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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Changing system-wide for umask Post 302854135 by Corona688 on Monday 16th of September 2013 07:05:10 PM
Old 09-16-2013
That depends on where it was set in the first place, investigate the contents of your /etc/profile
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KGMON(8)						      System Manager's Manual							  KGMON(8)

NAME
kgmon - generate a dump of the operating system's profile buffers SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/kgmon [ -b ] [ -h ] [ -r ] [ -p ] [ system ] [ memory ] DESCRIPTION
Kgmon is a tool used when profiling the operating system. When no arguments are supplied, kgmon indicates the state of operating system profiling as running, off, or not configured. (see config(8)) If the -p flag is specified, kgmon extracts profile data from the operating system and produces a gmon.out file suitable for later analysis by gprof(1). The following options may be specified: -b Resume the collection of profile data. -h Stop the collection of profile data. -p Dump the contents of the profile buffers into a gmon.out file. -r Reset all the profile buffers. If the -p flag is also specified, the gmon.out file is generated before the buffers are reset. If neither -b nor -h is specified, the state of profiling collection remains unchanged. For example, if the -p flag is specified and pro- file data is being collected, profiling will be momentarily suspended, the operating system profile buffers will be dumped, and profiling will be immediately resumed. FILES
/vmunix - the default system /dev/kmem - the default memory SEE ALSO
gprof(1), config(8) DIAGNOSTICS
Users with only read permission on /dev/kmem cannot change the state of profiling collection. They can get a gmon.out file with the warn- ing that the data may be inconsistent if profiling is in progress. 4.2 Berkeley Distribution November 17, 1996 KGMON(8)
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