Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers How to Understand file writing in Progress in UNIX? Post 302945912 by RudiC on Thursday 4th of June 2015 04:22:58 PM
Old 06-04-2015
Does a writer process keep fileA open or does its inode need to remain constant? If not, why don't you just mv the file?
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

writing database tables into a file in unix

I want to collect the database tables(Ex: Emp,Sal,Bonus...etc) in a file & give this file at the command prompt, when prompted for the tables list at command prompt. How can i do that ? Ex:- Import jason/jason1 tables=emp,sal,bonus log=j1.log i want to change this into Ex:- Import... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: dreams5617
3 Replies

2. UNIX and Linux Applications

UNIX memory problems w/Progress DB

We are currently running HP-UX 11 as our database server. The database is Progress version 9.1C. As of late, some of our batch processes that run on the UNIX db server are erroring out because of what appear to be memory issues(at least according to Progress). The db error messages indicate... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: eddiej
0 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

don't understand the unix script

if {"$my_ext_type" = MAIN]; then cd $v_sc_dir Filex.SH $v_so_dir\/$v_fr_file Can somebody tell me what does this suggest. I am pretty new to unix and I am getting confused. What i understood from here is If we have a file extension name as MAIN which we have then we change the directory to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pochaman
1 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Progress Bar in Perl for UNIX

Hi Programmers, I just wrote a small script to print the percent complete. This maybe useful for someone! #!/usr/local/bin/perl # Total from which percentage will be calculated $cnt = 16; $|=1; for($i=0;$i<$cnt;$i++) { # Calculate Percentage $percent = ($i/$cnt)*100; (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: hifake
13 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

trying to understand rationale of unix stream i/o concept

I am an entry level programmer with no formal training in computer science. I am trying to enhance my conceptual knowledge about operating systems in general. I have been using the C programming language on Linux systems for some time and have used the traditional unix stream I/O APIs. The... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kaychau
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Understand a old unix shell script

Hi All, I have a unix old script i but i am not able to understand the few commands in it and what it does. below is the script. if ; then for F in $(find $DIR/. ! -name . -prune -name "DP_*.dat") do IN=${F##/*/} OUT='ORD'$(echo $IN | cut -c7-) exec.ksh $IN... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kam786sim
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

i writing a unix script but i want to out put a file and append on it.

i have an existing script that is used to send an e-mail containing the alrams that appear on the server. But i need to create a daily log file containing all the alarms that was send that day. i tired to add at the and of the script a command, echo command but for some reason the file was... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ashraf_victory
1 Replies

8. Red Hat

How to Understand the UNIX Time Format?

How to understand the unix time format as here i have pasted this is a unix time 1402565420 and its 3:00 PM here but its give this Output as long number How can i make it to understand format as i have 3:00 PM Normal time format <----3:00PM = 1402565420----> Unix Time Will Any one Explain to... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: babinlonston
4 Replies

9. Programming

Writing a UNIX shell script to call a C function and redirecting data to a .txt file

Hi, I am complete new to C programming and shell scripting. I just wrote a simple C code to calculate integral using trapezoid rule. I am prompting user to pass me No. of equally spaced points , N , upper and lower limit. My code looks as follows so far: #include<stdio.h> #include<string.h>... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: bjhjh
2 Replies
rwlock(3C)						   Standard C Library Functions 						rwlock(3C)

