Hello all -
I've searched this forum, but was unable to find out the info I need.
I'm trying to mount (nfs mount) a directory on another box from my Linux machine.
The mount point resides on a Tru64 digital unix machine. The machine trying to do the mount is a Linux machine (redhat 8.0).
... (2 Replies)
I have a file "dbshot.xml" that contains lines that need replacing in a batch format but the parameters are based on two lines.
Ex.
<role roletype="01">
<status>1
needs to be changed to
<role roletype="01">
<status>0
I can't use simply "<status>1" replace since the... (2 Replies)
the command "nawk" returns the error command cannot be found in my unix system.
Is there a specific library i need to have to use this command?
I tried, the whereis command and it returns nothing.
if there is nothing to do, what command can i use to replace this nawk command?
Appreciate some... (4 Replies)
I got a sample file like this.
$ cat test
12|13|100|s
12|13|100|s
100|13|100|s
12|13|100|s
I want to replace all 100 by 2000 only in 3rd field using "awk"
This is replacing all 100's :-(
$ awk -F "|" '{gsub( /100/,"2000");print}' test
12|13|2000|s
12|13|2000|s
2000|13|2000|s... (5 Replies)
Hello guys,
In my script, I need to add two other routines where I Manipulate the files with a 'x'
The routine looks at CLI named qip-getobjectprof that references a input file named hosts_list.txt
Then I use the CLI named qip-setobject to set the orignal name with an 'x'and move the... (3 Replies)
We have year folder say in a path /opt/informat/Archive a folder 2012.
And in the same folder /opt/informat/Archive we have different folders month based, like 201210, 201211, 201212, this have data for each month, ie files. Now time to time i need to move the monthly folders to the main folder... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: raghavraok
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
tcpdrop
TCPDROP(8) BSD System Manager's Manual TCPDROP(8)NAME
tcpdrop -- drop TCP connections
SYNOPSIS
tcpdrop local-address local-port foreign-address foreign-port
tcpdrop [-l] -a
DESCRIPTION
The tcpdrop command may be used to drop TCP connections from the command line.
If -a is specified then tcpdrop will attempt to drop all active connections. The -l flag may be given to list the tcpdrop invocation to drop
all active connections one at a time.
If -a is not specified then only the connection between the given local address local-address, port local-port, and the foreign address
foreign-address, port foreign-port, will be dropped.
Addresses and ports may be specified by name or numeric value. Both IPv4 and IPv6 address formats are supported.
The addresses and ports may be separated by periods or colons instead of spaces.
EXIT STATUS
The tcpdrop utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
EXAMPLES
If a connection to httpd(8) is causing congestion on a network link, one can drop the TCP session in charge:
# sockstat -c | grep httpd
www httpd 16525 3 tcp4
192.168.5.41:80 192.168.5.1:26747
The following command will drop the connection:
# tcpdrop 192.168.5.41 80 192.168.5.1 26747
The following command will drop all connections but those to or from port 22, the port used by sshd(8):
# tcpdrop -l -a | grep -vw 22 | sh
SEE ALSO netstat(1), sockstat(1)AUTHORS
Markus Friedl <markus@openbsd.org>
Juli Mallett <jmallett@FreeBSD.org>
BSD January 30, 2013 BSD