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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Similar Threads for Man Pages - In Development Post 303042585 by vbe on Tuesday 31st of December 2019 03:33:57 AM
Old 12-31-2019
Hi Neo,
my 2 cents:
You maybe did so but if not, knowing the type of process it involves, I would have chosen as you did a calm period for the task, and to not waste proc time due to the different caches, try to optimize what I can/ where I can e.g. not sure you can change the cache ration of the FS or underlying storage ( I suppose that is more the provider's duty...) but you have access to your RDBMS kernel I would reduce its cache working storage to force the reading of the true data) this is efficient for big batch processes when you know you are after data not often read ( so no chance of finding them in caches), of course, it impacts ordinary online interactive work but as you have fewer requests thrown by online users its acceptable... it should improve a bit your step 4...
 

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KLIST(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						  KLIST(1)

NAME
klist -- list Kerberos credentials SYNOPSIS
klist [-c cache | --cache=cache] [-s | -t | --test] [-T | --tokens] [-5 | --v5] [-v | --verbose] [-l | --list-caches] [-f] [--version] [--help] DESCRIPTION
klist reads and displays the current tickets in the credential cache (also known as the ticket file). Options supported: -c cache, --cache=cache credential cache to list -s, -t, --test Test for there being an active and valid TGT for the local realm of the user in the credential cache. -T, --tokens display AFS tokens -5, --v5 display v5 cred cache (this is the default) -f Include ticket flags in short form, each character stands for a specific flag, as follows: F forwardable f forwarded P proxiable p proxied D postdate-able d postdated R renewable I initial i invalid A pre-authenticated H hardware authenticated This information is also output with the --verbose option, but in a more verbose way. -v, --verbose Verbose output. Include all possible information: Server the principal the ticket is for Ticket etype the encryption type used in the ticket, followed by the key version of the ticket, if it is available Session key the encryption type of the session key, if it's different from the encryption type of the ticket Auth time the time the authentication exchange took place Start time the time that this ticket is valid from (only printed if it's different from the auth time) End time when the ticket expires, if it has already expired this is also noted Renew till the maximum possible end time of any ticket derived from this one Ticket flags the flags set on the ticket Addresses the set of addresses from which this ticket is valid -l, --list-caches List the credential caches for the current users, not all cache types supports listing multiple caches. SEE ALSO
kdestroy(1), kinit(1) HEIMDAL
October 6, 2005 HEIMDAL
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