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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users What do you call the > thingy in context of the shell? Post 302281166 by homeyjoe on Wednesday 28th of January 2009 09:52:27 AM
Old 01-28-2009
I've always called the > symbol a 'goesinter' but not sure if that's a old-timer saying or just something I picked up along the path of life.
 

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reltimer(3C)															      reltimer(3C)

NAME
reltimer - relatively arm a per-process timer SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
The function sets the of the specified timer to an offset from the current clock setting. If specifies a value argument with the member equal to zero, the timer is disabled. updates the it_interval value of the timer to the value specified. Time values smaller than the resolution of the specified timer are rounded up to its resolution; timer values larger than the maximum value of the specified timer are rounded down to the maximum value (see mktimer(3C)). returns in the ovalue parameter a value representing the previous amount of time before the timer would have expired or zero if the timer was disabled, together with the previous interval timer period. The members of ovalue are subject to the resolution of the timer, and are the same values that would be returned by a call. The behavior of this function is undefined if value is NULL. RETURN VALUE
Upon successful completion, returns zero; otherwise, it returns -1 and sets to indicate the error. ERRORS
fails if any of the following conditions are encountered: [EINVAL] does not correspond to an ID returned by or the value structure specified a nanosecond value less than zero or greater than or equal to 1000 million. [EIO] An error occurred while accessing the clock device. FILES
SEE ALSO
timers(2), gettimer(3C), mktimer(3C), thread_safety(5). STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
reltimer(3C)
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