As a UNIX newbie, how can I create a (cron)script that rotates my syslogs on AIX 4.3.3 on a 24 hour basis and compresses the old logs ?
TIA ! (1 Reply)
(I will not duplicate my post that I create in 'Programming' ( My post ), but the issue also (after C ) is related to Sun Solaris.)
I need to find the warning-codes to be used in the
#pragma warn..
C-code directives to suppress some compilation warnings.
More desciptive explanation you... (2 Replies)
I am not able to find warn-codes that should be used in
#pragma warn -<code>
directive!:wall:
Could anybody advise where I can see a list of warnings with codes that (as I understand) should be 3-letters code?
I have a pro-C program that produces some warnings.
(Do not advise,... (4 Replies)
hi guys
I have suse 11 sp1 and I have a lot of warn file filling / these are under /var/log
there's this big one
-rw-r----- 1 root root 3.9G Feb 1 10:28 warn
warn: ASCII text
and the others that are about 2.5 to 3MB - they are about 130 warn-*.bz2
-rw-r----- 1 root root 3.9G Feb... (2 Replies)
Hi all
I have a newly installed Oracle X2-4 server running Solaris 10 x86 with the latest patches.
I have one non-global zone configured running an Oracle DB instance.
After configuring IPMP failover between two NICs on the server and rebooting I am seeing the /var/adm/messages being flooded... (7 Replies)
(Apologies for any typos.)
OSX 10.12.3 AND Windows 10.
This is for the serious Python experts on at least 3.5.x and above...
In script format sys.stdout.write() AND sys.stderr.write() seems to work correctly.
Have I found a serious bug in the interactive sys.stdout.write() AND... (2 Replies)
I'm running CentOS 6.8 and use bash. I would like a warning to appear to the user who runs the command "service httpd restart"
E.g.
# service httpd restart
are you sure y/n
n
#
(or if y, the command executes).
I looked into it a little but am not sure of the best approach. Aliases I ... (1 Reply)
I'm running CentOS 6.8 and use bash. I would like a warning to appear to the user who runs the command "service httpd restart"
E.g.
# service httpd restart
are you sure y/n
n
#
(or if y, the command executes).
I looked into it a little but am not sure of the best approach. Aliases I... (2 Replies)
When I tried to configure GNU make, I received:...
WARNING: Your system has neither waitpid() nor wait3().
Without one of these, signal handling is unreliable
You should be aware that running GNU make with -j
could result in erratic behavior.
...
What is that supposed to mean ? my spec:
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: abdulbadii
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
warnings
warnings(3pm) Perl Programmers Reference Guide warnings(3pm)NAME
warnings - Perl pragma to control optional warnings
SYNOPSIS
use warnings;
no warnings;
use warnings "all";
no warnings "all";
use warnings::register;
if (warnings::enabled()) {
warnings::warn("some warning");
}
if (warnings::enabled("void")) {
warnings::warn("void", "some warning");
}
if (warnings::enabled($object)) {
warnings::warn($object, "some warning");
}
warnings::warnif("some warning");
warnings::warnif("void", "some warning");
warnings::warnif($object, "some warning");
DESCRIPTION
The "warnings" pragma is a replacement for the command line flag "-w", but the pragma is limited to the enclosing block, while the flag is
global. See perllexwarn for more information and the list of built-in warning categories.
If no import list is supplied, all possible warnings are either enabled or disabled.
A number of functions are provided to assist module authors.
use warnings::register
Creates a new warnings category with the same name as the package where the call to the pragma is used.
warnings::enabled()
Use the warnings category with the same name as the current package.
Return TRUE if that warnings category is enabled in the calling module. Otherwise returns FALSE.
warnings::enabled($category)
Return TRUE if the warnings category, $category, is enabled in the calling module. Otherwise returns FALSE.
warnings::enabled($object)
Use the name of the class for the object reference, $object, as the warnings category.
Return TRUE if that warnings category is enabled in the first scope where the object is used. Otherwise returns FALSE.
warnings::fatal_enabled()
Return TRUE if the warnings category with the same name as the current package has been set to FATAL in the calling module. Otherwise
returns FALSE.
warnings::fatal_enabled($category)
Return TRUE if the warnings category $category has been set to FATAL in the calling module. Otherwise returns FALSE.
warnings::fatal_enabled($object)
Use the name of the class for the object reference, $object, as the warnings category.
Return TRUE if that warnings category has been set to FATAL in the first scope where the object is used. Otherwise returns FALSE.
warnings::warn($message)
Print $message to STDERR.
Use the warnings category with the same name as the current package.
If that warnings category has been set to "FATAL" in the calling module then die. Otherwise return.
warnings::warn($category, $message)
Print $message to STDERR.
If the warnings category, $category, has been set to "FATAL" in the calling module then die. Otherwise return.
warnings::warn($object, $message)
Print $message to STDERR.
Use the name of the class for the object reference, $object, as the warnings category.
If that warnings category has been set to "FATAL" in the scope where $object is first used then die. Otherwise return.
warnings::warnif($message)
Equivalent to:
if (warnings::enabled())
{ warnings::warn($message) }
warnings::warnif($category, $message)
Equivalent to:
if (warnings::enabled($category))
{ warnings::warn($category, $message) }
warnings::warnif($object, $message)
Equivalent to:
if (warnings::enabled($object))
{ warnings::warn($object, $message) }
warnings::register_categories(@names)
This registers warning categories for the given names and is primarily for use by the warnings::register pragma, for which see
perllexwarn.
See "Pragmatic Modules" in perlmodlib and perllexwarn.
perl v5.16.2 2012-10-25 warnings(3pm)