10-12-2008
6 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
How we can detect that there has been a data loss during FTP, throught Shell scripting?
I have gone through FTP return codes, but, none indicate that there has been any data loss.
Can we use FTP return code 226 as an indication that during file transfer there has been no data loss? If,... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: sameerbo
4 Replies
2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I am experiencing a problem where under a dial condition I am experiencing packet loss, which is failrly normal, but the response to the packet loss is taking bewteen 6 and 10 seconds. Could someone please advise what the industry standard is on the response time under a packet loss senario. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: shane
1 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have a script that pings several hosts and stores the response in a text file (see below)
Once this file is created, the intention is to populate a database with the values for 'packet loss', 'avg' and 'mdev', but first I have to extract this data.
avg=latency
mdev = jitter
packet... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: tony.kandaya
5 Replies
4. IP Networking
I have 4 network ports on our T5240 sun server.
all but 1 gives packet losses (nxge1)
nxge0 gives on average 50% packet loss, very bad.
nxge2 gives on average 1-2% packet loss.
nxge3 gives on average 20% packet loss.
Is there a tool or something to help me find the problem? (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: photon
11 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
(I'm aware log rotation is a common subject, but I tried searching and couldn't find an answer)
For some time now, I've been using the Logfile::Rotate module to rotate logs in a log-monitoring script. So far, I haven't experienced any problems, and it works great because I can use it in Linux... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: w1r3d
1 Replies
6. Solaris
Hi,
I am using the ce interface on my Solaris 9 server and there is significant packet loss when transmitting large packets. Does anyone have a fix for this?
----10.1.0.0 PING Statistics----
51 packets transmitted, 42 packets received, 17% packet loss
round-trip (ms) min/avg/max =... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: sparcman
12 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
globus_gram_job_manager_script_interface
globus_gram_job_manager_script_interface(3) globus gram job manager globus_gram_job_manager_script_interface(3)
NAME
globus_gram_job_manager_script_interface - Job Manager Scheduler Interface The GRAM Job Manager interfaces with the job filesystems and
scheduler through scheduler-specific Perl modules.
GRAM provides several Perl modules which can be used to implement scheduler-specific interfaces to the GRAM Job Manager. These are:
Globus::GRAM::Error
This module implements the GRAM error results as objects. Methods in this module will construct a GRAM error with the value matching
the values in the GRAM Protocol library. A scheduler-specific JobManager module may return one of these objects from its methods to
indicate errors to the Job Manager program.
Globus::GRAM::JobState
This module defines the GRAM job state constants. A scheduler-specific JobManager module returns one of these values from its methods
to indicate the managed job's current state.
Globus::GRAM::JobSignal
This module defines the GRAM job signal constant values. The Job Manager uses these values to communicate which signal is being invoked
in the manager's signal method.
Globus::GRAM::JobManager
This module defines the actual implementatoin of the Job Manager scheduler interface. One writing a scheduler-specific GRAM interface
will create a subclass of this object which overrides the default implementation's methods.
Globus::GRAM::JobDescription
This module mimics the RSL job description using perl syntax. The job manager passes an object of this type to the JobManager modules's
constructor. The job manager stores RSL and some configuration values in that JobDescription object. The manager accesses values stored
in the JobDescription by invoking methods containing the RSL attribute's name (example: $description->gram_my_job()). Method names are
handled as if they were based on the canonical RSL representation of the attribute name. For example, the gram_my_job may be
equivalently referred to as GramMyJob, grammyjob, or GRAM_My_Job.
Version 13.33 Mon Apr 30 2012 globus_gram_job_manager_script_interface(3)