Hi,
I am new to the unix networking.
I have written one client and server for UDP sockets..
I got the following errors while conpilation
I have include all include files.
Could some one help ...is there any other file to be included.....?
will the include files change on different unix... (3 Replies)
I have a file that contains some variables that I may want to share throughout multiple scripts.
I think there's an #include command in UNIX.
How do I use it (in korn)? (1 Reply)
Hi,
In my code,I come across include statements with $ sign what it represents...
$include "getsum.h" /* This how I seen in my code */
Sarwan (5 Replies)
I want to include all the subnet files under /etc/dhcpd/ to /etc/dhcpd.conf
so here is my content of dhcpd.conf
...
include "/etc/dhcpd/*";
however, the check-syntax reports syntax error, as they do not recognize the wildcard *, and display that " file /etc/dhcpd/* could not be found.
... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have an easy question...
My ksh script has a section with non ksh script in it - let's pretent it is VBA code. I need to include this vba script in my ksh script into so that my VBA script can be reused elsewhere by other ksh script by "$include" into other ksh scripts. What is the syntax... (3 Replies)
Hi there,
I'm working on a c++ project and I need to use some libraries which are part of a framework. I installed it on my home directory, and alle the .hh are located in subdirs of my home.
I'd like to include the files I need just as if they where std c header, that is:
#include... (2 Replies)
i have three files
a.h t.c and p.c
a.h has 3 functions only and does not include anything
p.c has one function i made called go
t.c has a main function and calls the go function, it includes a.h only
i run the program using
gcc -Wall -g -o t p.c t.c
but i get a warning, implicet... (2 Replies)
Our admin has upgraded our OS solaris system to 5.11 but no more I can compile any trivial or non-trivial code. I'm trying to compile a trivial c++ program(a Helloworld program) but It gives error indicating that include files do not exist (in this trivial case <stdio.h>), it starts compiling but... (1 Reply)
RHEL 5.4
I'm trying to use %include statements in my kickstarts, and am running into some problems.
In %pre, I can %include /mnt/source/isolinux/setup-questions and that works just fine. One of the things it does is echo out several variables to /tmp/vars In %post --nochroot, I copy... (2 Replies)
I have an implementation file tomog.cpp that implements a class called Tomog where I need to include its header file which resides in another place.
How can I best specify the include file? I would not like to do
#include "../../tomso/tomography/tomog.hpp"
I wish to do instead
... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: kristinu
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
lvdisplay
LVDISPLAY(8) System Manager's Manual LVDISPLAY(8)NAME
lvdisplay - display attributes of a logical volume
SYNOPSIS
lvdisplay [-c|--colon] [-d|--debug] [-h|-?|--help] [--ignorelockingfailure] [--maps] [-P|--partial] [-v|--verbose] LogicalVolumePath [Logi-
calVolumePath...]
DESCRIPTION
lvdisplay allows you to see the attributes of a logical volume like size, read/write status, snapshot information etc.
lvs (8) is an alternative that provides the same information in the style of ps (1). lvs is recommended over lvdisplay.
OPTIONS
See lvm for common options.
-c, --colon
Generate colon separated output for easier parsing in scripts or programs. N.B. lvs (8) provides considerably more control over the
output.
The values are:
* logical volume name
* volume group name
* logical volume access
* logical volume status
* internal logical volume number
* open count of logical volume
* logical volume size in sectors
* current logical extents associated to logical volume
* allocated logical extents of logical volume
* allocation policy of logical volume
* read ahead sectors of logical volume
* major device number of logical volume
* minor device number of logical volume
-m, --maps
Display the mapping of logical extents to physical volumes and physical extents.
Examples
"lvdisplay -v /dev/vg00/lvol2" shows attributes of that logical volume. If snapshot logical volumes have been created for this original
logical volume, this command shows a list of all snapshot logical volumes and their status (active or inactive) as well.
"lvdisplay /dev/vg00/snapshot" shows the attributes of this snapshot logical volume and also which original logical volume it is associated
with.
SEE ALSO lvm(8), lvcreate(8), lvscan(8)Sistina Software UK LVM TOOLS 2.02.44-cvs (02-17-09) LVDISPLAY(8)