04-01-2014
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hello, everyone:
i encounter a problem these days , pls help me ,thanks in advance.
my env:
machine: ES40 A ES40 B
os: true64 Unix 4.0f
note: src.tar 8M network card speed 100M
my problem:
... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: q30
3 Replies
2. AIX
Hi,
I am trying to send oracle archives over WAN and it is taking hell a lot of time. To reduce the time, I tried to gzip the files and send over to the other side. That seems to reduce the time. Does anybody have experienced this kind of problem and any possible ways to reduce the time.
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: giribt
1 Replies
3. Solaris
At work, I'm in a Solaris environment working with csh, and $PATH is populated with anywhere between 10 and 20 entries.
Last week, every command I issued (even "ls") took several seconds, if not an entire minute, to run. Once I moved "/home/sybase/bin" to the end of $PATH, certain commands... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: acheong87
2 Replies
4. Red Hat
hey guys,
We have two Sun x2100 servers running RHEL5 in a test environment. Both servers are fresh OS installs and hooked up to the same network switch.
When ssh'ing to one server, there is a significant delay, while ssh'ing to the other server, the connection is almost instant. We are... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: amheck
2 Replies
5. BSD
hi
howto restart the network with a wireless interface including wpa_supplicant on freeBSD 7.2 without reboot? (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ccc
3 Replies
6. AIX
Hi All,
Please let me know the command to restart the network interface and enable it on boot in AIX, similar to /etc/init.d/network restart in Redhat.
Thanks,
Sunil.K
please watch out to post in the right subforum! (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: sunilrk07
9 Replies
7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi Guys,
I've inherited a mess of an infrastructure in my new job, there hasn't been a sys admin in post for about a year, so things are falling apart. The first thing to break after I started was the printer server. I have it working again, and people can print, however it's very slow, slower... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: rudigarude
0 Replies
8. Solaris
I have identical M5000 machines that are needing to transfer very large amounts of data between them. These are fully loaded machines, and I've already checked IO, memory usage, etc... I get poor network performance even when the machines are idle or copying via loopback. The 10 GB NICs are... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: christr
7 Replies
9. AIX
Hello everyone,
I've been a life long Unix/Linux user but I'll be the first to admit I have little specific AIX knowledge at this point and I've inherited these systems for better or worse so please forgive if I ask something in the wrong context. And yes, I've searched google for 3 days now :)... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: BDMcGrew
3 Replies
10. Debian
Hello,
I would like to do follow steps.
Set a static IP-Adress on eth0 (For Testing)
Set DHCP on eth0
All steps should be done without a single reboot.
/etc/network/interfaces
iface eth0 inet static
address 192.0.2.7/24
gateway 192.0.2.254How do i perform... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: int3g3r
3 Replies
UP2DATE(8) Red Hat, Inc. UP2DATE(8)
NAME
rhnsd - a program for quering the Red Hat Network for updates and information
SYNOPSIS
rhnsd [OPTION]...
DESCRIPTION
rhnsd is a daemon process that runs in the background and periodically polls the Red Hat Network to see if there are any queued actions
available. If any are queued, it runs them.
rhnsd is typically started from the init scripts in /etc/init.d/rhnsd when it's time to poll the Red Hat Network servers for available
updates and actions. The default interval is every 120 minutes. The minimum polling interval is 60 minutes.
To check for updates, rhnsd runs an external program called rhn_check. This is a small application that actually makes the network connec-
tion to Red Hat Networks.
The rhnsd daemon does not listen on any network ports, nor does it ever talk to the network directly. Any network activity is done via the
rhn_check utility.
rhnsd can be configure by editing the /etc/sysconfig/rhn/rhnsd config file. This is actually the configuration file the rhnsd init script
/etc/init.d/rhnsd uses.
-i, --interval
Specify the interval that rhnsd should wait between checking the Red Hat Network. Default is 120 minutes, the minimum is 60 minutes.
This can also be specified in /etc/sysconfig/rhn/rhnsd
-v, --verbose
output more information about what rhnsd is doing.
-f, --foreground
force the rhnds process to run in the foreground instead of automatically backgrounding itself, as it does by default.
FILES
/etc/sysconfig/rhn/rhnsd
Configuration settings for the rhnsd daemons init script.
/usr/sbin/rhn_check
The external program launched by rhnsd to connect to the Red Hat Network and retrieve any actions that have queued up.
/etc/sysconfig/rhn/systemid
A certification that authenticates the client machine to the Red Hat Network. Generated via the up2date or rhnreg_ks utility.
SEE ALSO
The rhnsd daemon is tightly coupled with Red Hat Network. Visit <http://www.redhat.com/network> for access or to sign up.
rhn_check(8), up2date(8), up2date-config(8),
AUTHORS
Written by Preston Brown <pbrown@redhat.com> and
Cristian Gafton <gafton@redhat.com>
REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs to <http://bugzilla.redhat.com>.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 1999, 2000 Red Hat, Inc.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICU-
LAR PURPOSE.
4th Berkeley Distribution Fri Feb 9 2001 UP2DATE(8)