04-23-2010
Please refrain from formatting your whole posts in bold letters. Also start using code tags please. If you don't know code tags, I can send you a PM where it is explained, so let me know.
What do you want to write, a shell script/perl etc. parsing output of commands I already mentioned or a C program?
On AIX memory usage/load in % is kind of useless.
---------- Post updated at 03:25 PM ---------- Previous update was at 03:22 PM ----------
Also please refrain from asking technical questions via PM - you got an infraction for this. Please read the forum rules carefully - it might help for further posting here, ty:
The UNIX and Linux Forums - Forum Rules
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. IP Networking
hello everybody
how are u all.
this is mine first post on such a great and big forum.
and probably in a wrong section :confused:
i need to know about any squid monitoring tool for *.nix.
i will be very greatful for ur reply. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: usman156
2 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi guys,
I have 8 Tru64 machines here and i want to monitor them. What open source tool i can use? Like i want to monitor the hard disk space,memory,connectivity etc. Before im using Nagios, is this applicable to UNIX?
tnx.
jeff (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jefferson
1 Replies
3. AIX
Has anyone here had experience with a product called "SMARTS" from EMC? I am told by the SMARTS admin that he is having trouble gathering SNMP info from these AIX boxes (which are running AIX 5.3.8), because AIX uses SNMPv3 by default. We had to switch it to SNMPv1 just to get SMARTS to... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Kent Stevens
0 Replies
4. Infrastructure Monitoring
Hi all,
Please let me know the most using, perfect unix monitoring tool and the link for downloading the tool. It should have network server monitoring on all aspect(working users, memory usage, working services, disk space etc).
Thanks
Rath (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ratheeshp
3 Replies
5. Solaris
Hi All,
I was wondering if there is any Network Monitoring Tool for Solaris 10 to monitor a network having hybrid operating systems. I just googled it without success.
Hope, experts will guide me to get it.
Thanks,
Deepak (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: naw_deepak
0 Replies
6. Infrastructure Monitoring
Hi All,
I was wondering if there is any Network Monitoring Tool for Solaris 10 to monitor a network having hybrid operating systems. I just googled it without success.
Hope, experts will guide me to get it.
Thanks,
Deepak (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: naw_deepak
7 Replies
7. Red Hat
Hello,
Please let me know the best and descriptive network monitoring tools available for a linux enviornment. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: mitchnelson
3 Replies
8. Infrastructure Monitoring
hello everybody,
please could you tell me what is the best monitoring tool "Free" to monitoring sun servers in my DC.
BR, (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: maxim42
1 Replies
9. AIX
Hi,
is any one using nagios monitoring solution on AIX ? if yes, is it supported on AIX 7.1 TL 03 as well ?
I tried to search online and unix.com , could not find it.
Thank you (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: aaron8667
5 Replies
10. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
We have AIX and RHEL. Need suggestion for system monitoring tool for AIX and RHEL. Free or paid is fine as I would like to compare. Thank you (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: kiasu
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
svnpath
SVNPATH(1) SVNPATH(1)
NAME
svnpath - output svn url with support for tags and branches
SYNOPSIS
svnpath
svnpath tags
svnpath branches
svnpath trunk
DESCRIPTION
svnpath is intended to be run in a Subversion working copy.
In its simplest usage, svnpath with no parameters outputs the svn url for the repository associated with the working copy.
If a parameter is given, svnpath attempts to instead output the url that would be used for the tags, branches, or trunk. This will only
work if it's run in the top-level directory that is subject to tagging or branching.
For example, if you want to tag what's checked into Subversion as version 1.0, you could use a command like this:
svn cp $(svnpath) $(svnpath tags)/1.0
That's much easier than using svn info to look up the repository url and manually modifying it to derive the url to use for the tag, and
typing in something like this:
svn cp svn+ssh://my.server.example/svn/project/trunk svn+ssh://my.server.example/svn/project/tags/1.0
svnpath uses a simple heuristic to convert between the trunk, tags, and branches paths. It replaces the first occurrence of trunk, tags, or
branches with the name of what you're looking for. This will work ok for most typical Subversion repository layouts.
If you have an atypical layout and it does not work, you can add a ~/.svnpath file. This file is perl code, which can modify the path in
$url. For example, the author uses this file:
#!/usr/bin/perl
# svnpath personal override file
# For d-i I sometimes work from a full d-i tree branch. Remove that from
# the path to get regular tags or branches directories.
$url=~s!d-i/(rc|beta)[0-9]+/!!;
$url=~s!d-i/sarge/!!;
1
LICENSE
GPL version 2 or later
AUTHOR
Joey Hess <joey@kitenet.net>
Debian Utilities 2013-12-23 SVNPATH(1)