NAME
rwlock, rwlock_init, rwlock_destroy, rw_rdlock, rw_wrlock, rw_tryrdlock, rw_trywrlock, rw_unlock - multiple readers, single writer locks SYNOPSIS
cc -mt [ flag... ] file...[ library... ] #include <synch.h> int rwlock_init(rwlock_t *rwlp, int type, void * arg); int rwlock_destroy(rwlock_t *rwlp); int rw_rdlock(rwlock_t *rwlp); int rw_wrlock(rwlock_t *rwlp); int rw_unlock(rwlock_t *rwlp); int rw_tryrdlock(rwlock_t *rwlp); int rw_trywrlock(rwlock_t *rwlp); DESCRIPTION
Many threads can have simultaneous read-only access to data, while only one thread can have write access at any given time. Multiple read access with single write access is controlled by locks, which are generally used to protect data that is frequently searched. Readers/writer locks can synchronize threads in this process and other processes if they are allocated in writable memory and shared among cooperating processes (see mmap(2)), and are initialized for this purpose. Additionally, readers/writer locks must be initialized prior to use. rwlock_init() The readers/writer lock pointed to by rwlp is initial- ized by rwlock_init(). A readers/writer lock is capable of having several types of behavior, which is specified by type. arg is currently not used, although a future type may define new behavior parameters by way of arg. type may be one of the following: USYNC_PROCESS The readers/writer lock can synchronize threads in this process and other processes. The readers/writer lock should be initialized by only one process. arg is ignored. A readers/writer lock initialized with this type, must be allo- cated in memory shared between processses, i.e. either in Sys V shared memory (see shmop(2)) or in memory mapped to a file (see mmap(2)). It is illegal to initialize the object this way and to not allocate it in such shared memory. USYNC_THREAD The readers/writer lock can synchronize threads in this process, only. arg is ignored. Additionally, readers/writer locks can be initialized by allocation in zeroed memory. A type of USYNC_THREAD is assumed in this case. Multiple threads must not simultaneously initialize the same readers/writer lock. And a readers/writer lock must not be re-initialized while in use by other threads. The following are default readers/writer lock initialization (intra-process): rwlock_t rwlp; rwlock_init(&rwlp, NULL, NULL); OR rwlock_init(&rwlp, USYNC_THREAD, NULL); OR rwlock_t rwlp = DEFAULTRWLOCK; The following is a customized readers/writer lock initialization (inter-process): rwlock_init(&rwlp, USYNC_PROCESS, NULL); Any state associated with the readers/writer lock pointed to by rwlp are destroyed by rwlock_destroy() and the readers/writer lock storage space is not released. rw_rdlock() gets a read lock on the readers/writer lock pointed to by rwlp. If the readers/writer lock is currently locked for writing, the calling thread blocks until the write lock is freed. Multiple threads may simultaneously hold a read lock on a readers/writer lock. rw_tryrdlock() trys to get a read lock on the readers/writer lock pointed to by rwlp. If the readers/writer lock is locked for writing, it returns an error; otherwise, the read lock is acquired. rw_wrlock() gets a write lock on the readers/writer lock pointed to by rwlp. If the readers/writer lock is currently locked for reading or writing, the calling thread blocks until all the read and write locks are freed. At any given time, only one thread may have a write lock on a readers/writer lock. rw_trywrlock() trys to get a write lock on the readers/writer lock pointed to by rwlp. If the readers/writer lock is currently locked for reading or writing, it returns an error. rw_unlock() unlocks a readers/writer lock pointed to by rwlp, if the readers/writer lock is locked and the calling thread holds the lock for either reading or writing. One of the other threads that is waiting for the readers/writer lock to be freed will be unblocked, pro- vided there is other waiting threads. If the calling thread does not hold the lock for either reading or writing, no error status is returned, and the program's behavior is unknown. RETURN VALUES
If successful, these functions return 0. Otherwise, a non-zero value is returned to indicate the error. ERRORS
The rwlock_init() function will fail if: EINVAL type is invalid. The rw_tryrdlock() or rw_trywrlock() functions will fail if: EBUSY The reader or writer lock pointed to by rwlp was already locked. These functions may fail if: EFAULT rwlp or arg points to an illegal address. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |MT-Level |MT-Safe | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
mmap(2), attributes(5) NOTES
These interfaces also available by way of: #include <thread.h> If multiple threads are waiting for a readers/writer lock, the acquisition order is random by default. However, some implementations may bias acquisition order to avoid depriving writers. The current implementation favors writers over readers. SunOS 5.10 14 May 1998 rwlock(3C)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:56 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy