03-27-2015
I have refined my script, comments are now excluded from the search.
9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi!
We are having problems with our unix servers (SunOS 5.9) that services for some of our applications are continuously going down. (this is more due to the applications installed than the UNIX OS).
What I am looking for is some kind of administrative tool where I can set what service to scan... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: erinor
1 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
We have lost our Sys Admin and with the DST changes.. i need to make sure all services are re-started on a SUN server running SUNOS 5.9
How can i list what is running and make sure they are running after the DST patches are applied? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: JanSP
2 Replies
3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello all happy people! :)
Iam trying to figure out how to disable running services, and witch i can disable. Iam running ssh,apache,ftp and identd.
Here is an output from nmap:
21/tcp open ftp Solaris ftpd
22/tcp open ssh SunSSH 1.1 (protocol 2.0)
23/tcp ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: empty
2 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
I am trying to fetch failed process but while doing that unable to do so. like;
(1)ps -ef | grep snmpCollect
o/p is coming like -
root 12423 4393 1 19:44:06 pts/0 0:00 grep snmpCollect
(2)ps -ef | grep sttps
o/p-
root 15517 4393 0 19:53:24 pts/0 0:00 grep sttps... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: kumarabhi84
6 Replies
5. Programming
Hi,
I need to write a code which will fetch all the application activity on user computers including app name, time of day, duration, version, etc.
Using this I need to know which applications are running currently in user's computers.
How can it be done programmatically? I need to write the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: arunarora
1 Replies
6. SuSE
Hi Dear Guys:
I want to get a list of running services. Is there any command having this functionality? (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: crest.boy
3 Replies
7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I did search on the subject on services in linux and they do explain how to find what are the services that loaded when the linux boot.
however I have not find how to detect what services run right now.
I would like to now that and how to kill services.
Thanks. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: programAngel
3 Replies
8. HP-UX
Hi,
I am trying to list down list of running services, corresponding package name and status on HP-UX box. The output will be a CSV in a fashion:- Service Name, Package Name, Status.
While working on Linux centos, I used chkconfig to do the same. Below was the snippet:-
for i in `chkconfig... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Happy83
3 Replies
9. SuSE
Hi,
We have a ldap server configured with services (port) and want to know how to fetch that to the ldap clients:
# cat /etc/nsswitch.conf|grep -i services
services: files sss (neither sss nor ldap works)
by doing "#getent services" I am getting only the result from /etc/services but I... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Sridaran
1 Replies
CG(1) CG(1)
NAME
cg - Recursively grep for a pattern and store it.
SYNOPSIS
cg [ -l ] | [ [ -i ] pattern [ files ] ]
DESCRIPTION
cg does a search though text files (usually source code) recursively for a pattern, storing matches and displaying the output in a human-
readable fashion. It is intended to give some of the functionaly of AT&T's cscope(1) tool, with the advantages of simplicity and not being
language-specific. The script will colorize output if configured as such.
It is typically run with a Perl regular expression to search for. The search can be made case insensitive by using the -i option. A list
of files may also be specified with an additional argument after the pattern. Put the files pattern in quotes to make it be matched by
Perl rather than by the shell. Running the script with no arguments will recall the results of the previous search. After the search,
entries found can be edited using the vg(1) script. The -l option shows the last log made.
SOME EXAMPLES
cg - alone recalls the previous search results.
cg -i pattern - search the default list of files for all files matching the pattern (and case-insensitively).
cg pattern '*.c' - search recursively for pattern in all *.c files. This automatically converts '*' to '.*' and '.' to '.' for you and
does a Perl pattern match on all files in the tree.
cg pattern *.c - search through the shell-expanded list of *.c files, so not done recursively (in other words, only the files your shell
pass to the script as arguments).
cg -l - show the last log made.
COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS
-i Do a case-insensitive search.
-l Show the last log made.
-p Toggle the default pager option. cg has a bulit-in pager function, which can be enabled or disabled by default (in .cgvgrc). If the
default is enabled, this option disables the pager; if the default is disabled, this option enables it.
-P Force the built-in pager to be disabled.
FILES
${HOME}/.cglast
Log file of the last search.
${HOME}/.cgvgrc
Per-user configuration file (if the defaults are not desireable).
${HOME}/.cgvg/*
Log files in $HOSTNAME.shell_pid form with the log of the last search.
SEE ALSO
vg(1), perl(1), find(1), grep(1), cscope(1)
AUTHOR
cg was written by Joshua Uziel <uzi@uzix.org>.
13 Mar 2002 CG(1)