The problem is not the system memory. The limitation is the memory available to read the large files by the commands you are running (like grep, for example).
These must be very large files.
Can you post the size of the files?
For instance I am posting the typical size of files that got the error on the "rm" command. These are not big at by any means.
Hi
I have installed solaris 10 on an intel machine. Logged in as root. In CDE, i open terminal session, type login alex (normal user account) and password and i get this message
No utpmx entry: you must exec "login" from lowest level "shell" :confused:
What i want is: open various... (0 Replies)
Hi Friends,
Can any of you explain me about the below line of code?
mn_code=`env|grep "..mn"|awk -F"=" '{print $2}'`
Im not able to understand, what exactly it is doing :confused:
Any help would be useful for me.
Lokesha (4 Replies)
Hello friends,
Assume that, I am trying to execute a "db2 connect" command from Linux shell prompt via a shell script called "sample"
sample
db2 connect to bas39
$sample
If the database is not present its should display a custom error message by catching the error message given by db2.... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have line in input file as below:
3G_CENTRAL;INDONESIA_(M)_TELKOMSEL;SPECIAL_WORLD_GRP_7_FA_2_TELKOMSEL
My expected output for line in the file must be :
"1-Radon1-cMOC_deg"|"LDIndex"|"3G_CENTRAL|INDONESIA_(M)_TELKOMSEL"|LAST|"SPECIAL_WORLD_GRP_7_FA_2_TELKOMSEL"
Can someone... (7 Replies)
logs:
"/home/abc/public_html/index.php"
"/home/abc/public_html/index.php"
"/home/xyz/public_html/index.php"
"/home/xyz/public_html/index.php"
"/home/xyz/public_html/index.php"
how to use "cut" or "awk" or "sed" to get the following result:
abc
abc
xyz
xyz
xyz (8 Replies)
How to use "mailx" command to do e-mail reading the input file containing email address, where column 1 has name and column 2 containing “To” e-mail address
and column 3 contains “cc” e-mail address to include with same email.
Sample input file, email.txt
Below is an sample code where... (2 Replies)
Hello.
System : opensuse leap 42.3
I have a bash script that build a text file.
I would like the last command doing :
print_cmd -o page-left=43 -o page-right=22 -o page-top=28 -o page-bottom=43 -o font=LatinModernMono12:regular:9 some_file.txt
where :
print_cmd ::= some printing... (1 Reply)
Hi 2 all,
i have had AIX 7.2
:/# /usr/IBMAHS/bin/apachectl -v
Server version: Apache/2.4.12 (Unix)
Server built: May 25 2015 04:58:27
:/#:/# /usr/IBMAHS/bin/apachectl -M
Loaded Modules:
core_module (static)
so_module (static)
http_module (static)
mpm_worker_module (static)
... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: penchev
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
tayga
TAYGA(8)TAYGA(8)NAME
tayga - stateless NAT64 daemon
SYNOPSIS
tayga [OPTION]...
tayga --mktun [OPTION]...
tayga --rmtun [OPTION]...
DESCRIPTION
TAYGA is a stateless NAT64 daemon for Linux. Using the in-kernel TUN network driver, TAYGA receives IPv4 and IPv6 packets from the host's
network stack, translates them to the other protocol, and then sends the translated packets back to the host using the same TUN interface.
Translation is compliant with IETF Internet-Draft draft-ietf-behave-v6v4-xlate-23, and address mapping is performed in accordance with RFC
6052. Optionally, TAYGA may be configured to dynamically map IPv6 hosts to addresses drawn from a configured IPv4 address pool.
As a stateless NAT, TAYGA requires a one-to-one mapping between IPv4 addresses and IPv6 addresses. Mapping multiple IPv6 addresses onto a
single IPv4 address can be achieved by mapping IPv6 addresses to private IPv4 addresses with TAYGA and then using a stateful NAT44 (such as
the iptables(8) MASQUERADE target) to map the private IPv4 addresses onto the desired single IPv4 address.
TAYGA's configuration is stored in the tayga.conf(5) file, which is usually found in /etc/tayga.conf or /usr/local/etc/tayga.conf.
INVOCATION
Without the --mktun or --rmtun options, the `tayga` executable runs as a daemon, translating packets as described above.
The --mktun and --rmtun options instruct TAYGA to create or destroy, respectively, its configured TUN device as a "persistent" interface
and then immediately exit.
Persistent TUN devices remain present on the host system even when TAYGA is not running. This allows host-side network parameters and
firewall rules to be configured prior to commencement of packet translation. This may simplify network configuration on the host; for
example, systems which use a Debian-style /etc/network/interfaces file may configure TAYGA's TUN device at boot by running `tayga --mktun`
as a "pre-up" command and then configuring the TUN device as any other network interface.
OPTIONS -c configfile | --config configfile
Read configuration options from configfile
-d Enable debug messages (enables --nodetach as well)
-n | --nodetach
Do not detach from terminal
-u userid | --user userid
Set uid to userid after initialization
-g groupid | --group groupid
Set gid to groupid after initialization
-r | --chroot
chroot() to data-dir (specified in config file)
-p pidfile | --pidfile pidfile
Write process ID of daemon to pidfile
AUTHOR
Written by Nathan Lutchansky <lutchann@litech.org>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2010 Nathan Lutchansky
License GPLv2+: GNU GPL version 2 or later
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
SEE ALSO tayga.conf(5)
<http://www.litech.org/tayga/>
TAYGA 0.9.2 June 2011 TAYGA(8)