Netra X1 LOM: Unable to change any variable via the "set" command
I'm posting here as it didn't seem quite right in the hardware section (as it's LOM commands). My apologies if I have that wrong though
I've finally gotten round to configuring the LOM on my Netra X1, but I can't get it to change the hostname via the "set" command:
Ok, that's not right, so I go to change it:
Same problem setting anything else (the ultimate plan is to set up the IP address for it).
The manual just says "set <variable> <value>" and all should be good...
What on earth is going on here?!?!?
i am using perl in win2000advanced server...
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perl -version:
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This is perl, v5.6.1 built for MSWin32-x86-multi-thread
(with 1 registered patch, see perl -V for more detail)
Copyright 1987-2001, Larry Wall
Binary build 638 provided by... (1 Reply)
Hi,
Please clarify what is the difference between "env" and "set" command.
I guess set will display the system variables and user defined variables.
Thanks
Sweta (1 Reply)
Hi,
i am working in C in Fedora Eclipse 3.3.0 with gdb debugger. I am geting segmentation fault with an error message "mi_cmd_var_create: unable to create variable object" on debugging the program.
What should I do to solve this problem?
rgds,
Dona_m (14 Replies)
p="-e"
echo $p
It is not returning the value "-e" stored. Instead returns null.
I am wondering how could this happen. Please help me out.I tried all possibilities like p='-e' | p="\-e". Nothing seems to work.
:confused::confused: (10 Replies)
Hi
I have a "set" command which ends with a "." (dot), for example:
set `grep "\<${pnum}\>" /tstmp/data.txt |sed 's/#//'` .
Can somebody help me to understand the purpose of this "set" and "." combination?
The problem is that this command does not produce the same result when run on AIX... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have line in input file as below:
3G_CENTRAL;INDONESIA_(M)_TELKOMSEL;SPECIAL_WORLD_GRP_7_FA_2_TELKOMSEL
My expected output for line in the file must be :
"1-Radon1-cMOC_deg"|"LDIndex"|"3G_CENTRAL|INDONESIA_(M)_TELKOMSEL"|LAST|"SPECIAL_WORLD_GRP_7_FA_2_TELKOMSEL"
Can someone... (7 Replies)
I have a bunch of random character lines like ABCEDFG. I want to find all lines with "A" and then change any "E" to "X" in the same line. ALL lines with "A" will have an "X" somewhere in it. I have tried sed awk and vi editor. I get close, not quite there. I know someone has already solved this... (10 Replies)
Hi Guys,
I have a variable such that:
set x = (Session,Date,Type,Receive Coil Name,Manufacturer,Manufacturer's Model Name)
foreach i ($x)
echo $i
end
I would like to read each variable one by one like:
Session
Date
Type
Receive Coil Name
Manufacturer
Manufacturer's Model Name
Is... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I need to get the version of python installed and store it in a variable for later use. Whereas it is printing on the console instead of storing to variable. I am able to store output of ls command in a variable. Please check the below code :
root@myhost:/volumes/srini# cat... (4 Replies)
How to use "mailx" command to do e-mail reading the input file containing email address, where column 1 has name and column 2 containing “To” e-mail address
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Sample input file, email.txt
Below is an sample code where... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: asjaiswal
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
cook_rsh
cook_rsh(1) General Commands Manual cook_rsh(1)NAME
cook - load balancing rsh
SYNOPSIS
cook [ option... ] architecture command [ argument... ]
cook -Help
DESCRIPTION
The cook program is a wrapper around rsh(1) which does simple load balancing. It obtains its load information by running the rup(1)
command, and selects the most suitable host hased on the architecture you specify, and the least load of all hosts of that architecture.
The first command line argument is the architecture name which is used to get the list of possible hosts. From that list the rup(1)
command is run to determine the host with the lowest load, which is in turn used as the first argument of the eventual rsh(1) command.
COOKBOOKS
In order to make use of this program, somewhere in your cookbook, you need to add a line which reads
parallel_rsh = "cook";
If the host chosen is the same as the caller (build host) then this program just exec the command skipping the rsh. So it costs nothing
to use this in a one machine network!
For each recipe you want distributed to a remote host, you need to add a host-binding attribute to. Typical usage is where you have a
muti-architecture build.
%1/%0%.o: %0%.c
host-binding %1 {
cc -o [target] -c [resolve %0%.c]; }
In the recipe given here, each architecture has its object files placed into a separate architecture-specific directory tree. The
architecture name (%1) is used in the host-binding, so that the compiles may be load-balanced to all machines of that architecture.
If you need a command to run on a specific host (say, because that's where a specific application license resides), then simply use the
host name in the host-binding attribute, rather than an architecture name.
DEFINING THE CLASSES
The /host_lists.pl file is expected to exist, and to contain variable definitions used to determine if hosts are members of particular
architectures.
The /host_lists.pl file defines a perl HOL "hash of lists" The hash is %ArchNames and it maps names of architectures as user want to see
them, to list references as the actual lists are stored.
The names of each architecture could be any form you wish but the convention is to use the GNUish names such as "sparc-sun-solaris2.8".
For each architecture, define one or more lists of machines according to what function each machine set may do. This can be as simple or
as elaborate as required. The form of the list variable name can be any valid perl identifier but may as well be like the architecture
name with dash changed to underbar and dot removed, and the type added. For example one might define solaris hosts as:
@sparc_sun_solaris28_hosts = (
"mickey", "minny", "scrooge" );
And linux hosts as:
@i386_linux22_hosts = (
"goofy", "scrooge" );
If there is a need to define different sets of machines for different types of jobs then add a suffix to the names in the host-binding
directive on each of the recipes, and lists here with the same suffix.
The hash to map argument names to lists is defined like:
%ArchNames = (
"sparc-solaris2.8", => @sparc_solaris28_hosts,
"i586-unknown-linux22", => @i386_linux22_hosts, );
Of course if users have differing opinions as to what the architecture names should look like, you can define "alias" mappings as well.
"sun4-SunOS-5.8", => @sparc_solaris28_hosts,
Or maybe the level is of no importance, then define
"sparc-solaris", => @sparc_solaris28_hosts,
"sparc-solaris2.7", => @sparc_solaris28_hosts,
Also, this list isn't allowed to be empty.
And finally, curtesy of Perl, the last line of the file must read
1; for obscure and magical reasons.
SYSLOG LOGGING
Typical commands seen during a build would look like
sh -c 'cd /aegis/dd/gumby2.2.C079 && sh -ce /aegis/dd/gumby2.2.C079/.6.1; echo $? > /aegis/dd/gumby2.2.C079/.6.2'
So we can extract the project/ change from the command quite easily and logging it via syslog would be a trivial addition.
OPTIONS
This command is not usually given any options.
-h Help - show usage info
-vP Verbose - report choice
-Tn Trace value for testing
FILES
/exclude.hosts
This file is used to list those host which must not be used by this script. Simply list excuded hosts, one hostname per line. If
the file is absent, all hosts reported by rup(1) may be used.
/host_lists.pl
This file defines the classes of hosts for each architecture.
AUTHOR
Jerry Pendergraft <jerry@endocardial.com>
Reference Manual Cook cook_rsh(1)