SunOS5.8 is a radical departure from SunOs4.X in many ways. one of the important differences is the handling of devices. Adding devices under SunOS4.x required a kernel reconfiguration, recompliation and reboot. Under SunOS5.X, this has changed with the ability to add some drivers on the fly.... (1 Reply)
One cool thing about unix is that it predicts disk blocks that you may need and tries to have them in core before you need them. Over the years, various unix vendors tried various algorithms to improve performance. HP has patented their latest algorithm...
Multi-threaded Read Ahead Prediction... (0 Replies)
I would like to search a router config file for "ip address $ip", once found, I want to grab the line just before that contains "interface $interfacetype"
basically saying, 10.3.127.9 is assigned to "Loopback1" given the below as an example.
interface Loopback1
ip address 10.3.127.9... (1 Reply)
Hi Guys,
I wonder if after enabling CIO/DIO at the filesystem level and assuming that CIO/DIO will bypass the JFS2 read ahead available when not using CIO/DIO my questionis what parameters I can play with to tune/improve the CIO in order to obtain similar performance for sequential reads (... (7 Replies)
:confused:
Good Day,
I have this script that gets the archive names and the time it applies based on the alert log. The application of archives are of daily basis and usually many so having this script helps my job become easier.
My problem is that when i get all the time stamps and... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I am trying to write a ksh to compare the time in a date
date
Thu Jul 1 09:01:24 PDT 2010
when I try to get hour
date | awk '{print $4}' | cut -f1 -d:
08
how I can trim the 0 ahead of 08 to make it 8?
please help~ (7 Replies)
Time on unix server shows 8:00a CST
Time on Windows 7 Box shows 8:00a CST
However when you access an NFS share the time stamp on the files show an hour ahead? Talking about a newly created file shows an hour ahead so at 8:00a the file will show a time stamp of 9:00a CST
the problem it... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Paul Standley
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
wiki-toolkit-revert-to-date
WIKI-TOOLKIT-REVERT-TO-DATE(1p) User Contributed Perl Documentation WIKI-TOOLKIT-REVERT-TO-DATE(1p)NAME
wiki-toolkit-revert-to-date - Revert the state of a Wiki::Toolkit instance to an earlier point in time.
SYNOPSIS
# Removes any changes made to a Wiki::Toolkit instance since a given date
# (and optionally time), restoring it to the state at that point.
wiki-toolkit-revert-to-date --type postgres
--name mywiki
--user wiki
--pass wiki
--host 'db.example.com'
--port 1234
--date 2007-01-05
--time 11:23:21
DESCRIPTION
Takes three mandatory arguments:
type
The database type. Should be one of 'postgres', 'mysql' and 'sqlite'.
name
The database name.
date
The date to revert the state back to, in the format YYYY-MM-DD
five optional arguments:
time
The time (on the specified date) to revert the state back to, in the format hh:mm:ss. If not specified, will use midnight.
user
The user that connects to the database. It must have permission to create and drop tables in the database.
pass
The user's database password.
host
The hostname of the machine the database server is running on (omit for local databases).
port
The port number that the database server is expecting connections to.
AUTHOR
Nick Burch
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2006 Nick Burch. All Rights Reserved.
This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
Wiki::Toolkit
perl v5.14.2 2011-09-25 WIKI-TOOLKIT-REVERT-TO-DATE(1p)