01-23-2013
checkout last command.. you can get a hint about whether the reboot was done by someone or was it a crash?
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1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi All,
Since server is located at remote place so how to identify which user rebooted the server. Is there any way to identify the user.
Thanks in advance,
Reg,
Bache Gowda (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bache_gowda
1 Replies
2. Solaris
Hi,
how can i know who has rebooted the server? even last command is not displaying the user, wheather any way to track the user. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: manoj.solaris
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3. HP-UX
Hi ,
Plz some one can help me ...
How can we know that the server was rebooted by which user in hp unix and linux.
Regards
Venkata Jeevan (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jeevanbv
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4. AIX
Is there such location or command to know how many times did you reboot your server in that particular day?in AIX. (3 Replies)
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5. AIX
Hi,
I want to know how to find out which user has rebooted the server? I have used last command but it is not giving username though it is showing below output
reboot --------------- date
Regards,
Manoj (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: manoj.solaris
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6. Linux
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It has... (1 Reply)
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7. Solaris
In Windows we can check the event viewer for entries 6005,6006,6009 to confirm the system down times, as in when it got down and when it came back up. Is there some similar log files in Solaris/RHEL that I can check the timings and who or what caused the system reboot. I am an absolute newbie. Need... (4 Replies)
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I am trying to figure out what might causing Production server unexpectedly reboot during last few months ..
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-bash-2.05b$ uname -a
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9. Red Hat
Hi
One of our server is showing the uptime 0hr 5mints
there is no log in /var/log/messages
there is no log in command "last"
kernel version is 2.4.9 (RH2.1 AS)
What could be the reason for this. is this issue is related to uptime counter reached max
how to verify this.
Best Regards
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10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I have been mounting a directory to share with a windows pc. If i reboot the AIX box the mount goes away. How can i make the mount permanent? Here is the command I use to make the mount
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CRASH(8) BSD System Manager's Manual CRASH(8)
NAME
crash -- examine and debug system images
SYNOPSIS
crash [-M core] [-N kernel]
DESCRIPTION
The crash command is used to examine and debug system images.
If run without any arguments, crash operates on the running system.
The options are as follows:
-M core Operate on the specified crash dump instead of the default /dev/mem. Crash dumps should be from the same version of the system
and same machine architecture as the running version of crash, and must be uncompressed.
-N kernel Extract the name list from the specified kernel instead of the default /dev/ksyms.
The command syntax used by crash is the same as the in-kernel debugger. See the ddb(4) manual page for more information.
Operations and facilities that require a running system, such as breakpoints, are not supported by crash.
crash does not provide pagination. However, by using the pipe symbol, output may be sent to commands available from the shell. For example:
crash> ps | more
crash> ps | grep ioflush
SEE ALSO
ps(1), vmstat(1), ddb(4), pstat(8)
HISTORY
The crash command appeared in NetBSD 6.0.
BSD
March 7, 2009 BSD