Hy, I've an 486 dx2 laptop an I want to run unix on it, the problem is it has only 4 megabytes of ram, so my question is; does anybody know an unix based OS which runs with only 4 mb?
thanx (7 Replies)
Hi,
I am seeing very high kernel usage and very high load averages on my system (Although we are not loading much data to our database). Here is the output of top...does anyone know what i should be looking at?
Thanks,
Lorraine
last pid: 13144; load averages: 22.32, 19.81, 16.78 ... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
In my application malloc is returning NULL even though there is sufficient amount of free memory is available but swap memory is low.
Is this possible that, if free memory is high & swap memory is low, malloc will not be able to allocate memory & return NULL ?:)
Kindly look into... (5 Replies)
on the file Ftp'd from the mainframe ,do we have any UNIX command to replace mainframe low and values to space or null.
i tried using tr and it doesn't work ...
Thanks (1 Reply)
Is it possible to have a bash script pick the highest and lowest values of four variables? I've been googling for this but haven't come up with anything. I have a script that assigns variables ($c0, $c1, $c2, and $c3) based on the coretemps from grep/sed statements of sensors. I'd like to also... (5 Replies)
Hi guys,
i have a question about spliting a binary file into 2 chunks.
First chunk with all high bytes and the second one with all low bytes.
What unix tools can i use? And how can this be performed?
I looked in manpages of split and dd but this does not help.
Thanks (2 Replies)
I've got a domain running on a few boards of a 25k. I'm seeing very high kernel cpu usage in top and cant' quite explain it. System runs a large number of smallish Oracle 10g2 databases (30), used mainly for development.
load average: 36.63, 36.68, 37.42
2489 processes: 2452 sleeping, 21... (0 Replies)
Need some clarification on this....
1. how are kernel/ user spaces and high/low memory related?
2. What do they all mean when i have the kernel command line as:
"console=ttyS0,115200 root=/dev/sda2 rw mem=exactmap memmap=1M@0 memmap=96M@1M irqpoll"
or
2. what do mem and memmap mean in... (3 Replies)
Hello All
I have a system running AIX 61 shared uncapped partition (with 11 physical processors, 24 Virtual 72GB of Memory) .
The output from NMON, vmstat show a high run queue (60+) for continous periods of time intervals, but NO paging, relatively low I/o (6000) , CPU % is 40, Low network.... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: IL-Malti
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
glib::flags
Glib::Flags(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Glib::Flags(3pm)NAME
Glib::Flags - Overloaded operators representing GLib flags
HIERARCHY
Glib::Flags
DESCRIPTION
Glib maps flag and enum values to the nicknames strings provided by the underlying C libraries. Representing flags this way in Perl is an
interesting problem, which Glib solves by using some cool overloaded operators.
The functions described here actually do the work of those overloaded operators. See the description of the flags operators in the "This
Is Now That" section of Glib for more info.
METHODS
scalar = $class->new ($a)
o $a (scalar)
Create a new flags object with given bits. This is for use from a subclass, it's not possible to create a "Glib::Flags" object as such.
For example,
my $f1 = Glib::ParamFlags->new ('readable');
my $f2 = Glib::ParamFlags->new (['readable','writable']);
An object like this can then be used with the overloaded operators.
scalar = $a->all ($b, $swap)
o $b (scalar)
o $swap (scalar)
aref = $f->as_arrayref
Return the bits of $f as a reference to an array of strings, like ['flagbit1','flagbit2']. This is the overload function for "@{}", ie.
arrayizing $f. You can call it directly as a method too.
Note that @$f gives the bits as a list, but as_arrayref gives an arrayref. If an arrayref is what you want then the method style
somefunc()->as_arrayref can be more readable than [@{somefunc()}].
bool = $f->bool
Return 1 if any bits are set in $f, or 0 if none are set. This is the overload for $f in boolean context (like "if", etc). You can call
it as a method to get a true/false directly too.
integer = $a->eq ($b, $swap)
o $b (scalar)
o $swap (integer)
integer = $a->ge ($b, $swap)
o $b (scalar)
o $swap (integer)
scalar = $a->intersect ($b, $swap)
o $b (scalar)
o $swap (scalar)
integer = $a->ne ($b, $swap)
o $b (scalar)
o $swap (integer)
scalar = $a->sub ($b, $swap)
o $b (scalar)
o $swap (scalar)
scalar = $a->union ($b, $swap)
o $b (scalar)
o $swap (scalar)
scalar = $a->xor ($b, $swap)
o $b (scalar)
o $swap (scalar)
SEE ALSO
Glib
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2003-2011 by the gtk2-perl team.
This software is licensed under the LGPL. See Glib for a full notice.
perl v5.14.2 2012-05-24 Glib::Flags(3pm)