Hi All,
I am working on a Solaris machine. When i use a particular software to generate some files, the log shows around 0 to 3 secs for generating each file. But the same when i see on the disk it shows double the time difference between two file generation.
For example if file A takes 0 secs... (7 Replies)
Dear All,
We are using AIX 5.2 with IBM pseries servers.
I want to check disk io for a running process.
Please if anybody can help me.
Thanks.
Aqeel Anwar (1 Reply)
Hello ,
Well I have some /tmp files which are growing very quickly..Can anyone suggest me a way to find which process is logging into this file :confused: ?
Thanks very much in Advance!!
Mohammed (2 Replies)
Hi
We are running an IBM P570 with AIX and Unidata.
The disk monitor in nmon is showing that one of our logical volumes is hitting 100% most of the time, and that 98% of it is write.
I am trying to identify the top processes in terms of disk IO, obviously particularly write so that we... (4 Replies)
Hi,
The OS is SuSE Enterprise 11 and the system is HP WS460c G6 Blade with hardware disk array RAID 1 mirror. One disk was just replaced and the disk mirroring process is on its way. My question is how to follow up / monitor the disk mirroring process? I know hpacucli can do the job, but there... (0 Replies)
I have multiple input files that I want to manipulate using a shell script. The files are called 250.1 through 250.1000 but I only want the script to manipulate 250.300 through 250.1000. Before I was using the following script to manipulate the text files:
for i in 250.*; do
|| awk... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I am using iostat and /proc/<pid>/status to determine the disk usage per process. I have a question regarding buffer cache. When I am reading a 10MB file, the counters I get show that <5MB of the file is read. Do the counters in iostat and /proc/<pid> reflect the amount of data that is... (2 Replies)
In Our Production server I/O was very high, I Recived mail that Disk I/O was high, is it possible how to find which process Used this much I/O ?
Iam Using Ubuntu server 12.04.
Linux 3.9.3-x86_64-server33 (Li473-1200) 07/23/2014 _x86_64_ (8 CPU)
12:05:01 AM DEV ... (5 Replies)
Hello!
Need help to write a Linux script that can be run from windows using command/Cygwin/any other way. I am new to scripting, actually i am trying to automate server health check like free disk space, memory along with few services status, if any services is not running then start services ,... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Sayed Ibrahim
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
rarpd
rarpd(1M)rarpd(1M)NAME
rarpd - Reverse Address Resolution Protocol daemon
SYNOPSIS
config_file] [interface_name]
DESCRIPTION
the Reverse Address Resolution Protocol daemon, implements the server portion of the Reverse Address Resolution Protocol [1]. It responds
to RARP requests providing the requested client IP address. Rarpd can be started during boot-time initialization. To do so, set the vari-
able with in
Options are:
Print debugging information.
Use the specified
config_file database instead of
interface_name Respond to requests over just this interface.
The configuration file database contains hardware address to IP address mappings. Other than comment lines (which begin with a '#') and
blank lines, all lines are considered client entries. A client entry is of the form:
hardware_address WHITE_SPACE ip_address
where hardware_address consists of (colon-separated hexadecimal bytes, and ip_address consists of (dot-seperated decimal bytes. For exam-
ple:
#
# hardware addr IP addr
#
# ethernet clients
08:00:09:26:ec:19 15.13.136.68
08:00:09:17:0a:93 15.13.136.74
#
# 100VG clients
08:00:09:63:5d:f5 190.20.30.103
#
# FDDI clients
08:00:09:09:53:4c 192.20.30.98
There must be exactly 6 hardware address bytes. There must be exactly 4 protocol address bytes.
The following signals have the specified effect when sent to the process using the kill(1) command:
Causes server to read the config file and reload database.
Dumps current data base and cache to
RETURN VALUE
Exit status is 1 if the command fails, and error messages are written to stderr and/or syslog. Typically, the daemon will continue answer-
ing requests until externally interrupted.
LIMITATIONS
1. The daemon supports only ethernet, 100VG and FDDI network interfaces.
2. The daemon supports only 4 byte Internet Protocol addresses.
3. The and programs cannot be run on the same interface at the same time.
AUTHOR
was developed by HP.
SEE ALSO rarpc(1M).
[1] R. Finlayson, T. Mann, J.C. Mogul, M. Theimer, "Reverse Address Resolution Protocol", RFC 903.
rarpd(1M)