01-16-2012
Thanks for sharing your story. It's very true that most of the times we do not bother to check the time of the clock before scheduling stuffs.
We maintain IT infrastructure for a big pharma company. For any SLA (service level agreement) breach, my employer has to pay a real big amount of money to the client. Now that's been told, once my colleague had to schedule a maintenance on an AIX server. We have a procedure to do that. There's a lot of approvals from service delivery managers of both the client and our company required. After getting those, this guy went on scheduling the reboot of the machine in maintenance mode in cron a day before. The next day, I got a call from IT Incident management people saying a server is down before it's scheduled maintenance window. It happened around 20 minutes before the scheduled time. We had to raise a severity for this. Upon checking the root cause of this later, we found somehow the server was failing to sync with the NTP server and the clock was going 20 minutes faster than the actual time.
And yes, because of all these, we breached the SLA!
This User Gave Thanks to admin_xor For This Post:
8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
can anybody tel lme,how to instal NTS -150 on a unix network,it needs some patch to fetch time frm serve,,?? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: pesty
2 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Is there anyway to get the start time and end time / status of a crontab job which was just completed? Of course, we know the start time of the crontab job since we are scheduling. But I would like to know process start and time recorded somewhere or can be fetched from a command like 'ps'. ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: thambi
3 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi guys,
I know that this topic has been discuss numerous times, and I have search the net and this forum for it.
However, non able to address the problem I faced so far.
I am on Solaris Platform and unable to install additional packages like the GNU date and gawk to make use of their... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: DrivesMeCrazy
5 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello All,
I have a problem calculating the time difference between start and end timings...!
the timings are given by 24hr format..
Start Date : 08/05/10 12:55
End Date : 08/09/10 06:50
above values are in mm/dd/yy hh:mm format.
Now the thing is, 7th(08/07/10) and... (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: smarty86
16 Replies
5. Solaris
I have a cluster of two Solaris server (veritas cluster). one working and the other is standby
I am going to change the date on them , and am looking for a secure solution as it is giving an important service.
my opinion is that the active one doesn't need to be restarted (if I don't change the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: barry1946
1 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi guys thanks for the help for my previous posts.Now i have a requirement that i download a XMl file which has UTC time stamp.I need to convert UTC time into Unix server timezone.
For ex if the time zone of unix server is CDT then i need to convert into CDT.whatever may be the system time... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohanalakshmi
5 Replies
7. Programming
Dear all,
I am kindly seeking assistance on the following issue.
I am working with data that is sampled every 0.05 hours (that is 3 minutes intervals) here is a sample data from the file
5.00000 15.5030
5.05000 15.6680
5.10000 16.0100
5.15000 16.3450
5.20000 16.7120
5.25000... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: malandisa
4 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All,
I have one file which contains time for request and response.
I want to calculate time difference in milliseconds for each line.
This file can contain 10K lines.
Sample file with 4 lines.
for first line.
Request Time: 15:23:45,255
Response Time: 15:23:45,258
Time diff... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Raza Ali
6 Replies
LEAVE(1) BSD General Commands Manual LEAVE(1)
NAME
leave -- remind you when you have to leave
SYNOPSIS
leave [[+]hhmm]
DESCRIPTION
leave waits until the specified time (within the next 12 hours), then reminds you that you have to leave by writing to the TTY that you exe-
cuted leave on.
You are reminded 5 minutes and 1 minute before the actual time, at the time, and every minute thereafter. When you log off, leave exits just
before it would have printed the next message.
OPTIONS
hhmm The time of day is in the form hhmm where hh is a time in hours (on a 12 or 24 hour clock), and mm are minutes.
However, all times are converted to a 12 hour clock, and assumed to be in the next 12 hours. An attempt to set an alarm for farther
into the future will be truncated to within the next 12 hours.
+ If the time is preceded by '+', the alarm will go off in hours and minutes from the current time.
If no argument is given, leave prompts with "When do you have to leave?" A reply of newline causes leave to exit, otherwise the reply is
assumed to be a time. This form is suitable for inclusion in a ~/.login or ~/.profile.
SEE ALSO
calendar(1), csh(1), sh(1)
HISTORY
The leave command appeared in 3.0BSD.
BUGS
In the modern age with X(1) and window multiplexing programs like window(1) and screen(1), the leave command's reminders and admonitions
might not be seen if the user has the window where leave was started minimized or obscured.
This all begs for a more general user notifications system to be implemented.
BSD
January 19, 2002 BSD