Gurus,
Pls. help on this to run the script in background.
I have a script to run the informatica workflows using PMCMD in script.
Say the script name is test.sh & Parameters to the script is Y Y Y Y
The no of parameters to the bove script is 4. all are going to be a flags. Each flag will... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I need to establish a procedure that will start an application in background each time my remote Solaris server is (re)started. This would be a kind of daemon. I am no sysadmin expert, so I am looking for pointers.
How should I proceed? What are the main steps?
Thanks,
JVerstry (9 Replies)
I have a command running in the foreground (and so my term window is locked up) and I want to kill it, then resume it in the background and go home. It is creating a zip file, and the file will be written to the current directory - no std in / std out issues.
How do I do this? Kill it with a... (3 Replies)
I have a script called startWebLogic.sh which I was running in the background but the problem is which I used the command :- ps -elf | grep "startWebLogic.sh" | grep -v grep to find the process id but I was unable to find the process id for this script and when I checked from the front end the... (3 Replies)
Hello, I was trying to make some processes to run at background and went to a problem.
First I tried just to loop in one line something like this:
for i in {1..10}; do echo 'hello world' &; done;
but it pops a syntax error, so I tried several ways to fix it but wasn't able to understand... (2 Replies)
Hi ,
I want to see all the background process that are running in unix box machine...please guide me is there any specific command for that..since I am executing some scripts at background..!!:confused: (1 Reply)
I am trying to run a command. This is one of my attempts:
for i in fileservera; do ssh -t $i 'sudo ls /';doneThis works, and I see the directories. However, what I want to do now is start a process on the remote server such as /usr/bin/connectproc -standalonesudo /usr/bin/connectproc... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I wrote a KSH script and running it on HP-UX machine
I am running one script in background.
My script is at location
$HOME/myScript/test/background_sh
When I view my script in background with psu commend
> psu | grep background_sh
I see following output
UID PID PPID C ... (1 Reply)
Hello,
I am running a python file from terminal and I wish to see which code is running at background. When I use htop, I see just a few commands, unable to see entire command.
htop > report
nano report
Output:
^
Following parts of ffmpeg line is not shown by htop. Just showing... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: baris35
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
device_maps
device_maps(4) File Formats device_maps(4)NAME
device_maps - device_maps file
SYNOPSIS
/etc/security/device_maps
DESCRIPTION
The device_maps file contains access control information about each physical device. Each device is represented by a one line entry of the
form:
device-name : device-type : device-list :
where
device-name This is an arbitrary ASCII string naming the physical device. This field contains no embedded white space or non-
printable characters.
device-type This is an arbitrary ASCII string naming the generic device type. This field identifies and groups together devices
of like type. This field contains no embedded white space or non-printable characters.
device-list This is a list of the device special files associated with the physical device. This field contains valid device
special file path names separated by white space.
The device_maps file is an ASCII file that resides in the /etc/security directory.
Lines in device_maps can end with a `' to continue an entry on the next line.
Comments may also be included. A `#' makes a comment of all further text until the next NEWLINE not immediately preceded by a `'.
Leading and trailing blanks are allowed in any of the fields.
The device_maps file must be created by the system administrator before device allocation is enabled.
This file is owned by root, with a group of sys, and a mode of 0644.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: A sample device_maps file
# scsi tape
st1:
rmt:
/dev/rst21 /dev/nrst21 /dev/rst5 /dev/nrst5 /dev/rst13
/dev/nrst13 /dev/rst29 /dev/nrst29 /dev/rmt/1l /dev/rmt/1m
/dev/rmt/1 /dev/rmt/1h /dev/rmt/1u /dev/rmt/1ln /dev/rmt/1mn
/dev/rmt/1n /dev/rmt/1hn /dev/rmt/1un /dev/rmt/1b /dev/rmt/1bn:
FILES
/etc/security/device_maps
SEE ALSO allocate(1), bsmconv(1M), deallocate(1), dminfo(1M), list_devices(1)NOTES
The functionality described in this man page is available only if the Basic Security Module (BSM) has been enabled. See bsmconv(1M) for
more information.
SunOS 5.10 16 Jan 2001 device_maps(4)