1. Run the SCP command in background
2. Store the PID of the SCP Job (in Shell, PID of immediate backgrounded job can be derived by: BGPROC_PID=$!
3. Monitor the processes in a loop for the presence of above Backgrounded process
Hello all,
How do I start a background process and save the process id to a file on my system. For example %wait 5 & will execute and print the process id. I can't figure out how to get it to a file. I've tried: > filename 0>filename 1>filename.
Any assistance is most appreciated.
Thanks,
Jim... (10 Replies)
I've tried this a long time ago and was successful but could not remember how i did it. Tried ctrl+Z and then used bg %
could not figure what i did after to keep it no hangup -
not sure if used nohup -p pid, can u plz help me out if this can be done.
Any help will be appreciated. (12 Replies)
Hi,
I was trying to run ssh2 command in background... but i got follwoing error message saying that process has been stopped..
+ Stopped(SIGTTOU)
Anyone have any idea about this??? Appreciated your help.. (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have a query about processing and running Perl program at the background.
I have HTML file called Userform.html which accepts input from the user. As soon as input is given the contol goes to get.cgi (get.cgi does some processing and computing tasks).
Actually get .cgi takes more... (0 Replies)
What I need to learn is how to use a script that launches background processes, and then kills those processes as needed.
The script successfully launches the script. But how do I check to see if the job exists before I kill it?
I know my problem is mostly failure to understand parameter... (4 Replies)
Looking for a logic where say i have a script called parent_script which is used to call other 4 to 5 child scripts in background as..
cat parent_script # containing 65 lines
1
2
..
35 while read child_script
36 do
37 ./child_script_name&
38 done< ${SCRIPT_LISTS}
39
40 # Need to have... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am using net::ftp for transferring files now i am trying in the same Linux server as a result ftp is very fast but if the server is other location (remote) then the file transferred will be time consuming.
So i want try putting FTP part as a background process. I am unaware how to do... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have written a menu driven shell script in which as per the choice, I run the another script on background.
For eg:
1. get info
2)process info
3)modify info
All the operations have different scripts which i schedule in background using &.
However I wish to display the error... (0 Replies)
Hello all,
Can someone help with one script?
I have as example 3 scripts
1.sh
sleep 60 &
sleep 60 &
sleep 10 &
sleep 80 &
sleep 60 &
2.sh
sleep 40 &
sleep 5 &
sleep 10 &
sleep 70 &
sleep 60 &
3.sh (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: vikus
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
iosnoop
iosnoop(1m) USER COMMANDS iosnoop(1m)NAME
iosnoop - snoop I/O events as they occur. Uses DTrace.
SYNOPSIS
iosnoop [-a|-A|-Deghinostv] [-d device] [-f filename] [-m mount_point] [-n name] [-p PID]
DESCRIPTION
iosnoop prints I/O events as they happen, with useful details such as UID, PID, block number, size, filename, etc.
This is useful to determine the process responsible for using the disks, as well as details on what activity the process is requesting. Be-
haviour such as random or sequential I/O can be observed by reading the block numbers.
Since this uses DTrace, only users with root privileges can run this command.
OPTIONS -a print all data
-A dump all data, space delimited
-D print time delta, us (elapsed)
-e print device name
-i print device instance
-N print major and minor numbers
-o print disk delta time, us
-s print start time, us
-t print completion time, us
-v print completion time, string
-d device
instance name to snoop (eg, dad0)
-f filename
full pathname of file to snoop
-m mount_point
mountpoint for filesystem to snoop
-n name
process name
-p PID process ID
EXAMPLES
Default output, print I/O activity as it occurs,
# iosnoop
Print human readable timestamps,
# iosnoop -v
Print major and minor numbers,
# iosnoop -N
Snoop events on the root filesystem only,
# iosnoop -m /
FIELDS
UID User ID
PID Process ID
PPID Parent Process ID
COMM command name for the process
ARGS argument listing for the process
SIZE size of the operation, bytes
BLOCK disk block for the operation (location. relative to this filesystem. more useful with the -N option to print major and minor num-
bers)
STIME timestamp for the disk request, us
TIME timestamp for the disk completion, us
DELTA elapsed time from request to completion, us (this is the elapsed time from the disk request (strategy) to the disk completion
(iodone))
DTIME time for disk to complete request, us (this is the time for the disk to complete that event since it's last event (time between
iodones), or, the time to the strategy if the disk had been idle)
STRTIME
timestamp for the disk completion, string
DEVICE device name
INS device instance number
D direction, Read or Write
MOUNT mount point
FILE filename (basename) for I/O operation
NOTES
When filtering on PID or process name, be aware that poor disk event times may be due to events that have been filtered away, for example
another process that may be seeking the disk heads elsewhere.
DOCUMENTATION
See the DTraceToolkit for further documentation under the Docs directory. The DTraceToolkit docs may include full worked examples with ver-
bose descriptions explaining the output.
EXIT
iosnoop will run forever until Ctrl-C is hit.
AUTHOR
Brendan Gregg [Sydney, Australia]
SEE ALSO iotop(1M), dtrace(1M)version 1.50 Jul 25, 2005 iosnoop(1m)