Please state which Operating System you are using.
In general you get differences if "TZ" is changed in a user's profile so it is different from the one set in /etc/profile .
See.
how do i set the system date and time? i know i have to be root to do it but i'm new to unix--really new--and some of this stuff seems really cryptic. thanks for any help.:confused: (2 Replies)
I am trying to change the time on a Sun Solaris System, but I am having some difficulties. I thought by accessing the clock icon in the CDE would allow me to change the time. Also when I clicked the help icon I still could not fine any information. (1 Reply)
Hi,
I am trying to set environment variable on a remote machine. I want to do it by running a shell script
Here's what I am doin
rsh <remote-hostname> -l root "cd /opt/newclient; . ./setp.sh"
In setp.sh, I have
#############################
cd ../newlib;
export... (1 Reply)
Hello all,
I wish to set the time and date of the system from my application. (I write code in C ).
How can it be done?
I found the function stime() - but it gets time in seconds as a parameter, and I don't know how to convert my time & date to seconds since EPOCH.
What's the best... (0 Replies)
Hi,
We have a ftp server which is running on public ip and out side of firewall.
Users out side of our network and users of our local network both using the same public ip and doing upload and downloading.
Last few days we are facing bandwidth problem as internal network users increased.
... (1 Reply)
I am trying to do a comparison of files based on their last modified date.
I am pulling the first file from a webapp folder using curl.
curl --silent -I http://localhost:8023/conf/log4j2.xml | grep Last
Last-Modified: Tue, 22 Mar 2016 22:02:18 GMT
The second file is on local disk.
stat... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I want to parse below file and Write a function to extract the logs between two given timestamp.
Apache (Unix) Log Samples - MonitorWare
The challenge here is there are three date and time format.
First :- 07/Mar/2004:16:05:49
Second :- Sun Mar 7 16:02:00 2004
Third :- 29-Mar... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: sahil_shine
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
systemd-machine-id-commit.service
SYSTEMD-MACHINE-ID-COMMIT.SERVICE(8) systemd-machine-id-commit.service SYSTEMD-MACHINE-ID-COMMIT.SERVICE(8)NAME
systemd-machine-id-commit.service - Commit a transient machine ID to disk
SYNOPSIS
systemd-machine-id-commit.service
DESCRIPTION
systemd-machine-id-commit.service is an early boot service responsible for committing transient /etc/machine-id files to a writable disk
file system. See machine-id(5) for more information about machine IDs.
This service is started after local-fs.target in case /etc/machine-id is a mount point of its own (usually from a memory file system such
as "tmpfs") and /etc is writable. The service will invoke systemd-machine-id-setup --commit, which writes the current transient machine ID
to disk and unmount the /etc/machine-id file in a race-free manner to ensure that file is always valid and accessible for other processes.
See systemd-machine-id-setup(1) for details.
The main use case of this service are systems where /etc/machine-id is read-only and initially not initialized. In this case, the system
manager will generate a transient machine ID file on a memory file system, and mount it over /etc/machine-id, during the early boot phase.
This service is then invoked in a later boot phase, as soon as /etc has been remounted writable and the ID may thus be committed to disk to
make it permanent.
SEE ALSO systemd(1), systemd-machine-id-setup(1), machine-id(5), systemd-firstboot(1)systemd 237 SYSTEMD-MACHINE-ID-COMMIT.SERVICE(8)