Hi,
I have written a daemon process, to perform certain operations in the background.
For this I have to close, the open file descriptors,
Does anybody know how to find out the number of open file descriptors ?
Thanks in Advance,
Sheetal (2 Replies)
Hello all,
A few questions on file descriptors ...
scenario : Sun Ultra 30 with Sun OS 5.5.1 , E250 with Solaris 2.6
In one of my servers, the file descriptor status from the soft limit and hard limits are 64 and 1024 respectively for root user.
Is the soft limit (64) represents the... (3 Replies)
i m trying to learn processes in unix and i've been reading this but i don't quite get it. its regarding file descriptors. : each is a part of file pointers, they point to another area. indexes into an Operating system maintained table called "file descriptor table". one table per process. may... (3 Replies)
according to the many sources the exec command other than its use in find and escaping the shell, has another definitive use.. which I am having a hard time understanding.
according to many resources and info pages that I have read I can use the exec command with a file descriptor.. such as
exec... (5 Replies)
I am in a Systems programming class this semester, and our current project is to write a program utilizing sockets and fork. For the project, I decided to make my own instant messaging program. I have the code completed, but I have a problem that keeps old clients from communicating with new... (3 Replies)
im having trouble with the comprehending the exec command and the use of file descriptors.
given:
#!/bin/sh
exec 4>&1
exec 1>&2
exec 2>&4
exec 4>&-
echo Hello
would the standard output of this script be sent to STDOUT, STDERR or neither and why???
thanks for the help. (1 Reply)
Need to close files which descriptor number are larger than 9 in ksh.
'exec 10>&-' fails with 'ksh: 10: not found'. How do you specify file descriptors which occupies two or more digits in ksh script?
Thanks,
Masaki (2 Replies)
What is the difference between a file descriptor and a semaphore?
My basic understanding is:
- a file descriptor is a small positive integer that the system uses instead of the file name to identify an open file or socket.
- a semaphore is a variable with a value that indicates the... (1 Reply)
Hi, I'm playing with KSH
I entered following command in terminal
{ echo "stdout" >&1; echo "stderr" >&2; } > out
And I get only stoud in a new file out.
My question is: Where did my stderr vanish ? (5 Replies)
Hello i am having an issue with bash script and this is the code
now=$(cat hosts1.txt | awk '{print $2;}')
while read n ;do
ssh root@$now 'useradd test1; echo -e "test1\ntest1" | passwd test1 && echo "test1 ALL=(ALL:ALL) ALL" >> /etc/sudoers'
When i execute only part with cat, it... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: tomislav91
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT V7
ssh-argv0
SSH-ARGV0(1) BSD General Commands Manual SSH-ARGV0(1)NAME
ssh-argv0 -- replaces the old ssh command-name as hostname handling
SYNOPSIS
hostname | user@hostname [-l login_name] [command]
hostname | user@hostname [-afgknqstvxACNTX1246] [-b bind_address] [-c cipher_spec] [-e escape_char] [-i identity_file] [-l login_name]
[-m mac_spec] [-o option] [-p port] [-F configfile] [-L port:host:hostport] [-R port:host:hostport] [-D port] [command]
DESCRIPTION
ssh-argv0 replaces the old ssh command-name as hostname handling. If you link to this script with a hostname then executing the link is
equivalent to having executed ssh with that hostname as an argument. All other arguments are passed to ssh and will be processed normally.
OPTIONS
See ssh(1).
FILES
See ssh(1).
AUTHORS
OpenSSH is a derivative of the original and free ssh 1.2.12 release by Tatu Ylonen. Aaron Campbell, Bob Beck, Markus Friedl, Niels Provos,
Theo de Raadt and Dug Song removed many bugs, re-added newer features and created OpenSSH. Markus Friedl contributed the support for SSH
protocol versions 1.5 and 2.0. Jonathan Amery wrote this ssh-argv0 script and the associated documentation.
SEE ALSO ssh(1)Debian Project September 7, 2001 Debian Project