10-28-2012
The default time zone is defined in the /etc/default/init (or /etc/TIMEZONE which is a link to it). Each Solaris zone can then have its own default timezone.
Actually, every user and actually every process can set its own timezone too using the TZ variable.
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Hi All ,
I try to install some packages in my global zone...
On the execution of the installion of the script it quits by saying the error
"Non global zone check failed"
Kindly help me in this regard
Thanks in advance,
jeganr (7 Replies)
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2. Solaris
Hi Guys,
My requirement is I have file called /opt/orahome/.profile in non global zone.
PATH=/usr/bin:/usr/ucb:/etc:/usr/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/openwin/bin:.
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Hi Greetings...
I have an issue in connecting the zone from outside the network and it is because of default gateway. I can ping default gateway from inside the zone and not able to ping from global zone due to different VLAN issue. If i add two different gateways and restart network services,... (2 Replies)
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So this is Solaris 11.1. I have a Global zone that has several non-global zones running in it. I want to change the capped-memory.physical resources setting in ALL the zone configs of the running zones.
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5. Solaris
HI Community,
how can i configure audit logs for global zones and standard zone. i have enabled and started auditd service and it went to maintenance mode. please help me to configure that
Thanks & Regards,
BEn (9 Replies)
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6. Solaris
Hi,
If I change date and time in global zone, then it will affect in non global zones.
During this process what files will get affect in non global zones and which mechanism it's using to change.
gloabl zone:Solaris 11.3 X86
TIA (1 Reply)
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Hi, hoping someone can help, its been a while since I used Solaris.
After creating a NGZ (non global zone), the NGZ can access the GZ (Global Zone) and the GZ can access the NGZ (using ssh, zlogin)
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Hope that everyone is doing well today. Happy Friday.
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CTIME(2) System Calls Manual CTIME(2)
NAME
ctime, localtime, gmtime, asctime, timezone - convert date and time to ASCII
SYNOPSIS
#include <u.h>
#include <libc.h>
char* ctime(long clock)
Tm* localtime(long clock)
Tm* gmtime(long clock)
char* asctime(Tm *tm)
/env/timezone
DESCRIPTION
Ctime converts a time clock such as returned by time(2) into ASCII (sic) and returns a pointer to a 30-byte string in the following form.
All the fields have constant width.
Wed Aug 5 01:07:47 EST 1973
Localtime and gmtime return pointers to structures containing the broken-down time. Localtime corrects for the time zone and possible day-
light savings time; gmtime converts directly to GMT. Asctime converts a broken-down time to ASCII and returns a pointer to a 30-byte
string.
typedef
struct {
int sec; /* seconds (range 0..59) */
int min; /* minutes (0..59) */
int hour; /* hours (0..23) */
int mday; /* day of the month (1..31) */
int mon; /* month of the year (0..11) */
int year; /* year A.D. - 1900 */
int wday; /* day of week (0..6, Sunday = 0) */
int yday; /* day of year (0..365) */
char zone[4]; /* time zone name */
} Tm;
When local time is first requested, the program consults the timezone environment variable to determine the time zone and converts accord-
ingly. (This variable is set at system boot time by init(8).) The timezone variable contains the normal time zone name and its difference
from GMT in seconds followed by an alternate (daylight) time zone name and its difference followed by a newline. The remainder is a list
of pairs of times (seconds past the start of 1970, in the first time zone) when the alternate time zone applies. For example:
EST -18000 EDT -14400
9943200 25664400 41392800 57718800 ...
Greenwich Mean Time is represented by
GMT 0
SOURCE
/sys/src/libc/9sys
SEE ALSO
date(1), time(2), init(8)
BUGS
The return values point to static data whose content is overwritten by each call.
Daylight Savings Time is ``normal'' in the Southern hemisphere.
These routines are not equipped to handle non-ASCII text, and are provincial anyway.
CTIME(2)