Hello!
I have an ESX Server up and running. Now I want to connect a serial device to the COM Port. For that I need the minicom program.
When I try "configure - make - make all" I get some errors. Can someone please explain to me, what the problems are:
# ./configure
checking for a... (3 Replies)
Hello everybody,
I'm trying to create a S10 cluster on ESX 3.5 servers but I have several problems.
I use AMD Athtlon x64 CPU's on ESX servers and Solaris 10 U8 at my guest servers..
First and the most important problem, I dont know how to attach a RDM disk to Solaris 10. (Is it correct,... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I am going to install solaris cluster 3.2 in vmware esx 3.5 for demo, for cluster we need two different network interfaces for private and pubic connectivity, but we have single ethernet controller
how to create two different ethernet instance name with single ethernet controller in vmware... (1 Reply)
Hi
I would make a script for my ESX server. Unfortunately I'm beginner in shell scripting.
I will do the following:
# With the command vmware-cmd -l I can do a listing like this
File1.vmx
File2.vmx
File3.vmx
File4.vmx
File5.vmx
# Now with every single line of this output I will... (2 Replies)
Hi!
Does anyone know how a high percentage of Hardware Interrupts does affect a Linux system? any why does it generate hardware interrupts?
The affected system is a SuSE 10.2 32bit running 2.6.16.60-0.33-vmi #1 SMP Fri Oct 31 14:24:07 UTC 2008 i686 i686 i386 GNU/Linux
procinfo shows that... (2 Replies)
Hi All
How would you send a solaris virtual machine in vmware esx, a break signal? :confused: (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: jakerock
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
rrddump
RRDDUMP(1) rrdtool RRDDUMP(1)NAME
rrddump - dump the contents of an RRD to XML format
SYNOPSIS
rrdtool dump filename.rrd [filename.xml] [--header|-h {none,xsd,dtd}] [--no-header] [--daemon address] > filename.xml
DESCRIPTION
The dump function writes the contents of an RRD in human readable (?) XML format to a file or to stdout. This format can be read by
rrdrestore. Together they allow you to transfer your files from one computer architecture to another as well to manipulate the contents of
an RRD file in a somewhat more convenient manner.
filename.rrd
The name of the RRD you want to dump.
filename.xml
The (optional) filename that you want to write the XML output to. If not specified, the XML will be printed to stdout.
--header|-h {none,xsd,dtd}
By default RRDtool will add a dtd header to the xml file. Here you can customize this to and xsd header or no header at all.
--no-header
A shortcut for --header=none.
If you want to restore the dump with RRDtool 1.2 you should use the --no-header option since 1.2 can not deal with xml headers.
--daemon address
Address of the rrdcached daemon. If specified, a "flush" command is sent to the server before reading the RRD files. This allows
rrdtool to return fresh data even if the daemon is configured to cache values for a long time. For a list of accepted formats, see
the -l option in the rrdcached manual.
rrdtool dump --daemon unix:/var/run/rrdcached.sock /var/lib/rrd/foo.rrd
EXAMPLES
To transfer an RRD between architectures, follow these steps:
1. On the same system where the RRD was created, use rrdtool dump to export the data to XML format.
2. Transfer the XML dump to the target system.
3. Run rrdtool restore to create a new RRD from the XML dump. See rrdrestore for details.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
The following environment variables may be used to change the behavior of "rrdtool dump":
RRDCACHED_ADDRESS
If this environment variable is set it will have the same effect as specifying the "--daemon" option on the command line. If both are
present, the command line argument takes precedence.
AUTHOR
Tobias Oetiker <tobi@oetiker.ch>
1.4.8 2013-05-23 RRDDUMP(1)