04-08-2019
The system currently needs about 3.5 GB virtual memory. Disabling swap in /etcfstab and rebooting with 2GB will work, but will not allow the applications to run like before. It depends on the applications what exactly happens.
Of course adding 2GB RAM is the best solution! Then you won't need the swapfiles. (While with zero swap I don't trust the kernel to handle all memory pressure situations well.)
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all
I currently use the following in shell.
#!/bin/sh
while read LINE
do
perl -i -ne "$/ = ''; print if !m'Using archive: ${LINE}'ms;" "datafile"
done < "listfile"
NOTE the single quote delimiters in the expression. It's highly likely the 'LINE' may very well have characters in it... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Festus Hagen
3 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have a control file which looks like this
LOAD DATA
INFILE '/array/data/data_Finished_T5_col_change/home/oracle/emp.dat'
PRESERVE BLANKS
INTO TABLE SCOTT.EMP
FIELDS TERMINATED BY '|' OPTIONALLY ENCLOSED BY '"' TRAILING NULLCOLS
(.................
..................)
How can i edit the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mwrg
1 Replies
3. Solaris
I know how to check if any file has a unix process using a file by looking at 'lsof <fullpath/filename>' command.
I think using lsof is very expensive. Also to make it accurate we need to inlcude fullpath of the file.
Is there another command that can tell if a file has a truely active... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: kchinnam
12 Replies
4. Homework & Coursework Questions
1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data:
When looking for corefiles, include any file with core in its name. (Some UNIX/Linux systems add the PID of the process that created the core to reduce the chances of overwriting an already existing core file that might be needed. The... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: s3270226
6 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have two files
File1
====
1|2000-00-00|2010-02-02||
2| 00:00:00|2012-02-24||
3|2000-00-00|2011-02-02||
File2
====
2000-00-00
00:00:00
I want the delete the patterns which are found in file 2 from file 1,
Expected output:
File1
==== (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: machomaddy
5 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Need unix commands to delete records from one file if the same record present in another file...
just like join ... if the record present in both files.. delete from first file or delete the particular record and write the unmatched records to new file..
tried with grep and while... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: msathees
6 Replies
7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi All,
I need to delete the oldest file in folder when the file count in the folder exceed 6 ( i have a process that puts the source files into this folder )
E.x : Folder : /data/opt/backup
01/01/2012 a.txt
01/02/2012 b.txt
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: akshay01987
1 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all
i want to write program with shell script that able compare two file content and if one of lines of file have # at the first of string or nothing find same string in one of two file . remove the line in second file that have not the string in first file. for example:
file... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: saleh67
2 Replies
9. Red Hat
ENVIROMENT
Linux: Fedora Core release 1 (Yarrow)
iPlanet: iPlanet-WebServer-Enterprise/6.0SP1
Log Path: /usr/iplanet/servers/https-company/logs
I have iPlanet log rotation enabled rotating files on a daily basis.
The rotated logs are NOT compressed & are taking up too much space.
I... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: zachs
7 Replies
10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
hi,
I need a help. I used this command to list all the log files which are for more than 10 days to a text file.
find /usr/script_test -type f -mtime +10>>/usr/ftprm.txt
I want all these files listed in the ftprm.txt to be ftp in another machine and then rm the files.
Anyone can help me... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: kamaldev
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
pdebuild-user-mode-linux
pdebuild-user-mode-linux(1) pbuilder pdebuild-user-mode-linux(1)
NAME
pdebuild-user-mode-linux - pbuilder-user-mode-linux way of doing debuild
SYNOPSIS
pdebuild-user-mode-linux [pdebuild-user-mode-linux options] -- [pbuilder-user-mode-linux options]
DESCRIPTION
A convenience program for pbuilder-user-mode-linux which invokes pbuilder after obtaining appropriate root privilege in a Debian source
directory. One must be inside the source tree containing the debian directory, in order to make it work.
PDEBUILD OPTIONS
--buildsourceroot [fakeroot]
The command used to gain root privilege for invoking dpkg-buildpackage
--auto-debsign
Invoke debsign at the end of pdebuild process.
--debsign-k [key-id]
Pass -k option to debsign to specify which keyid to sign.
--buildresult [Directory for build results]
The place which build result is stored.
--configfile [Extra config file to use]
The configuration file is used, but not passed on to pbuilder-user-mode-linux.
--debbuildopts [options to pass to dpkg-buildpackage]
The space-delimited list of options are passed to dpkg-buildpackage. This option appends to pbuilder option --debbuildopts and may
also be used to reset the list of options by passing the empty string.
--use-pdebuild-internal
Uses a different implementation of pdebuild, which calls clean and build inside the chroot, using bind-mounts.
pdebuild-internal tries to run debian/rules clean inside the chroot. To achieve the goal, the working directory is passed on inside
the chroot, in the form of bind-mounting and debuild is run.
This option will not protect the working directory and its parent directories from the build scripts.
-- [pbuilder options]
After the -- symbol, an arbitrary number of pbuilder options can be specified. See pbuilder-user-mode-linux.1 for full list of
options.
There is an exception that --buildresult needs to be specified as pdebuild option before the -- to be effective.
FILES
/etc/pbuilderrc
The configuration file for pbuilder-user-mode-linux, used in pdebuild-user-mode-linux.
/usr/share/pbuilder/pbuilderrc
The default configuration file for pbuilder-user-mode-linux, used in pdebuild-user-mode-linux.
${HOME}/.pbuilderrc
Configuration file for pbuilder-user-mode-linux, used in pdebuild-user-mode-linux, overrides what is written in /etc/pbuilderrc
AUTHOR
Initial coding, and main maintenance is done by Junichi Uekawa <dancer@debian.org>.
The homepage is available at http://pbuilder.alioth.debian.org
SEE ALSO
/usr/share/doc/pbuilder/pbuilder-doc.html, pbuilder-user-mode-linux(1), pbuilderrc(5), pbuilder-uml.conf(5)
Debian 2006 May 24 pdebuild-user-mode-linux(1)