Sponsored Content
Operating Systems AIX Time taking for cfgmgr on dual VIO Post 302838295 by blackrageous on Monday 29th of July 2013 10:57:37 AM
Old 07-29-2013
/usr/lib/methods is just a directory path...what methods are slow, do
Code:
cfgmgr -v

 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Truss taking time in stopping

Hi Experts, I am starting my unix servers with truss cmd and taking truss output in a file . But when I run it for considerabely long time, it is not stopping easily on doing ^C ..... It is taking lotz of ctrl-C's to stop. Please let me know is there any other way to stop truss except ^C and... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: aarora_98
1 Replies

2. AIX

Dual port NIC, cfgmgr

OS: AIX 6.1 The host has a dual port NIC installed and when I went to run `cfgmgr -v` to configure it I got an error showing device packages are missing from the install: `cfgmgr -v` on 10.15.xx.xxx cfgmgr: 0514-621 WARNING: The following device packages are required for device support but... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: b1f30
3 Replies

3. Red Hat

login process taking a long time

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)
Discussion started by: retlaw
4 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Job is taking long time

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)
Discussion started by: ajaykumarkona
7 Replies

5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

command taking lot of time to execute

Hi, I am running the following command, and it tries to delete some dn from ldap, however, it takes lot of time before it finally request LDAP server to delete it. I am trying to find why it is taking lot of time. Could you anyone help me in this regard. I have copies the pstack output, and... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: john_prince
3 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

SED taking too much time

Hi I am trying to remove some characters from my data file. The data file has huge number of records say 90000 records. I am using sed for this purpose. eg : cat FILENAME|sed 's/;//g' (to remove semi colon ';') However as the data file is too huge , it is taking too much time to give... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: dashing201
3 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Taking one input at a time

Legends, Please help me to come out of the below Bermuda triangle. I have four inputs in a shell script: A B C D Now, If A is passed by user then, B C D will be ignored. If C is passed by user, then A B D will be ignored. Regards, Sandy (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: sdosanjh
11 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

ls is taking long time to list

Hi, All the data are kept on Netapp using NFS. some directories are so fast when doing ls but few of them are slow. After doing few times, it becomes fast. Then again after few minutes, it becomes slow again. Can you advise what's going on? This one directory I am very interested is giving... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: samnyc
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Script taking more time in CRONTAB

Hello All, I have created a shell script, When i run it manually as ./<script_name> it takes 5 hours to run, but when i am scheduling it in crontab, it is taking 20 hours to run. Please help me and advice, what can be done to reduce the time in crontab. Thank you (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: anand2308
6 Replies
Tree::Simple::Visitor::CreateDirectoryTree(3pm) 	User Contributed Perl Documentation	   Tree::Simple::Visitor::CreateDirectoryTree(3pm)

NAME
Tree::Simple::Visitor::CreateDirectoryTree - A Visitor for create a set of directories and files from a Tree::Simple object SYNOPSIS
use Tree::Simple::Visitor::CreateDirectoryTree; # create a Tree::Simple object which # represents a directory heirarchy my $tree = Tree::Simple->new("www/") ->addChildren( Tree::Simple->new("conf/") ->addChildren( Tree::Simple->new("startup.pl"), Tree::Simple->new("httpd.conf") ), Tree::Simple->new("cgi-bin/"), Tree::Simple->new("ht_docs/"), Tree::Simple->new("logs/") ->addChildren( Tree::Simple->new("error.log"), Tree::Simple->new("access.log") ), ); # create an instance of our visitor my $visitor = Tree::Simple::Visitor::CreateDirectoryTree->new(); # pass the visitor to a Tree::Simple object $tree->accept($visitor); # the www/ directory now mirrors the structure of the tree DESCRIPTION
This visitor can be used to create a set of directories and files from a Tree::Simple object hierarchy. METHODS
new There are no arguments to the constructor the object will be in its default state. You can use the "setNodeFilter", "setFileHandler" and "setDirectoryHandler" methods to customize its behavior. setNodeFilter ($filter_function) This method accepts a CODE reference as its $filter_function argument and throws an exception if it is not a code reference. This code reference is used to filter the tree nodes as they are used to create the directory tree, it can be basically used as a node pre- processor. An example usage of this might be to enforce the 8.3 naming rules of DOS, or the 32 character limit of older macintoshes. setFileHandler ($file_handler) This method accepts a CODE reference as its $file_handler argument and throws an exception if it is not a CODE reference. This method can be used to create custom file creation behavior. The default behavior is to just create the file and nothing else, but by using this method it is possible to implement some other custom behavior, such as creating a file based on a template. The function is passed the full path of the file to be created (as built by File::Spec). setDirectoryHandler ($dir_handler) This method accepts a CODE reference as its $dir_handler argument and throws an exception if it is not a CODE reference. This method can be used to create custom directory creation behavior. The default behavior is to just create the directory and nothing else, but by using this method it is possible to implement some other custom behavior, such as creating a directory on a remote server. The function is passed the full path of the directory to be created (as built by File::Spec). visit ($tree) This is the method that is used by Tree::Simple's "accept" method. It can also be used on its own, it requires the $tree argument to be a Tree::Simple object (or derived from a Tree::Simple object), and will throw and exception otherwise. The tree is processed as follows: Any node which is not a leaf is considered a directory. Obviously since files themselves are leaf nodes, this makes sense that non-leaves will be directories. Any node (including leaf nodes) which ends in either the character "/" or "" is considered a directory. I think it is a pretty standard convention to have directory names ending in a separator. The separator itself is stripped off before the directory name is passed to File::Spec where the platform specific directory path is created. This means that it does not matter which one you use, it will be completely cross platform (at least as cross-platform as File::Spec is). All other nodes are considered to be files. BUGS
None that I am aware of. Of course, if you find a bug, let me know, and I will be sure to fix it. CODE COVERAGE
See the CODE COVERAGE section in Tree::Simple::VisitorFactory for more inforamtion. SEE ALSO
These Visitor classes are all subclasses of Tree::Simple::Visitor, which can be found in the Tree::Simple module, you should refer to that module for more information. AUTHOR
stevan little, <stevan@iinteractive.com> COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2004, 2005 by Infinity Interactive, Inc. <http://www.iinteractive.com> This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.10.1 2010-02-18 Tree::Simple::Visitor::CreateDirectoryTree(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:14 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy