I have COMPAQ DS 20 SERVER, During The Boot Process, There is an ERROR MESSAGE :
malloc_mem_alloc : no space in map.
AND the system can't boot , And i can't do anything.
The server display : malloc_mem_alloc and the unique thing i can di is to restart the server with i/o buttom.
HELP ME... (1 Reply)
To All:
I have this AIX machine (see boot process below). The problem was it hangs at:
The ctrmc Subsystem has been started. Subsystem PID is 11906..
I checked with other forums but their advise were just "strong punches in the air" with no specific explanation.
I really appreciate if... (6 Replies)
Good afternoon,
I'm currently working on an IBM 9110-510, with an AIX 6.1 on it.
Currently, I've put an HyperTerminal on the machine vty0. Folowing the procedure given by a support guy(§details), I'm able to get to the AIX banner
... (6 Replies)
Afternoon all, hopefully someone can give me a hand with this (the following may be explained very poorly :rolleyes: )
I know there's a process running on one of our Solaris 10 boxes that runs approximately every 5 minutes. Unfortunately I've no idea, who owns it, what it is called, or how it is... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I have to kill a program whose pid, i will be getting.
Multiple processes will be getting started by my script of same kind in a series.
So for after each call to a process i need to write a command or script which can kill the process if it takes more than 5min. In this i will... (3 Replies)
Hi, i want that the parent process start before the child, this code doesn't work,
if the child start before the parent it wait for signal, then the father send the signal SIGALRM and the child catch it and call printf;
else the father call printf and send the signal to the child that call its... (1 Reply)
I understand the OBP program looks for the boot-device, loads the bootblk (located on physical disk sectors 1 through 15). Then the secondary boot program, /platform/`arch -k`/ufsboot is run. This program loads the kernel core image files (genunix and unix).
So how does it uses the ufsboot and... (1 Reply)
This is on a CentOS box, I have two scripts that need to run in order.
I want to write a shell script that calls the first script, lets it run and then terminates it after a certain number of hours (that I specify of course), and then calls the second script (they can't run simultaneously) which... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: btramer
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
bootchartd
BOOTCHARTD(1) General Commands Manual BOOTCHARTD(1)NAME
bootchartd - collects process information, CPU statistics and disk usage statistics
SYNOPSIS
bootchartd [start|stop] [bootchart_init=INIT]
DESCRIPTION
bootchartd collects process information, CPU statistics and disk usage statistics from the /proc/ file system. The accumulated log file
may later be visualized using bootchart(1).
bootchartd is commonly used to profile the boot process for the purpose of speeding it up. In this case, it is started by the kernel as
the init process. This is configured by adding the init=/sbin/bootchartd option to the kernel command line -- either interactively or by
editing the bootloader's configuration file. Please refer to the documentation of your bootloader for details (e.g. lilo, grub or yaboot).
After bootchartd is initialized during the boot process, it will start the default init process (/sbin/init) to proceed with the regular
bootup. If, however, an alternative init process is used (e.g. (/sbin/initng), that process may be specified using the bootchart_init=INIT
kernel command line parameter.
Another possibility for using bootchartd is monitoring the resource usage of a specific application or the running system in general. In
this case, bootchartd is started interactively by running bootchartd start and stopped using bootchartd stop.
FILES
/var/log/bootchartd.tgz
default output file
/etc/bootchartd.conf
default configuration file
SEE ALSO bootchart(1), bootchartd.conf(5)AUTHOR
bootchart was written by Ziga Mahkovec <ziga.mahkovec@klika.si>.
This manual page was written by Jorg Sommer <joerg@alea.gnuu.de>, for the Debian project (but may be used by others).
2006-03-05 BOOTCHARTD(1)