I have my inputfile in the following format :
From:sdhfhg
dsfhsdjfjdsfh
dsfjdjshjsd
djfhsdjfjsdhjds
Error Description
<aa.aa.aa.aa.aa.aa>
From:ksljfsdhfjh
djfdsjkf
sdjwoquk
dsfsdfj
Error Description
<dd.dd.dd.dd.dd>
I want to read the lines from tag 'From:' thrul <aa.aa.aa.aa.aa.aa>... (1 Reply)
Hello experts,
I am using fork() in my code but I am confused which output comes first child or parent?
I did the following code .My book shows parent first but my linux shows child first.Can anyone tell me why?
#include <stdio.h>
int main(){
int pid;
printf("I am original process with pid... (5 Replies)
Assume we have an application built on *nix that uses fork()...then the processes procedure is going to act as follow:
X is considered a parent process (first click on application)
Y is considered a child process of X (second click on application)
Z is considered a child process of Y (third... (6 Replies)
hi,
i start using awk and have a very basic problem. here's my code:
#! /usr/bin/awk -f
# 2010, scz
#
{
$1 == "test" { print $2 }
}
this works on the command line but not as "program" - what is the difference between awk programs on the command line and executing awk... (3 Replies)
I writing a program that forks three times but only on the parent process. The three children processes then produces output in order. 1, 2, 3. I am confused on how to do this. I have tried multiple if and else if statements but the output does not come out right. How should I go about doing this? (1 Reply)
Hello everybody.I want to make clear that i am not going to ask from anybody to build my asignement but i have a big problem. I can't seem to find anywhere ONE good example on C about what i am trying to do:wall:.I think it is simple. All i ask is one example, even a link is fine.
So, i want to... (1 Reply)
i'm experimenting fork function and i found this code
#include <stdio.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <wait.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <unistd.h>
int main(void)
{
int fd;
pid_t p;
p = fork();
fork();
if (p>0) { fork();}
fork();
fork();... (6 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a program for class that needs to do the following:
1. Print the directory entries from the current directory using ncurses
2. Provide a prompt next to each directory entry and allow the user to enter commands that may or may not be about the file
3. Execute those commands in... (1 Reply)
Hello... And thanks in advance for any help anyone can offer me on my question! I've been doing a lot of reading to try and find my answer... But I haven't had any luck
What I'm trying to understand is where a child process inherits global environment variables from? I understand the exec()... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: bodisha
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
icapd
icapd(1M)icapd(1M)NAME
icapd - Instant Capacity (iCAP) daemon.
SYNOPSIS
icapd
DESCRIPTION
The (formerly ) daemon is installed and started as part of the Instant Capacity software on all potential iCAP systems, and respawns itself
if killed. If this daemon is not running, other Instant Capacity commands fail. The operations this daemon performs are vital in keeping
the complexwide view of the Instant Capacity state current. The following entry is added to /etc/inittab in order to have start and
respawn itself:
icap:23456:respawn:/usr/lbin/icapd # Instant Capacity daemon
This daemon is not started on hardware that is not supported under the Instant Capacity program. If is installed and running on a system
with Instant Capacity components present (cores, cells, or memory), it sends daily asset report email to HP (if so configured), tracks tem-
porary capacity, sends exception notifications, and maintains a healthy Instant Capacity state.
For more information about the functions that performs for Instant Capacity systems, see the located at /usr/share/doc/icapUserGuide.pdf.
The daemon reports errors via (see syslog(3C)). Exception notification email is sent to root and to the system contact email address (con-
figured via the command (see icapmodify(1M)).
The daemon performs periodic operations based on the time of day. The daemon is spawned by and gets its time zone specification from the
/etc/default/tz file. By default, the time zone specified in /etc/default/tz is EST5EDT. You can specify which time zone the daemon uses
to interpret its current time by modifying the /etc/default/tz file. For details about the time zone format, see environ(5). A restart of
the daemon is required before the new time zone value takes effect (that is, kill the process).
AUTHOR
was developed by HP.
SEE ALSO icapmodify(1M), icapstatus(1M), icapnotify(1M), icapmanage(1M), icap(5).
icapd(1M)