11-05-2015
So, do you sign on as the root account and run a command, is that right? If so, you can craft a simple start-up script in to do this for you.
Please can you confirm if this is what you do/need and the version of HP-UX or Linux you are using. It is not clear if you somehow have an HP-UX guest under a Linux hypervisor or if this is just an HP tool running on a flavour of Linux.
Thanks, in advance,
Robin
This User Gave Thanks to rbatte1 For This Post:
7 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hello,
i have changed a slow server with Solaris 7 to a bigger one with
Solaris 8 (Sun Ultra 2). Now i have a real bad performance
problem (only CPU).
Solaris 7 ran with standard FTP and Samba 2.0.7.
The new machine is running ProFTP and Samba 2.0.9.
There are a lot of NFS Shares and... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: olso
5 Replies
2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi,
1-in vmstat commande line, in reply, which column is the more important to look and verify if server is very slow ?
2-how can I see how many sessions are opened with the same login ?
Many thanks before. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: big123456
2 Replies
3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi,
I have this on a AIX UNIX machine :
ps aux| head -20
USER PID %CPU %MEM SZ RSS TTY STAT STIME TIME COMMAND
root 516 23.7 0.0 12 15808 - A 19:38:15 903:13 wait
root 774 23.7 0.0 12 15808 - A 19:38:15 902:13 wait
root 1290 23.6 0.0 ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: big123456
2 Replies
4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
i want to determine I/O performance of an
executable,
but iostat dont give correct results because
the disk that i am writing to and reading from,
are not physical disk of the host machine,
instead of these local disks we are using
a network storage.
is there any standard way in unix to get... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: gfhgfnhhn
2 Replies
5. News, Links, Events and Announcements
About 4 years ago I wrote this tool inspired by Rob Urban's collect tool for DEC's Tru64 Unix. What makes this tool as different as collect was in its day is its ability to run at a low overhead and collect tons of stuff. I've expanded the general concept and even include data not available in... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: MarkSeger
0 Replies
6. Solaris
Hi all,
I have two storadge 3510 Fc .. with 12 disks 146Gb ..total 1752Gb each storadge. I need to use about 1.4 Tb of it. and want RAID1 ..
I need 13 mount points ..
So question:
for best performance and redundjancy how I must do it.
create 13 logical drives on each stordge with same size... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: samar
1 Replies
7. Solaris
Can somebody kindly help me to determine which one i should choose to better manipulate OS volume.
RAID manager or veritas volume manager?
Any critical differences between those two?
Thanks in advance. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: beginningDBA
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENDARWIN
autofs
AUTOFS(8) System Manager's Manual AUTOFS(8)
NAME
/etc/init.d/autofs - Control Script for automounter
SYNOPSIS
/etc/init.d/autofs start|stop|restart|reload|status
DESCRIPTION
autofs control the operation of the automount(8) daemons running on the Linux system. Usually autofs is invoked at system boot time with
the start parameter and at shutdown time with the stop parameter. The autofs script can also manually be invoked by the system administra-
tor to shut down, restart or reload the automounters.
OPERATION
autofs will consult a configuration file /etc/auto.master (see auto.master(5)) by default to find mount points on the system. For each of
those mount points automount(8) will mount and start a thread, with the appropriate parameters, to manage the mount point.
/etc/init.d/autofs reload will check the current auto.master map against running daemons. It will kill those daemons whose entries have
changed and then start daemons for new or changed entries.
If a map is modified then the change will become effective immediately. If the auto.master map is modified then the autofs script must be
rerun to activate the changes.
/etc/init.d/autofs status will display the status of, automount(8), running or not.
SEE ALSO
automount(8), autofs(5), auto.master(5). autofs_ldap_auth.conf(5)
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Christoph Lameter <chris@waterf.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system. Edited by H. Peter Anvin
<hpa@transmeta.com>.
9 Sep 1997 AUTOFS(8)