Thanks, but not all process is showing up in result.
Is there a way to list with seconds elapsed since a process started, rather than like day-hour:minute:seconds
Should be like below. The above process is running for 1 day, 0 hour, 0 minutes, 0 seconds. So total seconds it has been running is 86400 seconds. So the ps result should show like below.
Ok, so I know there's a way to do this, but I've been trying to find out all afternoon with no luck. I think it should print out something like this:
1 bin
2 daemon
6 duo
Where the numbers on the left are the number of processes being run by the user whose name is listed on the right. Is... (4 Replies)
Hi,
Can any one help me on this.
How to capture the running process for two hours with an interval of 10 sec.
Thanks in andvance
Double post, continued here, thread closed (0 Replies)
Hi Experts,
Please help me in this.
I am trying this code on AIX 5.3.
I need list of jobs that executed in last 4 hours.
I have a schedule on this script - cron executes it and sends mail to me for every 2 hours.
I have a Job time and have around 100 jobs those execute daily.
What all i need... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
new to the forum and new to Unix but I have an issue which is annoying on a new level. I have included a short and full version for anyone needing more information.
Short Version
I am running a set of scripts that work and run fine. one of the scripts arranges the first... (4 Replies)
I have unix epoch time 1441678454803, Can you please help me to print this time in below format ?
DAY,HOUR,MIN,SEC
Appreciate your help!!!
Thanks,
Prince (7 Replies)
Hi,
Is it possible to display processes which have been running for more than a 5hrs using a variation of the ps -ef command?
Regards,
Manny (5 Replies)
HI
can someone help me to check the process running more than 2 hours.
I have the below command which shows the time and process id, however, I only need the processes running more than 2 hours. (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Vinod
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
uuclean
uuclean(8c)uuclean(8c)Name
uuclean - uucp spool directory clean-up
Syntax
uuclean -p[pre] [ options ... ]
Description
The command scans the spool directory for files with the specified prefix and deletes all those which are older than the specified number
of hours.
The -ppre argument causes the command to scan for files with pre as the file prefix. You can specify up to 10 arguments. A without any
pre following causes all files older than the specified time to be deleted. You must specify at least one argument.
Options-ntime Delete all files whose age is more than time, in hours, (default is 72 hours) and that have the specified pre as their file
prefix.
-m Send mail to the owner of the file when it is deleted.
-ssystem Delete files in all directories that are subdirectories of the per system spool directory that exists for system. If ALL is
specified, then all system directories are processed. ALL is the default.
-ddirectory Delete files that reside in the named directory. The default directory is The option over rides the option.
The command typically starts the program. In earlier versions, a deleted work file (C.file) would result in mail to the owner of the work
file, regardless of the option. Now, notification of deleted work files is sent to the user ID "uucp". If the option is used, mail is
also sent to the owner.
Examples
Here are some example command lines:
# uuclean -pLTMP. -pLOG. -n4 -d/usr/spool/uucp
# uuclean -d/usr/spool/uucp/.XQTDIR -p -n
# uuclean -smarkie -p -n84
The third example deletes all files for the system that are older than 84 hours.
Files
Directory with commands used by uuclean internally
See Alsouucp(1c), uux(1c), cron(8)uuclean(8c)