tcp 0 0 10.80.1.26.57597 10.81.248.79.53008 ESTABLISHED
tcp 0 47 10.80.1.26.57607 10.81.248.79.53008 ESTABLISHED
tcp 0 0 ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: alexcol
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
timetrans
TIMETRANS(1p) User Contributed Perl Documentation TIMETRANS(1p)NAME
timetrans - Converts time into time
SYNOPSIS
timetrans [units-options] [-count]
DESCRIPTION
timetrans converts time from one type of unit to another. If any of the units options are specified, then timetrans will convert those
time units into the number of seconds to which they add up. If given the count option, timetrans will convert that number of seconds into
the appropriate number of weeks, days, hours, minutes, and seconds. The converted result is printed out. Units options cannot be
specified in the same execution as the count option, and vice versa.
timetrans is intended for use with DNSSEC-Tools, for calculating a zone's expiration time.
OPTIONS
Units Options
The converted value of each unit is totaled and a single result printed.
-seconds seconds
Count of seconds to convert to seconds.
-minutes minutes
Count of minutes to convert to seconds.
-hours hours
Count of hours to convert to seconds.
-days days
Count of days to convert to seconds.
-weeks weeks
Count of weeks to convert to seconds.
Count Option
The specified seconds count is converted to the appropriate number of weeks, days, hours, minutes, and seconds.
-count seconds
Count of seconds to convert to the appropriate set of units.
Other Options
timetrans has the following miscellaneous options.
-Version
Displays the version information for timetrans and the DNSSEC-Tools package.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Converting 5 days into seconds
$(42)> timetrans -days 5
432000
Example 2: Converting 2 weeks into seconds
$(43)> timetrans -w 2
1209600
Example 3: Converting 8 days and 8 hours into seconds
$(44)> timetrans -d 8 -hours 8
720000
Example 4: Converting 1 week, 1 day, and 8 hours into seconds
$(46)> timetrans -w 1 -days 1 -h 8
720000
Example 5: Converting 14 weeks, 4 days, 21 hours, 8 minutes, and 8 seconds into seconds
$(47)> timetrans -w 14 -d 4 -h 21 -m 8 -s 8
8888888
Example 6: Converting 720000 seconds into time units
$(48)> timetrans -c 720000
1 week, 1 day, 8 hours
Example 7: Converting 1814421 seconds into time units
$(49)> timetrans -c 1814421
3 weeks, 21 seconds
Example 8: Converting 8888888 seconds into time units
$(50)> timetrans -c 8888888
14 weeks, 4 days, 21 hours, 8 minutes, 8 seconds
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2004-2012 SPARTA, Inc. All rights reserved. See the COPYING file included with the DNSSEC-Tools package for details.
AUTHOR
Wayne Morrison, tewok@tislabs.com
SEE ALSO zonesigner(8)Net::DNS::SEC::Tools::timetrans.pm(3)perl v5.14.2 2012-06-21 TIMETRANS(1p)