Start with:
Then look up the full name of those which are IP addresses (not MAC addresses) in /etc/hosts or DNS according to where netstat finds the name on your computer.
Hi there,
I am completely new to this forum but it say's it's for complete newbies too :)
I have some questions:
1: I want to learn Linux and some basic Unix commands. Is it best to install a text version of Linux/Unix? (to get to know the commands, instead of a shell app)
2: Are there... (8 Replies)
Ive decided to take a trip over to unix and see how it is due to the perl compatabilities, What distro would you recommend? Im somewhat new to perl, and would like something with a "n00b-friendly" environment. Ive been running Linux boxes for some time now, and want to try a new os also. (3 Replies)
So I am ridiculously new to UNIX. The closest thing to it I use is Mac OS X. Recently I downloaded OpenDarwin 7.2.1 just to see what it was like. I popped it into Vmware, installation and boot work well, and I login.
Now I am presented with a console. I'm generally okay with command line... (2 Replies)
Howdy.
I know this is most likely possible using sed or awk or grep, most likely a combination of them together, but how would one go about running a grep like command on a file where you only try to match your pattern to the second field in a line, space delimited?
Example:
You are... (3 Replies)
This is my first post here, I tried searching the forum and other sites as well - but I still couldn't figure out exactly what UNIX is. I mean like for C programming we Turbo C++ IDE, and in same way different platforms for other languages.
What do we use for UNIX? I'm completely new to UNIX and... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying with the below Perl command to print the first field when the second field matches the given pattern:
perl -lane 'open F, "< myfile"; for $i (<F>) {chomp $i; if ($F =~ /patt$/) {my $f = (split(" ", $i)); print "$f";}} close F' dummy_file
I know I can achieve the same with the... (7 Replies)
Within AWK, how do you display a field of NR? Here's my code:
awk '(NR>1) && (P1=$1-w)>=100000 {print "increase of" " " P1*.0000179," " "kW at" " " 'NR*60/431900' " " "minutes" "\n" "change from" " " 'NR-10($1)' " " "kW to" " " 'NR+70($1)' "\n"}{w=$1}' filename
I can change NR and print... (3 Replies)
I just installed this 11.2 ver and when I tell it to shutdown it takes for ever then just hangs with this just a little bit of that red line left to go, then it just sits there like forever until I get tired of looking at it then force a shutdown by holding my power button down until my laptop... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: userx-bw
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUNOS
inet_type
inet_type(4) File Formats inet_type(4)NAME
inet_type - default Internet protocol type
SYNOPSIS
/etc/default/inet_type
DESCRIPTION
The inet_type file defines the default IP protocol to use. Currently this file is only used by the ifconfig(1M) and netstat(1M) commands.
The inet_type file can contain a number of <variable>=<value> lines. Currently, the only variable defined is DEFAULT_IP, which can be
assigned a value of IP_VERSION4, IP_VERSION6, or BOTH.
The output displayed by the ifconfig and netstat commands can be controlled by the value of DEFAULT_IP set in inet_type file. By default,
both commands display the IPv4 and IPv6 information available on the system. The user can choose to suppress display of IPv6 information by
setting the value of DEFAULT_IP. The following shows the possible values for DEFAULT_IP and the resulting ifconfig and netstat output that
will be displayed:
IP_VERSION4 Displays only IPv4 related information. The output displayed is backward compatible with older versions of the ifconfig(1M)
and netstat(1M) commands.
IP_VERSION6 Displays both IPv4 and IPv6 related information for ifconfig and netstat.
BOTH Displays both IPv4 and IPv6 related information for ifconfig and netstat.
The command-line options to the ifconfig and netstat commands override the effect of DEFAULT_IP as set in the inet_type file. For example,
even if the value of DEFAULT_IP is IP_VERSION4, the command
example% ifconfig -a6
will display all IPv6 interfaces.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Suppressing IPv6 Related Output
This is what the inet_type file must contain if you want to suppress IPv6 related output:
DEFAULT_IP=IP_VERSION4
SEE ALSO ifconfig(1M), netstat(1M)SunOS 5.10 16 Jun 1999 inet_type(4)