This might not the best method but I used the Log show command to access the unified logs.
And then directed this to a file. So I use this to monitor the camera status.
Hi All,
I have an expression as follows:-
a=`expr ${i} + ${j}` >> $log_file 2>&1
Here, if any of the values i or j or both happens to be empty then the "expr" returns error as
"expr: 0402-050 Syntax error." My problem is I am not able to re-direct this error to the log file. Its is getting... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have a script to compare 2 files.
file1=$1
file2=$2
num_of_records_file1=`awk ' END { print NR } ' $file1`
num_of_records_file2=`awk ' END { print NR } ' $file2`
i=1
while
do
sed -n "$i"p $file1 > file1_temp
sed -n "$i"p $file2 > file2_temp
diff file1_temp... (5 Replies)
Hi there,
We have 2 apps on our customers machines that can both open files with the same file extension. Is there any way via shell commands to set which application should be the default?
Essentially, I'm hoping to replicate Get Info > Open With > Change All using a shell script, but I just... (0 Replies)
Hello, currently we are executing a .sh from terminal.
The current .sh looks like this:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
/Users/user/my.app/Contents/MacOS/my &
--
Now, we also need to run a third line in the .sh - It's a command line application that I need to run when I execute the above .sh... (0 Replies)
#!/bin/ksh -x
cd /tmp/tj
ftp -n servername.com << DONE
user username password
as
put test.log
quit
close
DONE
echo "testing..."
sh -x scriptname, and it shows all, but username, as, put, quit, close, DONE.
how can i see those ? (1 Reply)
Hi guys,
been scratching round the forums and my mountain of resources.
Maybe I havn't read deep enough
My question is not how sed edits a stream and outputs it to a file, rather something like this below:
I have a .txt with some text in it :rolleyes:
abc:123:xyz
123:abc:987... (7 Replies)
What is the best practice to allow a 3rd party health monitoring app to read the messages file. Since messages is a system file and is owned by root the app cannot read the file. I don't want to run the app as root so how should I allow the app to read the file. The read function is actually built... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: slwiley
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
aulast
AULAST:(8) System Administration Utilities AULAST:(8)NAME
aulast - a program similar to last
SYNOPSIS
aulast [ options ] [ user ] [ tty ]
DESCRIPTION
aulast is a program that prints out a listing of the last logged in users similarly to the program last and lastb. Aulast searches back
through the audit logs or the given audit log file and displays a list of all users logged in (and out) based on the range of time in the
audit logs. Names of users and tty's can be given, in which case aulast will show only those entries matching the arguments. Names of ttys
can be abbreviated, thus aulast 0 is the same as last tty0.
The pseudo user reboot logs in each time the system is rebooted. Thus last reboot will show a log of all reboots since the log file was
created.
The main difference that a user will notice is that aulast print events from oldest to newest, while last prints records from newest to
oldest. Also, the audit system is not notified each time a tty or pty is allocated, so you may not see quite as many records indicating
users and their tty's.
OPTIONS --bad Report on the bad logins.
--extract
Write raw audit records used to create the displayed report into a file aulast.log in the current working directory.
-f file
Use the file instead of the audit logs for input.
--proof
Print out the audit event serial numbers used to determine the preceeding line of the report. A Serial number of 0 is a place holder
and not an actual event serial number. The serial numbers can be used to examine the actual audit records in more detail. Also an
ausearch query is printed that will let you find the audit records associated with that session.
--stdin
Take audit records from stdin.
EXAMPLES
To see this month's logins
ausearch --start this-month --raw | aulast --stdin
SEE ALSO last(1), lastb(1), ausearch(8), aureport(8).
AUTHOR
Steve Grubb
Red Hat Nov 2008 AULAST:(8)