Hi all,
Well back at work and back to crashing systems again :-)
Does anyone know where I can find some decent information on single user mode? I need to be able to fix a few things. Don't know if it's possible in single user mode but I need to fix the "etc/vfstab" mainly I re-wrote it to... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I have AIX 5.1 & I forgot the root password. I find out the solution is to boot in single-mode and remove the root password from the /etc/passwd file. My question is how to boot in single-mode? Also is there any password required when booting in this mode? (9 Replies)
I had a power failure the other day and when my relatively new Solaris 10 machine rebooted it is thrown into maintenance mode.
I've found the following lines in the /var/adm/messages file, I'm assuming this is the root cause of the problem. However, I don't have the slightest idea on how to... (9 Replies)
Hi All,
Can please let me know what is the difference between the single line mode and multi line mode in regular expresions?
Thanks,
Chidhambaram B (3 Replies)
Hi all
I am new on sun OS. I have have little experience on linux.
The Story start from this point:
I want to put some script on start-up the terminal, but I cant do that. my shell was sh and I tried so much to find way to do that. at last someone said to me change your shell to bash. I ask how... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Rahim_T
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
rwho
RWHO(1) BSD General Commands Manual RWHO(1)NAME
rwho -- who is logged in on local machines
SYNOPSIS
rwho [-aHq]
DESCRIPTION
The rwho command produces output similar to who(1), but for all machines on the local network. If no report has been received from a machine
for 11 minutes then rwho assumes the machine is down, and does not report the users last known to be logged into that machine.
If a user hasn't typed to the system for a minute or more, then rwho reports this idle time.
-a Include all users. By default, if a user hasn't typed to the system for an hour or more, then the user will be omitted from the
output.
-H Write column headings above the regular output.
-q ``Quick mode'': List only the names and the number of users currently logged on. When this option is used, all other options are
ignored.
FILES
/var/rwho/whod.* information about other machines
SEE ALSO finger(1), rup(1), ruptime(1), rusers(1), who(1), rwhod(8)HISTORY
The rwho command appeared in 4.3BSD.
BUGS
This is unwieldy when the number of machines on the local net is large.
BSD September 30, 2005 BSD