Hi peeps,
We are having around 60 users.
The time set to retrieve the mail is 300 sec.
But it's taking around 1 hour to deliver mails.
I am using debian sarge 3.1.
any clues?
And how it will affect if I decrease the time?
My machine has got 1 p4 3.0 GHZ processor and 1 GB ram.
The home... (2 Replies)
I'm having a bit of a login performance issue.. wondering if anyone has any ideas where I might look.
Here's the scenario...
Linux Red Hat ES 4 update 5
regardless of where I login from (ssh or on the text console) after providing the password the system seems to pause for between 30... (4 Replies)
I'm new from UNIX scripting. Please help.
I have about 10,000 files from the $ROOTDIR/scp/inbox/string1 directory to compare with the 50 files from /$ROOTDIR/output/tma/pnt/bad/string1/ directory and it takes about 2 hours plus to complete the for loop. Is there a better way to re-write the... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have here a script which is used to purge older files/directories based on defined purge period. The script consists of 45 find commands, where each command will need to traverse through more than a million directories. Therefore a single find command executes around 22-25 mins... (7 Replies)
grep -f taking long time to compare for big files, any alternate for fast check
I am using grep -f file1 file2 to check - to ckeck dups/common rows prsents. But my files contains file1 contains 5gb and file 2 contains 50 mb and its taking such a long time to compare the files.
Do we have any... (10 Replies)
Hi ,
We have 20 jobs are scheduled.
In that one of our job is taking long time ,it's not completing.
If we are not terminating it's running infinity time actually the job completion time is 5 minutes.
The job is deleting some records from the table and two insert statements and one select... (7 Replies)
Dear All,
OS = Solaris 5.10
Hardware Sun Fire T2000 with 1 Ghz quode core
We have oracle application 11i with 10g database. When ever i am trying to take cold backup of database with 55GB size its taking long time to finish. As the application is down nobody is using the server at all... (8 Replies)
Hi Gurus,
I have some weird issue. when using
ls -l
the result shows different time format:
-rw-r--r-- 1 abc gourp1 3032605576 Jun 14 2013 abc
-rw-rw-r-- 1 abc gourp1 1689948832 Aug 10 06:22 abc
one display 2013 which is year; another one displays 06:22 which is time.
... (4 Replies)
I have so many (hundreds of thousands) files and directories within this one specific directory that my "rm -rf" command to delete them has been taking forever.
I did this via the SSH, my question is: if my SSH connection times out before rm -rf finishes, will it continue to delete all of those... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: phpchick
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
autofs.conf
AUTOFS.CONF(5) BSD File Formats Manual AUTOFS.CONF(5)NAME
autofs.conf --automount(8) and automountd(8) configuration file
DESCRIPTION
The autofs.conf file specifies various configuration options for automount(8) and automountd(8).
autofs.conf consists of a series of lines, each of which may contain a line that sets a parameter, a comment, or a blank line.
A line that sets a parameter has the format:
parameter=value
A ``#'' is the comment character, and all characters from it to the end of line are ignored.
The parameters that are supported are:
AUTOMOUNT_TIMEOUT
The number of seconds after which an automounted file system will be unmounted if it hasn't been referred to within that period
of time. The default is 10 minutes (600 seconds). This is equivalent to the -t option in automount(8).
AUTOMOUNT_VERBOSE
TRUE or FALSE; if TRUE, automount(8) will print more detailed information about the actions it takes. This is equivalent to
the -v option to automount(8).
AUTOMOUNTD_VERBOSE
TRUE or FALSE; if TRUE, automountd(8) will log to syslogd(8) more detailed information about the actions it takes. This is
equivalent to the -v option to automountd(8).
AUTOMOUNTD_NOBROWSE
TRUE or FALSE; if TRUE, automountd(8) will disable browsing of all maps. This is equivalent to the -n option to automountd(8).
AUTOMOUNTD_TRACE
The trace level for logging information about requests received by automountd(8) from autofs, processing done for those
requests, and replies sent to autofs. The default level of 0 causes no information to be logged; each higher value causes more
information to be logged. This controls the same trace level that the -T option to automountd(8) controls. The trace is
logged to /var/log/system.log
AUTOMOUNTD_MNTOPTS
A string containing a comma-separated list of mount options that will be applied, by default, to all mounts done by
automountd(8). The options for a particular mount can override these options. This controls the same options that the -o
option to automountd(8)
AUTOMOUNTD_NOSUID
TRUE or FALSE; if TRUE, automountd(8) will force all mounts to have the "nosuid" mount option set.
AUTOMOUNTD_ENV
A string of the form
name=value
that causes the environment variable name to be set to the value value in automountd(8). Environment variables can be referred
to in map entries; the value of the environment variable is substituted for the reference to the variable. This is equivalent
to the -D option to automountd(8).
FILES
/etc/autofs.conf This file.
SEE ALSO auto_master(5), automount(8), automountd(8)Darwin March 27, 2007 Darwin