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
dput(1) General Commands Manual dput(1)
NAME
dput - package upload tool for Debian
SYNTAX
dput [options] [host] package.changes ...
DESCRIPTION
This is a tool for uploading Debian packages into the archive. You may specify to which host it should upload the file by passing it an
host argument. If omitted, dput uses the host specified by default_host (or, historically default_host_non-us) configuration option. Also
you have to pass the program one or more name of package.changes files and then they will be sequentially uploaded.
This program will then upload the package for you into the archive, using a selected upload method. Currently dput supports ftp, scp,
rsync, http, https, and local. The method scripts have been split from the main script so it is easy to add new methods. Look in
/usr/share/dput/ for examples.
Should something go wrong with your upload to destinations using the Debian upload queue daemon (e.g. ftp-master), you can remove files
from the upload queue with dcut(1).
OPTIONS
-c, --config - define a config file to use.
-d, --debug - activate debugging mode, helpful if bugs occur.
-D, --dinstall - do a dry run of dinstall after the upload.
-f, --force - force an upload of an already uploaded package.
-h, --help - print help information and exit.
-H, --host-list - print the lists of hosts that dput knows about.
-l, --lintian - run lintian before the upload.
-U, --no-upload-log - do not write a .upload log file after uploading.
-o, --check-only - check only the package and do not upload.
-p, --print - print the configuration that dput is using.
-P, --passive - use passive ftp instead of active. Note that passive ftp is the default unless specified otherwise in the configuration
file.
-s, --simulate - simulate an upload only.
-u, --unchecked - don't check GnuPG signature on the changes file.
-e, --delayed - Upload to a DELAYED queue, rather than the usual Incoming. This takes an argument from 0 to 15. Note that a delay of 0 is
different from no delay at all.
-v, --version - print version information and exit.
-V, --check-version - check if the user has already installed and tested the package before putting it into the archive.
ENVIRONMENT
This program doesn't depend on any environment variables. But if the variable USER is set, it will be used.
LICENSE
This program is distributed under the terms of the GPL.
BUGS
Please send bug reports to the author.
FILES
/etc/dput.cf
global dput configuration file
~/.dput.cf
peruser dput configuration file
SEE ALSO
dput.cf(5)
dcut(1)
/usr/share/doc/dput
/usr/share/dput
AUTHOR
dput was written Christian Kurz. The current maintainer is Thomas Viehmann <tv@beamnet.de>.
Many other people have contributed to this code. See the Thanks file.
COMMENTS
The author does appreciate comments and suggestions from you.
October 5, 2001 dput(1)