Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Tracking Reminders using Scripts Post 302440695 by dahlia84 on Wednesday 28th of July 2010 02:50:07 AM
Old 07-28-2010
Quote:
How can you know the end user have completed the task by shell? Any command can be used for that?
Yeah you are correct. I do not think we can use any script to know whether the end user has done his task. I have now decided to go with VBA+excel for automating this thing. Like when a user updates a cell with Y/N. Thanks for your reply and time Smilie
 

4 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Command Tracking

Hi, OS: Solaris9, SPARC Is there any way I can track the commands run by users from the shell prompt? Example: Somebody is deleting files from the system. Who it is is a mystery. That person obviously does not use bash prompt so there is no history. Is there anyway I can find out who... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: mahatma
5 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Tracking user

dear all, I'm facing problem that is i have noticed from few days back that some body is deleting and making changes in the file from developement server where i'm working(in unix) so i want to track that who is using the server, what performancr they are doing and each every thing which r... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: panknil
5 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Tracking down the problem

Is there a way to track down what process is sending to a certain port? I have some thing pounding the network with requests to a multicast IP that doesn't exist. I have shut down all comms related processes and yet it is still there. Need a way to track the port or IP back to the process. Thanks... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: mattmanuel
3 Replies

4. Red Hat

Tracking Process to a particular

I've tried to see what I can find on my own but I'm coming up with goose eggs. Basically I was wondering if there was a way of querying the scheduler (or something similar) to track a process back to a particular CPU it's executing on at the time of the command. ps has a "cpu" output option but... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: thmnetwork
1 Replies
REG_TASKER(3PVM)						  PVM Version 3.4						  REG_TASKER(3PVM)

NAME
pvm_reg_tasker - Register task as PVM task starter. SYNOPSIS
C #include <pvmsdpro.h> int cc = pvm_reg_tasker() Fortran Not Available DESCRIPTION
Registers the calling task as a PVM task starter. When a tasker is registered with a pvmd, and the pvmd receives a DM_EXEC message, instead of fork()ing and exec()ing the task itself, it passes a message to the tasker, which does the dirty work and sends a message back to the pvmd. Note: If this doesn't make sense, don't worry about it. This function is for folks who are writing stuff like debugger servers and so on. For a more complete explanation of what's going on here, you should refer to the PVM source code and/or user guide section on implementa- tion; this is only a man page. That said... When the pvmd receives a DM_EXEC message (request to exec new tasks), it searches epath (the PVM executable search path) for the file name. If it finds the file, it then either attempts to start the processes (using fork() and exec()) or, if a tasker has registered, sends it a SM_STTASK message. The format of the SM_STTASK message is: int tid // of task int flags // as passed to spawn() string path // absolute path of the executable int argc // number of args to process string argv[argc] // args int nenv // number of envars to pass to task string env[nenv] // environment strings The tasker must attempt to start the process when it gets one of these messages. The tasker doesn't reply to the pvmd if the task is suc- cessfully started; the task will reconnect to the pvmd on its own, using the cookie in envar PVMEPID to identify itself to the pvmd. The tasker must send a SM_TASKX message to the pvmd when any task that it owns (has started) exits, or if it can't start a particular task. The format of the SM_TASKX message is: int tid // of task int status // the Unix exit status (from wait()) int u_sec // user time used by the task, seconds int u_usec // microseconds int s_sec // system time used by the task, seconds int s_usec // microseconds The tasker task must use pvm_setopt(PvmResvTids, 1) to allow sending reserved messages. Messages should be packed using encoding Pvm- DataDefault to ensure they can be unpacked anywhere in the system. pvm_reg_tasker() returns PvmOk when successful. SEE ALSO
pvm_spawn(3PVM), pvm_tasks(3PVM), 16 March, 1994 REG_TASKER(3PVM)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:09 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy