All,
I am using SOLARIS 7. I have formated my hard drive to consist of only 150MB of swap space. This isn't enough considering I am running Oracle. How do I create additional swap space?
Please list sources or commands.
PS mkswap doesn't work on my machine. ( I have swap and... (5 Replies)
Hi,
this is solaris 10 on sparc sf280r, 2 disks mirrored using SVM,
swap is 4GB (slice 1) and rest all is given for / (slice0) in 36G disk.
I have already mirrored disks using SVM, for clear picture, I'm pasting some part of config below,
# Slice 0
metainit -f d110 1 1 c1t0d0s0... (2 Replies)
Could someone please explain how you know how much swap space you have on your system. See below:
# swap -s
total: 8225048k bytes allocated + 4863488k reserved = 13088536k used, 4008032k available
# swap -l
swapfile dev swaplo blocks free
/dev/dsk/c3t0d0s1 32,25 16... (2 Replies)
Hi,
i have done a blunder here, i increased the swap space on Xen5.6 server machine using below steps :-
1056 dd if=/dev/zero of=/root/myswapfile bs=1M count=1024
1057 ls -l /root/myswapfile
1058 chmod 600 /root/myswapfile
1059 mkswap /root/myswapfile
1060 swapon /root/myswapfile
... (1 Reply)
CENT OS 5.8 server running with a huge java application which uses up all my ram (4GB) and requires excess of atleast 2GB.But the swap is not getting used up((8GB) of swap space left unused) leading a wierd error and stopping application to stop working.
Any one here dealt with the same kind of... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: shiek.kaleem
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
join
JOIN(1) General Commands Manual JOIN(1)NAME
join - relational database operator
SYNOPSIS
join [ options ] file1 file2
DESCRIPTION
Join forms, on the standard output, a join of the two relations specified by the lines of file1 and file2. If file1 is `-', the standard
input is used.
File1 and file2 must be sorted in increasing ASCII collating sequence on the fields on which they are to be joined, normally the first in
each line.
There is one line in the output for each pair of lines in file1 and file2 that have identical join fields. The output line normally con-
sists of the common field, then the rest of the line from file1, then the rest of the line from file2.
Fields are normally separated by blank, tab or newline. In this case, multiple separators count as one, and leading separators are dis-
carded.
These options are recognized:
-an In addition to the normal output, produce a line for each unpairable line in file n, where n is 1 or 2.
-e s Replace empty output fields by string s.
-jn m Join on the mth field of file n. If n is missing, use the mth field in each file.
-o list
Each output line comprises the fields specified in list, each element of which has the form n.m, where n is a file number and m is a
field number.
-tc Use character c as a separator (tab character). Every appearance of c in a line is significant.
SEE ALSO sort(1), comm(1), awk(1)BUGS
With default field separation, the collating sequence is that of sort -b; with -t, the sequence is that of a plain sort.
The conventions of join, sort, comm, uniq, look and awk(1) are wildly incongruous.
7th Edition April 29, 1985 JOIN(1)