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Full Discussion: What does this mean?
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting What does this mean? Post 302866177 by Corona688 on Monday 21st of October 2013 12:13:43 PM
Old 10-21-2013
Quote:
Originally Posted by manands07
Well it can be anything . .
I have written three scripts by now and after successful execution of each script, there's a message as shown before.
Only the field values are changing . .

Like,
5.85u 4.679s 0:16.78 105.2% 1+6k 7+8io 5pf+7w

I want to know the significance of each field . .

Thanks for reply Smilie
I'm guessing -- only guessing, mind you -- that something in your scripts is using the shell's time builtin. This can change a lot across different systems but I recognize some parts of it:

It's telling you how much time something spent running as User(5.85 seconds), as System (4.679 seconds), and a total of 16.78 seconds (so must have spent some seconds just sitting waiting for I/O).

Try time sleep 10 in your shell.

The rest I'm not sure of. I'm not even sure what the "something" was since you refuse to post your script. What's your system? uname -a if you don't know.
This User Gave Thanks to Corona688 For This Post:
 
SLEEPENH(1)						      General Commands Manual						       SLEEPENH(1)

NAME
sleepenh - an enhanced sleep program. SYNOPSIS
sleepenh [initial-time] sleep-time DESCRIPTION
sleepenh is a program that can be used when there is a need to execute some functions periodically in a shell script. It was not designed to be accurate for a single sleep, but to be accurate in a sequence of consecutive sleeps. After a successful execution, it returns to stdout the timestamp it finished running, that can be used as initial-time to a successive exe- cution of sleepenh. OPTIONS
There are no command line options. Run it without any option to get a brief help and version. ARGUMENTS
sleep-time is a real number in seconds, with microseconds resolution (1 minute, 20 seconds and 123456 microseconds would be 80.123456). initial-time is a real number in seconds, with microseconds resolution. This number is system dependent. In GNU/Linux systems, it is the number of seconds since midnight 1970-01-01 GMT. Do not try to get a good value of initial-time. Use the value supplied by a previous exe- cution of sleepenh. If you don't specify initial-time, it is assumed the current-time. EXIT STATUS
An exit status greater or equal to 10 means failure. Known exit status: 0 Success. 1 Success. There was no need to sleep. (means that initial-time + sleep-time was greater than current-time). 10 Failure. Missing command line arguments. 11 Failure. Did not receive SIGALRM. 12 Failure. Argument is not a number. 13 Failure. System error, could not get current time. USAGE EXAMPLE
Suppose you need to send the char 'A' to the serial port ttyS0 every 4 seconds. This will do that: #!/bin/sh TIMESTAMP=`sleepenh 0` while true; do # send the byte to ttyS0 echo -n "A" > /dev/ttyS0; # just print a nice message on screen echo -n "I sent 'A' to ttyS0, time now is "; sleepenh 0; # wait the required time TIMESTAMP=`sleepenh $TIMESTAMP 4.0`; done HINT
This program can be used to get the current time. Just execute: sleepenh 0 BUGS
It is not accurate for a single sleep. Short sleep-times will also not be accurate. SEE ALSO
date(1), sleep(1). AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Pedro Zorzenon Neto. 2008/04/20 SLEEPENH(1)
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