Now, as you can see, this is a lot of data to be passing back and forth over a network.
Is there anything i can do to make the output smaller (zip it on the fly, compress?) and then when the data gets back to my local box, i can unpackage it to its original?
Hi all,
Have used ftp to transfer files from remote host to localhost.
I was wondering how can I ftp into remote hosts.
for example from a unix box, connect to an external server and then ftp that file into mainframe ? I would like to avoid pulling it to unix box and then ftping to mainframe.... (1 Reply)
Hi gurus of unix!!!!, I have a little question. I nedd your helps
The scenarios is the following
I have tree equipment that are installed in different places. I use a carrier to interconnect the equipment.
Some Port's (TCP) need to be open for an application that must be function correctly.
For... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I've been looking for a way to execute a console program (is in windows but by now I accept the linux way) from a linux machine, but this program has to be opened in the remote side. Linux machine acts only as a "signaling" host. My program has to open the camera in the remote side, but only... (7 Replies)
Hello forum:
I am curious about some output that I get using an alias <command> on a remote host and I wondered if someone could point me in the right direction.
Symptoms:
Using "ssh -qi /path/to/key root@som.ipa.ddr.ess mail" (or variation of via alias)
only gives a partial textual... (7 Replies)
I monitor all my servers using Nagios. Now, for Nagios to run certain checks, it has to connect to remote hosts via a certain port. Lets say the port is 8090.
Now, when Nagios connects to a remote host (for an example) via port 8090, and it has to run 6 checks (scripts) on that remote host, i... (2 Replies)
Hi There,
I have a file contaning some 100 servers names one by one the file called redhat_servers.txt
I want to prepare a script where it should give me the host name and kernal version.
I wrote like this,
#!/bin/bash
while read line
do
ssh $line "uname -nr"
done <... (3 Replies)
Am trying to copy a tar file onto a series of remote hosts and untar it at the destination. Need to do this without having to do multiple ssh.
Actions to perform within a single ssh session via shell script
- copy a file
- untar at destination (remote host)
OS : Linux RHEL6 (3 Replies)
Hello all,
i'm trying to create a report by greping a pattern on multiple remote hosts and creta a simple report,
actually i did this, is ther any better way to do this.
#!/bin/bash
for host in `cat RemoteHosts`
do
ssh $host -C 'hostname 2>&1; grep ERROR /var/log/WebServer.log.2019-09-21... (0 Replies)
Hi all,
i'm trying to gether multiple pattern on remote hosts, and trying to print hostname and the pattern,
ssh remoteserver1 -C 'hostname 2>&1;cat /var/log/server1.log | awk -F ";" '"'"'{ print " "$2" "$5}'"'"'| sort | uniq -c | sort -g -r '
The output is the following,
remoteserver1
... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: charli1
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
since
SINCE(1) User Manuals SINCE(1)NAME
since - display content of a file since the last time
SYNOPSIS
since [-aefhlmnqvxz] [-d seconds] [-s file] files
DESCRIPTION
since is a utility designed to monitor log files. since is similar to tail(2) as it also displays information appended to a file. However
since only displays the data which has been added since the last time since was run. If since is run on a particular file for the first
time, then the entire file is displayed.
EXAMPLE
since /var/log/apache/{access,error}_log > /dev/null
lynx --dump http://localhost/ > /dev/null
since /var/log/apache/{access,error}_log
OPTIONS -a Make updates to the since state files atomic. This option configures since to use a temporary file and a rename(2) instead of updat-
ing the state file in situ.
-d seconds
Specify the number of integer seconds to wait between polling files for changes. This option is only relevant in conjunction with
the -f option and if the inotify mechanism is not being used.
-e Print the header lines to standard error instead of standard output.
-f Follow the specified files. This option is analogous to tail -f as the files are also polled for changes until the process is inter-
rupted.
-h Print a terse help message.
-l Relaxed mode. If some data files are inaccessible since will not fail completely.
-m Disable mmap(2), use read(2) instead to access state and data files. Note that for certain smaller io operations read(2) may be
used even if this option has not been given.
-n Do not update the .since file which keeps track of file growth.
-q Make the utility operate more quietly.
-s filename
Specify the state file explicitly. Using this option will also disable the use of fallback state files.
-v Increase the verbosity. This option can be given multiple times.
-x Ignore file arguments which have compressed extensions.
-z Discard output. Similar to redirecting the output to /dev/null, but faster. If used in conjunction with the -f option, only the ini-
tial output will be discarded.
FILES
.since
State file recording the length of the previously displayed files. The location of the file can be set on the command line using
the -s option. If this option is not given, since will check the SINCE environment variable for the location of the state file. If
the SINCE environment variable has not been set since will use the HOME environment variable and store the information in the file
$HOME/.since. If the HOME variable is not set, since will use a getpwuid(3) lookup. If all these fail will use the file /tmp/since.
BUGS
since uses the inode of a file as its key, if that inode is recycled since will get confused. since is not particularly efficient when
storing or looking up the stat(2) information. Functionality equivalent to since can probably be achieved with a number of trivial shell
scripts.
COPYING
since may only be used, distributed and modified in accordance with the terms of the GPL (GNU General Public License) version 3 or newer as
published by the FSF (Free Software Foundation).
SEE ALSO tail(1), stat(2).
Linux JULY 1998 SINCE(1)