Hello Guru,
I am using a Pro*C program to prepare some reports
usaually the report file size is greater than 1GB.
But nowadays program is very slow.
I found out the program is taking much time to write data to file .....
is there any unix related reason to be slow down, the file writting... (2 Replies)
Hi I am trying to do the following:
run a command that looks at a binary file and formats it
find the first line that has what I am looking for (there will be multiple)
print the name of the file that has it
So I am running this but ti's not working
ls -ltr *20080612* | while read line... (3 Replies)
Hi
I want to split a file that has 'n' number of records into 16 small files.
Can some one suggest me how to do this using Unix script?
Thanks
rrkk (10 Replies)
I got the following info from this forum, in regards to configuring my
Solaris x86 to link to the Net:
# echo 192.168.0.1 > /etc/defaultrouter
# route add default 192.168.0.1
# echo nameserver 192.168.0.1 >> /etc/resolv.conf
# cp /etc/nsswitch.dns /etc/nsswitch.conf
So I did... (1 Reply)
Hi, I facing an NFS problem. I have machine1, which has diskA and diskB, and machine2, both are Mandriva 2009 Linux.
When I am on machine2 and NFS mount both diskA and diskB of machine1. Writing to diskA is very fast, but writing to diskB is very slow. I tried different mount rsize and wsize... (2 Replies)
Hi guys,
I am trying something. I wrote a simple shell program to test something where continuous while loop writes on a file over the nfs. The time taken to write "hello" 3000 times take about 10 sec which is not right. Ideally it should take fraction of seconds. If I write on the local disk, it... (1 Reply)
there are few nas shares that would be mounted on the local zone. should i add an entry into the add an entry in zone.xml file so that it gets mounted automatically when the zone gets rebooted? or whats the correct way to get it mounted automatically when the zone reboots (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am facing chgrp issue for a directory on a NAS mounted partation.
issue details :
user1 belongs to two groups grp1(primary) and grp2(secondary) not able to change directory group to secondary.
WORKING on /tmp
#mkdir /tmp/a
#ls -ld /tmp/a
drwxr-xr-x 2 user1 grp1 117 Mar 24... (7 Replies)
Dear friends,
I have been facing an issue with one of my red hat unix machine, suddenly lost to switch sudo users. My all colleagues lost to switch to access sudo users.
Then, we have realized its related to NAS issue which does not allowing to write the file. because of this we got so many... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Chand
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
radwho
RADWHO(1) FreeRADIUS Daemon RADWHO(1)NAME
radwho - show online users
SYNOPSIS
radwho [-c] [-d raddb_directory] [-f] [-i] [-n] [-N nas_ip_address] [-p] [-P nas_port] [-r] [-R] [-s] [-S] [-u user] [-U user] [-Z]
DESCRIPTION
The FreeRADIUS server can be configured to maintain an active session database in a file called radutmp. This utility shows the content of
that session database.
OPTIONS -c Shows caller ID (if available) instead of the full name.
-d raddb_directory
The directory that contains the RADIUS configuration files. Defaults to /etc/raddb.
-f Behave as the 'fingerd' daemon - waits for one line of input, then prints the output with lines
terminated.
-i Shows the session ID instead of the full name.
-n Normally radwho looks up the username in the systems password file, and shows the full username as well. The -n flags prevents this.
-N nas_ip_address
Show only those entries which match the given NAS IP address.
-p Adds an extra column for the port type - I for ISDN, A for Analog.
-P nas_port
Show only those entries which match the given NAS port.
-r Outputs all data in raw format - no headers, no formatting, fields are comma-separated.
-R Output all data in RADIUS attribute format. All fields are printed.
-s Show full name.
-S Hide shell users. Doesn't show the entries for users that do not have a SLIP or PPP session.
-u user
Show only those entries which match the given username (case insensitive).
-U user
Show only those entries which match the given username (case sensitive).
-Z When combined with -R, prints out the contents of an Accounting-Request packet which can be passed to radclient, in order to "zap"
that users session from radutmp.
For example,
$ radwho -ZRN 10.0.0.1 | radclient -f - radius.example.net acct testing123
will result in all an Accounting-Request packet being sent to the RADIUS server, which tells the server that the NAS rebooted. i.e. It
"zaps" all of the users on that NAS.
To "zap" one user, specifiy NAS, username, and NAS port:
$ radwho -ZRN 10.0.0.1 -u user -P 10 | radclient -f - radius.example.net acct testing123
Other combinations are also possible.
SEE ALSO radiusd(8), radclient(1), radiusd.conf(5).
AUTHOR
Miquel van Smoorenburg, miquels@cistron.nl.
7 April 2005 RADWHO(1)