Hello....
AIX has a limit of 11 shared memory segments per process, does any one know how many HP have?? If so how do I find that out??
Thanks in advance...... (2 Replies)
I am fairly new to HP-UX and trying to get a better understanding of the operating system. While poking around a bit I find myself questioning whether I should be concerned about Shared Memory segments with missing CPID and LPID? For example:
ipcs -mp
IPC status from /dev/kmem as of Mon Mar... (2 Replies)
I have created a shared memory segment (which size is 64 bytes) using shmget, shmat e.t.c and i want to divide it into 2 areas. One area for input data and one area for output? How can i do that?
Furthermore, When i have to write my input data into the shared memory segment i want to write... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I wanted to compare EDI files present in Two different Directories which can be related by the file names. While comparing the EDI files i have to skip selected segments such as "ISA" "IEA" and "GS" "GE" since this may have datetime stamp and different "Sender" "Receiver" Qual.
and... (3 Replies)
Hello all,
I'm trying to perform an averaging procedure which selects a selection of rows, average the corresponding value, selects the next set of rows and average the corresponding values etc.
The data below illustrates what I want to do. Given two columns (day and value),
I want to... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I have a awk line that averages rows.
So if my file looks like this:
Jack 1 1 1 1 1 1
Joe 1 1 1 1 1 1
Jerry 0 0 0 0 0 0
John 1 1 1 0 0 0
The awk line below skips column 1 and then averaged the rows
awk -F'\t' -v r=3... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
I got an application that is running on SUSE Linux. I would like to get some data about the number of TCP segments retransmission on a particular interface. Is there any way I can get that?
Thanks, (2 Replies)
I have queue.txt with the following contents:
Queue on node ...
description :
type : local
max message len : 104857600
max queue depth : 5000
queue depth max event : enabled
persistent msgs : yes
backout... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Daniel Gate
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
mkerrlst
MKERRLST(1) General Commands Manual MKERRLST(1)NAME
mkerrlst - create system error file
SYNOPSIS
mkerrlst [ -i inputfile ] [ -o outputfile ]
DESCRIPTION Mkerrlst(1) creates error message files in the format described by syserrlst(5).
With no arguments mkerrlst creates the file /etc/syserrlst from the internal array sys_errlist.
Give just the -o option mkerrlst will create the file outputfile from the internal array sys_errlist.
Given just the -i option mkerrlst will create the file /etc/syserrlst from the input file inputfile.
Given both -i and -o options mkerrlst will create the error message file outputfile from the strings contained in inputfile.
NOTE: error messages are numbered from 0. If the error 0 does not have a message associated with it the first string in inputfile must
still be present.
RETURN VALUE
mkerrlst exits with status of 0 if no errors are encountered. If errors do occur an error message is printed on stderr and the exit status
is 1.
ERRORS mkerrlst(1) can encounter any of the errors for the open(2), lseek(2), read(2), or write(2) system calls.
SEE ALSO syserrlst(3)syserrlst(5)HISTORY mkerrlst(1), first appeared in 2.11BSD.
BUGS
Error messages can be a maximum of 80 characters.
3rd Berkeley Distribution March 14, 1996 MKERRLST(1)