hi, i kill a process which is topas. then i do a fg of the process itself and got this Signal 15 received.finally, the display went as belows....
root@myhost:/]ksh: ^L^L^Lps: not found.
root@myhost:/] PID TTY TIME CMD
... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
I run this command ps -ef | grep daemon. This just returns half info on the page. Like.
User 10888 1 0 23:04:58 ? 0:44 /opt/xxxxx/bin/perl /home/xxxxx/s
After the "/s "at the end of the line it should continue. But it's not displayed. And can't even grep for the name... (1 Reply)
Hi,
After installing red hat linux(ppc version) on power series server,running export DISPLAY=IP:0.0 and after that xclock command I am getting can't open display error
Please suggest. (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I have connected to the board using telnet, when i tried to display huge record which has more then 1000, this telnet session where overlapping the printed data to the previous line.
Can some one help me how to solve this?
For example"
in a for loop i am printing
"1 Name1"... (3 Replies)
new to the forums hope is this the right area to post this, I have 4 IBM servers (inherited) and all of them are connecting through a KVM. Probelm is all the servers are fuzzy on the monitor. I have tried switching multiple monitors and all get the same effect no matter if they are wide screen or... (4 Replies)
Want few input related to unix environment and terminal settings:
1. Am trying to find a way to keep the unix terminal display intact even after opening and closing a vi/less file. Currently if I open a vim file in the unix terminal and then close the file,it displays the contents of vim file on... (4 Replies)
I have a script to do a couple simple but repetitive commands on files that are provided to us. One of the things is to get rid of the line feeds. This is the section that is causing problems, i even cut this section into its own file to make sure nothing else was affecting it.
#!/usr/bin/bash... (4 Replies)
I use the following command to print the current directory above the command prompt
set prompt="`exec pwd`\n$USER@`hostname -s` %B: % > "
The output is something like this
<current path>
$USER@hostname >
But when I try to CD to any other directory and press the return key, the... (6 Replies)
I want to search a small string in a large string and find the locations of the string. For this I used grep "string" -ob <file name where the large string is stored>. Now this gives me the locations of that string. Now how do I store these locations in a text file.
Please use CODE tags as... (7 Replies)
Hello Everyone,
have a question regarding fonts:
#env
root@oraapp:/>env
_=/usr/bin/env
LANG=ar_AA
LOGIN=root
SSH_TTY=/dev/pts/1
PATH=/usr/bin:/etc:/usr/sbin:/usr/ucb:/usr/bin/X11:/sbin:/usr/java131/jre/bin:/u ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: filosophizer
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
bdf
bdf(1M)bdf(1M)NAME
bdf - report number of free disk blocks (Berkeley version)
SYNOPSIS
type [filesystem|file] ... ]
DESCRIPTION
The command displays the amount of free disk space available either on the specified filesystem for example) or on the file system in which
the specified file (such as is contained. If no file system is specified, the free space on all of the normally mounted file systems is
printed. The reported numbers are in kilobytes.
Options
The command recognizes the following options:
Display information regarding file system swapping.
Report the number of used and free inodes.
Display information for local file systems only (for example,
HFS and CDFS file systems).
Do not sync the file system data on the disk before reporting the usage.
Note that the data reported by may not be up to date.
Report on the file systems of a given
type (for example, or
RETURN VALUE
The command returns 0 on success (able to get status on all file systems), or returns 1 on failure (unable to get status on one or more
file systems).
WARNINGS
If file system names are too long, the output for a given entry is displayed on two lines.
The command does not account for any disk space reserved for swap space, or used for the HFS boot block (8 KB, 1 per file system), HFS
superblocks (8 KB each, 1 per disk cylinder), HFS cylinder group blocks (1 KB - 8 KB each, 1 per cylinder group), and inodes (currently 128
bytes reserved for each inode). Non-HFS file systems may have other items not accounted for by this command.
AUTHOR
was developed by the University of California, Berkeley.
FILES
Static information about the file systems.
Mounted file system table.
File system devices.
SEE ALSO df(1M), fstab(4), mnttab(4).
bdf(1M)