Hi Folks,
The reqirement is that i need to generate 1 hr file with a time interval of five minutes..
For ex:
my i/p is
0000-0000
and desired o/p is
0000-0005
0005-0010
0010-0015
0015-0020
0020-0025
0025-0030
0030-0035
0040-0045
0050-0055
0055-0100
Script neede urgent
... (0 Replies)
i have file server 1 (filesvr01acess.log) and disc server 1 (discsvr01acess.log) in unix box(say ip adress of the box 10.39.66.81)
Similiarly i have file server 2 (filesvr01acess.log) and disc server 2(discsvr01acess.log) in another unix box(say ip adress of the box 10.39.66.82).
Now my... (1 Reply)
Hello,
I try to insert a post because I've got a trouble to perform a unix job. But I didn't found which steps (procedure) I should follow. Could you help me?
I got a log by my Application box, like following:
gbosmam037:test >view Log_Server.csv
... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am getting a high load average, around 7, once an hour. It last for about 4 minutes and makes things fairly unusable for this time.
How do I find out what is using this. Looking at top the only thing running at the time is md5sum.
I have looked at the crontab and there is nothing... (10 Replies)
We have a monitoring process for a load in unix box, during this process we are writing logs statements for each record, and during this process we are showing the counts per hour. Here is that how we are following
log files statements: (just two lines printed here), these statements logged at... (1 Reply)
I have a large tab delimited text file with 10 columns
for example
chrM 412 A A 75 0 25 2 ..,AGAATt II
chrM 413 G G 72 0 25 4 ..t,,Aag IIIH
chrM 414 C C 75 0 25 4 ...a,.. III2
chrM 415 C T 75 75 25 4 TTTt,,,ATC III7
At... (4 Replies)
I have an awk script that gives the following output:
Average end-to-end transmission delay 2.7 to 5.7 is 0.635392 seconds
Average end-to-end transmission delay 2.1 to 5.1 is 0.66272 seconds
Average end-to-end transmission delay 2.1 to 5.1 is 0.691712 seconds
Average end-to-end transmission... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
Thank you for reading through my post and helping me figure out how I would be able to perform this task.
For example: I have a list of continuous output collected into a file in the format as seen below:
Date...........Time........C....A......... B
==========================... (5 Replies)
I want to get CPU average value only (not required user CPU & memory) with each hours on individual date. The sample output is below
| | | User |Memory| User |
Date | Time |CPU %|CPU % | % |Mem % |
03/02/2015|00:00:00| 24.56| 20.66| 89.75| 63.48|... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: Saravanan_0074
13 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
schedule::at
At(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation At(3pm)NAME
Schedule::At - OS independent interface to the Unix 'at' command
SYNOPSIS
require Schedule::At;
Schedule::At::add(TIME => $string, COMMAND => $string [, TAG =>$string]);
Schedule::At::add(TIME => $string, COMMAND => @array [, TAG =>$string]);
Schedule::At::add(TIME => $string, FILE => $string)
%jobs = Schedule::At::getJobs();
%jobs = Schedule::At::getJobs(JOBID => $string);
%jobs = Schedule::At::getJobs(TAG => $string);
Schedule::At::readJobs(JOBID => $string);
Schedule::At::readJobs(TAG => $string);
Schedule::At::remove(JOBID => $string);
Schedule::At::remove(TAG => $string);
DESCRIPTION
This modules provides an OS independent interface to 'at', the Unix command that allows you to execute commands at a specified time.
Schedule::At::add
Adds a new job to the at queue.
You have to specify a TIME and a command to execute. The TIME has a common format: YYYYMMDDHHmm where YYYY is the year (4 digits), MM
the month (01-12), DD is the day (01-31), HH the hour (00-23) and mm the minutes.
The command is passed with the COMMAND or the FILE parameter. COMMAND can be used to pass the command as an string, or an array of
commands, and FILE to read the commands from a file.
The optional parameter TAG serves as an application specific way to identify a job or a set of jobs.
Returns 0 on success or a value != 0 if an error occurred.
Schedule::At::readJobs
Read the job content identified by the JOBID or TAG parameters.
Returns a hash of JOBID => $string where $string is the the job content. As the operating systems usually add a few environment
settings, the content is longer than the command provided when adding the job.
Schedule::At::remove
Remove an at job.
You identify the job to be deleted using the JOBID parameter (an opaque string returned by the getJobs subroutine). You can also
specify a job or a set of jobs to delete with the TAG parameter, removing all the jobs that have the same tag (as specified with the
add subroutine).
Used with JOBID, returns 0 on success or a value != 0 if an error occurred. Used with TAG, returns a hash reference where the keys are
the JOBID of the jobs found and the values indicate the success of the remove operation.
Schedule::At::getJobs
Called with no params returns a hash with all the current jobs or dies if an error has occurred. It's possible to specify the TAG or
JOBID parameters so only matching jobs are returned. For each job the key is a JOBID (an OS dependent string that shouldn't be
interpreted), and the value is a hash reference.
This hash reference points to a hash with the keys:
TIME
An OS dependent string specifying the time to execute the command
TAG The tag specified in the Schedule::At::add subroutine
Configuration Variables
o $Schedule::At::SHELL
This variable can be used to specify shell for execution of the scheduled command. Can be useful for example when scheduling from CGI
script and the account of the user under which httpd runs is locked by using '/bin/false' or similar as a shell.
EXAMPLES
use Schedule::At;
# 1
Schedule::At::add (TIME => '199801181530', COMMAND => 'ls',
TAG => 'ScheduleAt');
# 2
@cmdlist = ("ls", "echo hello world");
Schedule::At::add (TIME => '199801181630', COMMAND => @cmdlist,
TAG => 'ScheduleAt');
# 3
Schedule::At::add (TIME => '199801181730', COMMAND => 'df');
# This will remove #1 and #2 but no #3
Schedule::At::remove (TAG => 'ScheduleAt');
my %atJobs = Schedule::At::getJobs();
foreach my $job (values %atJobs) {
print " ", $job->{JOBID}, " ", $job->{TIME}, ' ',
($job->{TAG} || ''), "
";
}
AUTHOR
Jose A. Rodriguez (jose AT rodriguez.jp)
perl v5.14.2 2012-04-24 At(3pm)