What permissions did you set on /var/tmp when you restored it ? Speaking from my own experience on Linux and Solaris systems (and from some quick Googlings, this should apparently also be the case in recent releases of HP-UX) this is a directory that needs to have the sticky bit set, as well as being globally writeable.
In other words, it should have permissions that look like this:
If it doesn't have permissions of 1777, then this could be the cause of your problems. Can you confirm what permissions you set on it when you re-created it ?
Hi,
Help ! - I have a process which I cannot find that is writing to /var/tmp every 10 minutes and filling up my partition, it is also filling up my wtmpx file. I have some software error correction for a faulty DIMM at the moment - is this likely to be causing this as well as over-loading my... (3 Replies)
Hello,
does anyone have a script that can check the contents of the /tmp directory and for example e-mail the directory content if anything other than session files are present?
Maybe there are better ways to monitor suspicous /tmp and /var/tmp activity, if so I'm listening :) (1 Reply)
I'm getting an error when trying to vi my .profile. This is the first time I've logged onto this machine and apparently its rarely logged into. I'm assuming from the error that it's a permissions problem in the /var/tmp directory. Can anyone assist?
$ uname -a
AIX machine 1 5 000D96BF4C00
$... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I have some threaded applications. Design of the application is such that one thread will decode some data and put it in data structure, And main thread will wait for another child threads pick up the decoded data. The data will be large decoded files.
Once decoded data is picked by... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
Can I delete the above file? It's big, about 1G. It's on a redhat ent 4 with ldap on it.
Is that safe to delete? It wasn't been used for already a month and it's in the backup storage.
Thanks for any comment you may add. (1 Reply)
this is the situation:
Power outage. Root mirror (svm).
it goes to single-user-mode, asking for fsck.
Fsck suceeds for one disk, but fail for the other.
I can't use vi-editor, it says /var/tmp/Xz12a is a read-only file system.
I need to break the mirror, there's no copy of... (2 Replies)
Can anyone help me with this error?
sudo yum install perl-Gtk2-WebKit
Loaded plugins: langpacks, presto, refresh-packagekit, versionlock
Setting up Install Process
Resolving Dependencies
--> Running transaction check
---> Package perl-Gtk2-WebKit.i686 0:0.09-1.fc15 will be installed
-->... (0 Replies)
Dear All,
I have a file which I want to get the list of frequency of each word, ignoring list of stop words and now I have problems which punctuations and " 's ".
what I am doing is:
sed 's///g' file01.txt > file01-clear.txt
cat file01-clear.txt | tr "" ""| tr ' ' '\012' |sort |uniq -c... (3 Replies)
i try to find way to make string concatenation in csh ( sorry this is what i have )
so i found out i can't do :
set string_buff = ""
foreach line("`cat $source_dir/$f`")
$string_buff = string_buff $line
end
how can i do string concatenation? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: umen
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
cron
CRON(8) System Manager's Manual CRON(8)NAME
cron - daemon to execute scheduled commands (Vixie Cron)
SYNOPSIS
cron
DESCRIPTION
Cron should be started from /etc/rc or /etc/rc.local. It will return immediately, so you don't need to start it with '&'.
Cron searches /var/spool/cron for crontab files which are named after accounts in /etc/passwd; crontabs found are loaded into memory. Cron
also searches for /etc/crontab and the files in the /etc/cron.d/ directory, which are in a different format (see crontab(5)). Cron then
wakes up every minute, examining all stored crontabs, checking each command to see if it should be run in the current minute. When execut-
ing commands, any output is mailed to the owner of the crontab (or to the user named in the MAILTO environment variable in the crontab, if
such exists).
Additionally, cron checks each minute to see if its spool directory's modtime (or the modtime on /etc/crontab) has changed, and if it has,
cron will then examine the modtime on all crontabs and reload those which have changed. Thus cron need not be restarted whenever a crontab
file is modified. Note that the Crontab(1) command updates the modtime of the spool directory whenever it changes a crontab.
SEE ALSO crontab(1), crontab(5)AUTHOR
Paul Vixie <paul@vix.com>
4th Berkeley Distribution 20 December 1993 CRON(8)