Mostly i'm using it to watch overall throughput through the interfaces.
So normally all i'm doing is.
So i'll leave netstat running for a very long time and then scroll back through history looking for spikes in traffic and such trying to determine if the system is pushing too much traffic. If I could get it to display in more human readable numbers it would make life easier.
Hi,
The following command provides the usage in 1024-byte blocks
du -ks * | sort -n | echo "$1"
...
1588820 user10
2463140 user11
2464096 user12
5808484 user13
6387400 user14
.....
I am trying to produce an output of first coulmn by multiplying by 1024 so that the output should... (11 Replies)
This is what I have to start out with
more file
1208217600
1208131200
1193806800
I want to convert the epoch column into a human-readable format. My file has hundreds of these epoch times that I want to loop through and convert. (The epoch time is really the last column of the line)
... (3 Replies)
$ quota
Disk quotas for user cqlouis (uid 1254):
Filesystem blocks quota limit grace files quota limit grace
/dev/sdb1 64 300000 320000 8 0 0
$
I want to make the output of command quota in human readable format? How to?
As we... (2 Replies)
Hello
I have log file from solaris system which has date field converted by Java application using System.currentTimeMillis() function, example is 1280943608380 which equivalent to GMT: Wed, 04 Aug 2010 17:40:08 GMT.
Now I need a function in shell script which will convert 1280943608380... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I want to list all the directories present in a particular location and want to display their sizes as well. I know "ls -lh" but it doesn't show the size of the complete directory. So i want something like
dir1 266 MB
dir2 2 KB
dir3 22 MB
...
...
file1 10 Kb
.....
Thanks
Sarbjit (4 Replies)
This does not work. One line works but my pattern are about 100 characters long and it is messy to read. When I try to use several lines it does not two'
find "$inputDirectory" \( -name 'very long pattern1'
-o -name 'very long pattern2'
-o -name... (1 Reply)
Can someone help me to write a shell script to convert epoch timestamp into human readable format
1394553600,"test","79799776.0","19073982.728571","77547576.0","18835699.285714"
1394553600,"test1","80156064.0","19191275.014286","62475360.000000","14200554.720000"... (10 Replies)
Scripting Language: bash shell script, python
I want to parse .nessus file in human readable format. If any one have any ideas please help me. (2 Replies)
Hello.
I am comparing two binary file.
The first file is the source file. The second file is a modified version of the first one.
Modification concern uuid value.
Example
first file have multiple occurrences of 69a3604b-ac2b-43b7-af84-0a4a67fc6962 second file have the same occurence... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jcdole
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
pmc_name_of_capability
PMC_NAME_OF_CAPABILITY(3) BSD Library Functions Manual PMC_NAME_OF_CAPABILITY(3)NAME
pmc_name_of_capability, pmc_name_of_class, pmc_name_of_cputype, pmc_name_of_disposition, pmc_name_of_event, pmc_name_of_mode,
pmc_name_of_state -- human readable names for numeric constants used by pmc(3) and hwpmc(4)LIBRARY
Performance Counters Library (libpmc, -lpmc)
SYNOPSIS
#include <pmc.h>
const char *
pmc_name_of_capability(enum pmc_caps pc);
const char *
pmc_name_of_class(enum pmc_class pc);
const char *
pmc_name_of_cputype(enum pmc_cputype ct);
const char *
pmc_name_of_disposition(enum pmc_disp pd);
const char *
pmc_name_of_event(enum pmc_event pe);
const char *
pmc_name_of_mode(enum pmc_mode pm);
const char *
pmc_name_of_state(enum pmc_state ps);
DESCRIPTION
These convenience functions translate numeric constants used by the Performance Counters Library (libpmc, -lpmc) to const char * pointers to
human readable representations of their arguments.
Function pmc_name_of_capability() translates a PMC capability flag given in argument pc to a human readable string. PMC capabilities are
described in pmc(3).
Function pmc_name_of_class() translates the PMC class value specified in argument pc to a human readable name. PMC classes are described in
pmc(3).
Function pmc_name_of_cputype() translates the CPU type value specified in argument ct to a human readable name. CPU types known to the
library are described in pmc(3).
Function pmc_name_of_disposition() translates the PMC row disposition specified in argument pd to a human readable name. PMC row disposi-
tions are described in hwpmc(4).
Function pmc_name_of_event() translates the PMC event number specified by argument pe to a string. PMC event names are documented in section
EVENT SPECIFIERS of pmc(3).
Function pmc_name_of_mode() translates the PMC mode specified by argument pm to a human readable string. PMC modes are described in pmc(3).
Function pmc_name_of_state() translates the value of argument ps to a human readable name.
IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
The returned pointers point to static storage inside the PMC library and should not be freed by the caller.
RETURN VALUES
These functions return a non-NULL pointer on successful completion. In case of an error, a NULL pointer is returned and the global variable
errno is set to indicate the error.
ERRORS
A call to these functions may fail with the following errors:
[EINVAL] The function argument specified an invalid value.
SEE ALSO pmc(3), pmc_cpuinfo(3), pmc_pmcinfo(3), hwpmc(4)BSD November 24, 2007 BSD