Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Job is taking long time
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Job is taking long time Post 302481665 by Corona688 on Saturday 18th of December 2010 11:01:14 PM
Old 12-19-2010
What code is actually run on the server? And what OS and DBSM is involved? You might be able to trace it, see what system call it's blocking on...
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

fetchmail taking long time to fetchmail...

Hi peeps, We are having around 60 users. The time set to retrieve the mail is 300 sec. But it's taking around 1 hour to deliver mails. I am using debian sarge 3.1. any clues? And how it will affect if I decrease the time? My machine has got 1 p4 3.0 GHZ processor and 1 GB ram. The home... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: squid04
2 Replies

2. Red Hat

login process taking a long time

I'm having a bit of a login performance issue.. wondering if anyone has any ideas where I might look. Here's the scenario... Linux Red Hat ES 4 update 5 regardless of where I login from (ssh or on the text console) after providing the password the system seems to pause for between 30... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: retlaw
4 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

For Loop Taking Too Long

I'm new from UNIX scripting. Please help. I have about 10,000 files from the $ROOTDIR/scp/inbox/string1 directory to compare with the 50 files from /$ROOTDIR/output/tma/pnt/bad/string1/ directory and it takes about 2 hours plus to complete the for loop. Is there a better way to re-write the... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: hanie123
5 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

<AIX>Problem in purge script, taking very very long time to complete 18.30hrs

Hi, I have here a script which is used to purge older files/directories based on defined purge period. The script consists of 45 find commands, where each command will need to traverse through more than a million directories. Therefore a single find command executes around 22-25 mins... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: sravicha
7 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

gref -f taking long time for big file

grep -f taking long time to compare for big files, any alternate for fast check I am using grep -f file1 file2 to check - to ckeck dups/common rows prsents. But my files contains file1 contains 5gb and file 2 contains 50 mb and its taking such a long time to compare the files. Do we have any... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: gkskumar
10 Replies

6. Solaris

Re-sync Taking Extremely Long.

It's almost 3 days now and my resync/re-attach is only at 80%. Is there something I can check in Solaris 10 that would be causing the degradation. It's only a standby machine. My live system completed in 6hrs. (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: ravzter
9 Replies

7. Solaris

How to find out bottleneck if system is taking long time in gzip

Dear All, OS = Solaris 5.10 Hardware Sun Fire T2000 with 1 Ghz quode core We have oracle application 11i with 10g database. When ever i am trying to take cold backup of database with 55GB size its taking long time to finish. As the application is down nobody is using the server at all... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: yoojamu
8 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

ls is taking long time to list

Hi, All the data are kept on Netapp using NFS. some directories are so fast when doing ls but few of them are slow. After doing few times, it becomes fast. Then again after few minutes, it becomes slow again. Can you advise what's going on? This one directory I am very interested is giving... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: samnyc
3 Replies

9. UNIX and Linux Applications

From past 10 days my one job is taking lots of time

One of my job is taking long running time. I need to identify from the unix log file can you please help how to troubleshoot. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Nsharma3006
1 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Rm -rf is taking very long, will it timeout?

I have so many (hundreds of thousands) files and directories within this one specific directory that my "rm -rf" command to delete them has been taking forever. I did this via the SSH, my question is: if my SSH connection times out before rm -rf finishes, will it continue to delete all of those... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: phpchick
5 Replies
TRSP(8c)																  TRSP(8c)

NAME
trsp - transliterate sequenced packet protocol trace SYNOPSIS
trsp [ -a ] [ -s ] [ -t ] [ -j ] [ -p hex-address ] [ system [ core ] ] DESCRIPTION
Trpt interrogates the buffer of SPP trace records created when a socket is marked for "debugging" (see setsockopt(2)), and prints a read- able description of these records. When no options are supplied, trsp prints all the trace records found in the system grouped according to SPP connection protocol control block (PCB). The following options may be used to alter this behavior. -s in addition to the normal output, print a detailed description of the packet sequencing information, -t in addition to the normal output, print the values for all timers at each point in the trace, -j just give a list of the protocol control block addresses for which there are trace records, -p show only trace records associated with the protocol control block who's address follows, -a in addition to the normal output, print the values of the source and destination addresses for each packet recorded. The recommended use of trsp is as follows. Isolate the problem and enable debugging on the socket(s) involved in the connection. Find the address of the protocol control blocks associated with the sockets using the -A option to netstat(1). Then run trsp with the -p option, supplying the associated protocol control block addresses. If there are many sockets using the debugging option, the -j option may be use- ful in checking to see if any trace records are present for the socket in question. If debugging is being performed on a system or core file other than the default, the last two arguments may be used to supplant the defaults. FILES
/vmunix /dev/kmem SEE ALSO
setsockopt(2), netstat(1) DIAGNOSTICS
``no namelist'' when the system image doesn't contain the proper symbols to find the trace buffer; others which should be self explanatory. BUGS
Should also print the data for each input or output, but this is not saved in the race record. The output format is inscrutable and should be described here. 4.2 Berkeley Distribution October 8, 1985 TRSP(8c)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:24 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy