Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Which memory test tool is popular on CentOS 6? Post 302915688 by gull04 on Thursday 4th of September 2014 09:24:46 AM
Old 09-04-2014
Hi hce,

To get the most popular tool, you'd have to carry out an in depth survey.

I thought you'd just want one that would do the job.

Regards

Dave
This User Gave Thanks to gull04 For This Post:
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

vmproc tool-virtual memory

Hi All I am new to this wonderful message forum.I have high hopes on all the members in helping me out.I am looking out for a tool on HPUX which does work similarly to vmproc on TRU64.I am providing the information about vmproc just in case you know a tool giving similar results on HPUX do tell... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Shobhit
4 Replies

2. Programming

Tool for finding memory leaks

hi, i am a c++ programmer working on linux(redhat linux8.0) environment, i need to find out the memory leaks, so far i didn't used any tools, so what are the tools are available, and whic one is good to use. plz provide with a small example. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sarwan
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Test automation tool for UNIX ??

I am searching for a automation testing tool which I can use for most of the UNIX platforms (AIX, Linux, HP UX, Solaris). The installation process of the application in all platforms is almost same. Are you aware of any automation tool (like WinRunner for Windows) to solve my problem? (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: unmanju
5 Replies

4. Linux

Memory issues iin CentOS release 5.3 (Final)

New to the forum. I am running CentOS release 5.3 (Final) and have run into a unique situation. I have been able to determine that we have a swap memory leak due to an issue with an asterisk server. This specific issue takes approximately 2-3 months for enough of the swap to to be used before... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: g0neinsane
1 Replies

5. Red Hat

centOS memory leak - MEGABYTES per day

hi i've notice a huge problem on my newly installed centOS server and i have no idea how to solve it and where to start.. memory on server 3 GB and it goes down, down, down.. after reboot it shows 71mb used after a hour its 76mb and after 24h it's around 200 later = more i have NO idea... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: tip78
7 Replies

6. IP Networking

A wireless test tool for linux?

hi all: I want to find a wireless test tool for linux , just linke netstumbler on windows . i find the tool for long time , but i cann't find one. does somebody give a advice. thanks!!! (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: arnold.king
0 Replies

7. Linux

Memory issue on My CentOS 5.8 x64 bit server

Hello, I am using CentOS 5.8 x64 server for our one of internal application which is developed on PHP and Mysql as DB. Currently there are 8-10 instances deployed on this server some of them are rarely used. Below is the H/W specification fort the same :- Procesor :- Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU ... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: sunnysthakur
6 Replies

8. AIX

The good memory debugging tool in AIX ?

Hi, What's the good open-source debugger & memory analyzer for C programs in AIX ? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: SteAlma
4 Replies
cavern(1)						      General Commands Manual							 cavern(1)

NAME
cavern -- process raw survey data SYNOPSIS
cavern [options] survex data file Description Cavern is the Survex data processing engine. If multiple survey data files are listed on the command line, they are processed in order from left to right. Settings are reset to their defaults before processing each file. Options -p, --percentage You can get cavern to display the percentage progress through the current file. As of Survex 0.90 this is disabled by default, but you can enable it if you want. Because the value given is for the current file, the values jump around for a multi-file sur- vey project. Also note that displaying this information slows down processing a little. -o, --output=OUTPUT Sets location for output files. -q, --quiet Only show a brief summary (--quiet --quiet or -qq will display warnings and errors only). -s, --no-auxiliary-files do not create .err file. -w, --warnings-are-errors turn warnings into errors. --log Send screen output to a .log file. Output Cavern reads in text files containing the survey data .svx) and outputs two files, with the extensions .3d and .err. By default these files are put in the current directory, with the same base filename as the first .svx file read, but a different extension. You can change the directory and/or base filename using the --output command line option. E.g. if you process the data file entrance.svx with the command cavern entrance entrance.3d and entrance.err will be created. Cavern also gives a range of statistics at the end of a successful run: o The highest and lowest stations and the height difference between them o The total length of the survey (before and after adjustment). This total excludes survey legs flagged as SURFACE, DUPLICATE, or SPLAY. o The number of stations and legs. Note that a *EQUATE is counted as a leg in this statistic. o The East-West and North-South ranges, and the North-most, South-most, East-most, and West-most stations. o The number of each size of node in the network (where size is number of connections to a station) i.e. a one node is the end of a dead-end traverse, a two-node is a typical station in the middle of a traverse, a three-node is a T-junction etc. o How long the processing took and how much CPU time was used. .3d - data describing the loop-closed centre line This file contains details of the stations and legs, and any flags associated with them. .err - loop closure statistics (%age errors, etc) This file contains statistics about each traverse in the survey which is part of a loop. It includes various statistics for each traverse, such as the percentage error per leg. You should study this information to determine if any parts of the survey are of lower quality or contain gross errors. Error Messages There are a number of error messages that you may get when processing data. Most of these are self explanatory, and will be caused by such problems as typing mistakes, or by your survey data not being attached to fixed points (in this situation, Survex will list some of the stations that are not connected). Along with the error message, the filename and line number of the offending line will be printed (or the filename for errors such as `file not found'). The format of the filename and line number is that used by gcc, so if your editor can parse errors from gcc, you should be able to set it to allow you to jump to the file and line of each error. Cavern will stop after more than 50 errors. This usually indicates something like the incorrect data order being specified. Deluging the user with error messages makes the actual problem less clear. See Also 3dtopos(1), aven(1), cad3d(1), diffpos(1), extend(1), sorterr(1), svxedit(1) cavern(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:32 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy