Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting trying get the last /var/adm/messages Post 302438133 by arch12 on Monday 19th of July 2010 02:27:47 AM
Old 07-19-2010
trying get the last /var/adm/messages

Code:
grep \"^`date "+%b %d %T"`\" /var/adm/messages | egrep \"emerg|alert|crit|err|warning\

but get an output like this

Code:
ksh: alert:  not found
ksh: crit:  not found
ksh: err:  not found
ksh: warning":  not found
grep: can't open "19"
grep: can't open "16:27:16""


Last edited by pludi; 07-19-2010 at 03:52 AM.. Reason: code tags, please...
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Messages in /var/adm

Just want to check with all of you out there what does the following warning means in my "messages" file in /var/adm the warning is Prevous Time Adjustment Incomplete , does it mean my hard ware is faulty if so which piece of hardware it is ? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: owls
1 Replies

2. Solaris

/var/adm/messages- Help

Solaris 8/ sun 420R Checked /var/adm/messages file and got the following message: Dec 4 16:40:05 serverXYZ ConfigProvider: get_pkg_instdate: getdate failed for the standard C locale (7) Does anyone know what this means? Looked up getdate but do not understand.... Thanks. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: finster
1 Replies

3. Solaris

/var/adm/messages

I'm running a Solaris 9 box with Oracle databases on it. I'm getting the following messages in my /var/adm/messages log "Jun 24 12:30:32 sundb01 bootpd: IP address not found: xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx" ...where xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx is DHCP IP addresses of Windows 2000 workstations in the organisation. ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: soliberus
2 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

/var/adm/messages

Hi, No log entry is found in messages files. The file size is 0. We are using Solaris 9. Anyone knows what could be wrong. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: FrankC
3 Replies

5. Solaris

/var/adm/messages

Hello Friends, I am geting the folowing error in /var/adm/message is it disl related problem? if yes.. how to check all the disk are perfect or not? Sep 15 06:01:12 scsi: WARNING: /pci@1f,700000/scsi@2/sd@2,0 (sd7): Sep 15 06:01:12 Error for Command: write(10) Error Level:... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: bullz26
5 Replies

6. Solaris

Info req: /var/adm/messages - Kern.warning - different ID messages

Hi all, where I can find a list and meaning of the ID number (for example ID 353554 kern.warning)? Thanks in advance Pierluigi (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Petrucci
1 Replies

7. Solaris

/var/adm/messages

Check message file and result posted below. Can anyone tell me what this is a sign of, what does it mean? server1% more messages.0 Dec 02 09:35:06 server1 bsd-gw: Inval id protocol request (65): AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA^\\2... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: finster
6 Replies

8. Solaris

diff b/w /var/log/syslog and /var/adm/messages

hi sirs can u tell the difference between /var/log/syslogs and /var/adm/messages in my working place i am having two servers. in one servers messages file is empty and syslog file is going on increasing.. and in another servers message file is going on increasing but syslog file is... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: tv.praveenkumar
2 Replies

9. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

/var/adm/messages vs /var/log/messages

The /var/adm/messages in Solaris seem to log more system messages/errors compared to /var/log/messages in Linux. I checked the log level in Linux and they seem OK. Is there any other log file that contains the messages or is it just that Linux doesn't log great many things? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: gomes1333
2 Replies

10. Solaris

Difference between /var/log/syslog and /var/adm/messages

Hi, Is the contents in /var/log/syslog and /var/adm/messages are same?? Regards (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: vks47
3 Replies
Apache::TestTrace(3)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				      Apache::TestTrace(3)

NAME
Apache::TestTrace - Helper output generation functions SYNOPSIS
use Apache::TestTrace; debug "foo bar"; info_sub "missed it"; error_mark "something is wrong"; # test sub that exercises all the tracing functions sub test { print $Apache::TestTrace::LogFH "TraceLevel: $Apache::TestTrace::Level "; $_->($_,[1..3],$_) for qw(emerg alert crit error warning notice info debug todo); print $Apache::TestTrace::LogFH " " }; # demo the trace subs using default setting test(); { # override the default trace level with 'crit' local $Apache::TestTrace::Level = 'crit'; # now only 'crit' and higher levels will do tracing lower level test(); } { # set the trace level to 'debug' local $Apache::TestTrace::Level = 'debug'; # now only 'debug' and higher levels will do tracing lower level test(); } { open OUT, ">/tmp/foo" or die $!; # override the default Log filehandle local $Apache::TestTrace::LogFH = *OUT; # now the traces will go into a new filehandle test(); close OUT; } # override tracing level via -trace opt % t/TEST -trace=debug # override tracing level via env var % env APACHE_TEST_TRACE_LEVEL=debug t/TEST DESCRIPTION
This module exports a number of functions that make it easier generating various diagnostics messages in your programs in a consistent way and saves some keystrokes as it handles the new lines and sends the messages to STDERR for you. This module provides the same trace methods as syslog(3)'s log levels. Listed from low level to high level: emerg(), alert(), crit(), error(), warning(), notice(), info(), debug(). The only different function is warning(), since warn is already taken by Perl. The module provides another trace function called todo() which is useful for todo items. It has the same level as debug (the highest). There are two more variants of each of these functions. If the _mark suffix is appended (e.g., error_mark) the trace will start with the filename and the line number the function was called from. If the _sub suffix is appended (e.g., error_info) the trace will start with the name of the subroutine the function was called from. If you have "Term::ANSIColor" installed the diagnostic messages will be colorized, otherwise a special for each function prefix will be used. If "Data::Dumper" is installed and you pass a reference to a variable to any of these functions, the variable will be dumped with "Data::Dumper::Dumper()". Functions whose level is above the level set in $Apache::TestTrace::Level become NOPs. For example if the level is set to alert, only alert() and emerg() functions will generate the output. The default setting of this variable is warning. Other valid values are: emerg, alert, crit, error, warning, notice, info, debug. Another way to affect the trace level is to set $ENV{APACHE_TEST_TRACE_LEVEL}, which takes effect if $Apache::TestTrace::Level is not set. So an explicit setting of $Apache::TestTrace::Level always takes precedence. By default all the output generated by these functions goes to STDERR. You can override the default filehandler by overriding $Apache::TestTrace::LogFH with a new filehandler. When you override this package's global variables, think about localizing your local settings, so it won't affect other modules using this module in the same run. TODO
o provide an option to disable the coloring altogether via some flag or import() AUTHOR
Stas Bekman with contributions from Doug MacEachern perl v5.18.2 2015-06-18 Apache::TestTrace(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:09 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy