Hi there,
do someone have detailed information how to interpret the uptime command or rather which values can be called normal?
(i know what the information means, but i have no idea if these values are ok or to high:
3:02pm an 13:53, 2 Benutzer, Durchschnittslast: 10,06, 12,05, 13,00)
... (5 Replies)
Hi all,:o
i am new to shell scripting and i have aproblem like i just want to extractthe uptime of the system from an uptime command which gives the output as the Current time , how long the system has been running,how many users are surrently logged on and the system load averages for past 1,5,... (5 Replies)
hie guys
I am running fedora 6 on remote machines which are connecting to my server. The remote machines connect through one machine (more like my router) to the server. The problem i am having is that the remote machines are suppose to be reporting in real time mode to the server. Most of these... (2 Replies)
Hi,
Can someone explain in detail what 'uptime' ,'last reboot' and 'who -b' commands do in solaris.
this commands are not executing in every solaris box. why this is happening. Has solaris got some inbuilt commands into it. If yes then where i have found them?
Thanks,Soubhik (6 Replies)
I am executing the following script using 'awk -f process.awk out' where 'out' is the input file which consists of 5000 sequences. Each time it takes one sequence, run the below program by creating a directory, run the mfold command within that directory, running another shell script 'final5' and... (2 Replies)
Hey there,
I would like to set the bash command history counter to start from, say 101, instead of 1 (assuming the history was cleared with the 'unset HISTFILE' in .bashrc)?
For instance, if setting PS1 as
PS1='\! '
this would start counting from either 1 or the last number of the command... (0 Replies)
Hi!
I want to extract the uptime from the output of the uptime command.
The output:
11:53 up 3:02, 2 users, load averages: 0,32 0,34 0,43
I just need the "3:02" part. How can I do this?
Dirk (6 Replies)
Hello folks,
uptime command not shows how long the system has been up.
I know it come from a corruption of /var/adm/utmpx file.
I've done :
cat /dev/null > /var/adm/utmpx
Now who and last commands work fine. But uptime still give me back an answer without the "up time".
In which... (6 Replies)
What is the uptime command output when the server is running more than one year?
My doubt is whether it show in number of days format or number years and number of days format?
For example, Assume the server is running 400 days 3 hrs 3 min 3 secs. The output like 400 days 3:3 min or 1 year 5... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: maruthu
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
runlevel
RUNLEVEL(8) runlevel RUNLEVEL(8)NAME
runlevel - Print previous and current SysV runlevel
SYNOPSIS
runlevel [options...]
OVERVIEW
"Runlevels" are an obsolete way to start and stop groups of services used in SysV init. systemd provides a compatibility layer that maps
runlevels to targets, and associated binaries like runlevel. Nevertheless, only one runlevel can be "active" at a given time, while systemd
can activate multiple targets concurrently, so the mapping to runlevels is confusing and only approximate. Runlevels should not be used in
new code, and are mostly useful as a shorthand way to refer the matching systemd targets in kernel boot parameters.
Table 1. Mapping between runlevels and systemd targets
+---------+-------------------+
|Runlevel | Target |
+---------+-------------------+
|0 | poweroff.target |
+---------+-------------------+
|1 | rescue.target |
+---------+-------------------+
|2, 3, 4 | multi-user.target |
+---------+-------------------+
|5 | graphical.target |
+---------+-------------------+
|6 | reboot.target |
+---------+-------------------+
DESCRIPTION
runlevel prints the previous and current SysV runlevel if they are known.
The two runlevel characters are separated by a single space character. If a runlevel cannot be determined, N is printed instead. If neither
can be determined, the word "unknown" is printed.
Unless overridden in the environment, this will check the utmp database for recent runlevel changes.
OPTIONS
The following option is understood:
--help
Print a short help text and exit.
EXIT STATUS
If one or both runlevels could be determined, 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise.
ENVIRONMENT
$RUNLEVEL
If $RUNLEVEL is set, runlevel will print this value as current runlevel and ignore utmp.
$PREVLEVEL
If $PREVLEVEL is set, runlevel will print this value as previous runlevel and ignore utmp.
FILES
/run/utmp
The utmp database runlevel reads the previous and current runlevel from.
SEE ALSO systemd(1), systemd.target(5), systemctl(1)systemd 237RUNLEVEL(8)