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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Where did you meet UNIX for a first time? Post 302483455 by wilsonSurya on Monday 27th of December 2010 07:22:38 AM
Old 12-27-2010
My first experience was 2-3 years ago, while having training for my first job in Pune, India.
I forgot what unix flavor was that btw Smilie
I learned shell scripting, and that was fun though got stressed for passing the exam.
After back to home country assigned to project using Sun Solaris. I was able to explore and developing my scripting skill there.
At the end of 2008 I joined another company and work as core network engineer (telecommunication), now I rarely have time to develop my skill and interest bcz unix skill is not the most important here.. Smilie

But for having familiar with unix based system and scripting, it was a big plus to me in my work Smilie
 

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SKILL(1)							Linux User's Manual							  SKILL(1)

NAME
skill, snice - send a signal or report process status SYNOPSIS
skill [signal to send] [options] process selection criteria snice [new priority] [options] process selection criteria DESCRIPTION
These tools are probably obsolete and unportable. The command syntax is poorly defined. Consider using the killall, pkill, and pgrep com- mands instead. The default signal for skill is TERM. Use -l or -L to list available signals. Particularly useful signals include HUP, INT, KILL, STOP, CONT, and 0. Alternate signals may be specified in three ways: -9 -SIGKILL -KILL. The default priority for snice is +4. (snice +4 ...) Priority numbers range from +20 (slowest) to -20 (fastest). Negative priority num- bers are restricted to administrative users. GENERAL OPTIONS
-f fast mode This is not currently useful. -i interactive use You will be asked to approve each action. -v verbose output Display information about selected processes. -w warnings enabled This is not currently useful. -n no action This only displays the process ID. -V show version Displays version of program. PROCESS SELECTION OPTIONS
Selection criteria can be: terminal, user, pid, command. The options below may be used to ensure correct interpretation. Do not blame Albert for this interesting interface. -t The next argument is a terminal (tty or pty). -u The next argument is a username. -p The next argument is a process ID number. -c The next argument is a command name. SIGNALS
The signals listed below may be available for use with skill. When known, numbers and default behavior are shown. Name Num Action Description 0 0 n/a exit code indicates if a signal may be sent ALRM 14 exit HUP 1 exit INT 2 exit KILL 9 exit this signal may not be blocked PIPE 13 exit POLL exit PROF exit TERM 15 exit USR1 exit USR2 exit VTALRM exit STKFLT exit may not be implemented PWR ignore may exit on some systems WINCH ignore CHLD ignore URG ignore TSTP stop may interact with the shell TTIN stop may interact with the shell TTOU stop may interact with the shell STOP stop this signal may not be blocked CONT restart continue if stopped, otherwise ignore ABRT 6 core FPE 8 core ILL 4 core QUIT 3 core SEGV 11 core TRAP 5 core SYS core may not be implemented EMT core may not be implemented BUS core core dump may fail XCPU core core dump may fail XFSZ core core dump may fail EXAMPLES
Command Description snice seti crack +7 Slow down seti and crack skill -KILL -v /dev/pts/* Kill users on new-style PTY devices skill -STOP viro lm davem Stop 3 users snice -17 root bash Give priority to root's shell SEE ALSO
killall(1), pkill(1), kill(1), renice(1), nice(1), kill(2), signal(7) STANDARDS
No standards apply. AUTHOR
Albert Cahalan <albert@users.sf.net> wrote skill and snice in 1999 as a replacement for a non-free version, and is the current maintainer of the procps collection. Please send bug reports to <procps-feedback@lists.sf.net>. Linux March 12, 1999 SKILL(1)
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