Hi,
The following command provides the usage in 1024-byte blocks
du -ks * | sort -n | echo "$1"
...
1588820 user10
2463140 user11
2464096 user12
5808484 user13
6387400 user14
.....
I am trying to produce an output of first coulmn by multiplying by 1024 so that the output should... (11 Replies)
This is what I have to start out with
more file
1208217600
1208131200
1193806800
I want to convert the epoch column into a human-readable format. My file has hundreds of these epoch times that I want to loop through and convert. (The epoch time is really the last column of the line)
... (3 Replies)
$ quota
Disk quotas for user cqlouis (uid 1254):
Filesystem blocks quota limit grace files quota limit grace
/dev/sdb1 64 300000 320000 8 0 0
$
I want to make the output of command quota in human readable format? How to?
As we... (2 Replies)
Hello
I have log file from solaris system which has date field converted by Java application using System.currentTimeMillis() function, example is 1280943608380 which equivalent to GMT: Wed, 04 Aug 2010 17:40:08 GMT.
Now I need a function in shell script which will convert 1280943608380... (3 Replies)
Is there any way to make netstat output the information in a more human readable format? even if it's not exact? I don't even care if it has to round up/down to the nearest Meg to make it work.
I wind up having to stare at netstat running for while and I wish I could get it to output things in a... (10 Replies)
This does not work. One line works but my pattern are about 100 characters long and it is messy to read. When I try to use several lines it does not two'
find "$inputDirectory" \( -name 'very long pattern1'
-o -name 'very long pattern2'
-o -name... (1 Reply)
Hello Experts,
Below is the record i have:
sample data attached
I want this record of each row to be in single line and there are multiple rowise unixtime mentioned e.g 11996327 , This needs to be converted to Human readdable data and time from multiple rows
Can you help me , it will be... (10 Replies)
Can someone help me to write a shell script to convert epoch timestamp into human readable format
1394553600,"test","79799776.0","19073982.728571","77547576.0","18835699.285714"
1394553600,"test1","80156064.0","19191275.014286","62475360.000000","14200554.720000"... (10 Replies)
Scripting Language: bash shell script, python
I want to parse .nessus file in human readable format. If any one have any ideas please help me. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sk151993
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
kdump
KDUMP(1) BSD General Commands Manual KDUMP(1)NAME
kdump -- display kernel trace data
SYNOPSIS
kdump [-dlNnRT] [-e emulation] [-f file] [-m maxdata] [-p pid] [-t trstr] [-x | -X size] [file]
DESCRIPTION
kdump displays the kernel trace files produced with ktrace(1) in human readable format. The file ktrace.out in the current directory is dis-
played, unless either the -f option is used, or a file name is supplied as the last argument.
The options are as follows:
-d Display all numbers in decimal.
-e emulation
If an emulation of a process is unknown, interpret system call maps assuming the named emulation instead of default "netbsd".
-f file Display the specified file instead of ktrace.out.
-l Loop reading the trace file, once the end-of-file is reached, waiting for more data.
-m maxdata Display at most maxdata bytes when decoding I/O.
-N Suppress system call number-to-name translation.
-n Suppress ad hoc translations. Normally kdump tries to decode many system calls into a more human readable format. For example,
ioctl(2) values are replaced with the macro name and errno values are replaced with the strerror(3) string. Suppressing this
feature yields a more consistent output format and is easily amenable to further processing.
-p pid Only display records from the trace file that are for the indicated pid.
-R Display relative timestamps (time since previous entry).
-T Display absolute timestamps for each entry (seconds since epoch).
-t trstr Restrict display to the specified set of kernel trace points. The default is to display everything in the file. See the -t
option of ktrace(1).
-x Display GIO data in hex and ascii instead of vis(3) format.
-X size Same as -x but display hex values by groups of size bytes. Supported values are 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16.
SEE ALSO ktrace(1)HISTORY
The kdump command appears in 4.4BSD.
BSD November 15, 2003 BSD