03-03-2020
Many thanks to all. I was using an older version of AWK. I installed the new version and got the results.
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. AIX
Hello Everyone,
I received the following (root) email. Does anyone know what causes this and how I can find the offending printer?
Thanks in advance.
Jim
Message 2:
From daemon Wed Nov 30 09:51:07 2005
Date: Wed, 30 Nov 2005 09:51:07 -0800
From: daemon
To: root (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: jlslhills
2 Replies
2. Programming
Hi,
According to my understanding..
When message queues are used, when a process post a message in the queue and if another process reads it from the queue then the queue will be empty unlike shared memory where n number of processess can access the shared memory and still the contents remain... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: rvan
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3. Programming
Hii can anyone pls tell how to limit the max no of message in a posix message queue. I have made changes in proc/sys/fs/mqueue/msg_max
But still whenever i try to read the value of max. message in the queue using attr.mq_curmsgs (where struct mq_attr attr) its giving the default value as 10.... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohit3884
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4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi I wrote a script
#!/usr/bin/ksh
#set -x
for fs in `df -k|awk '{print $1}'|sed -n "3,14 p"`
do
x=`df -kl | grep $fs | awk '{ print $5 }'`
y=50%
if
then
message="File System `df -k |grep $fs |awk '{print $6\", \"$5}'`... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: namishtiwari
1 Replies
5. Solaris
Hi,
Im working on Solaris 9 on SPARC-32 bit running on an Ultra-80, and I have to find out the following:-
1. Total Physical Memory in the system(total RAM).
2. Available Physical Memory(i.e. RAM Usage)
3. Total (Logical) Memory in the system
4. Available (Logical) Memory.
I know... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: 0ktalmagik
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6. Programming
Hi,
I'm trying to learn how to manage memory when I have to deal with lots of data.
Basically I'm indexing a huge file (5GB, but it can be bigger), by creating tables that
holds offset <-> startOfSomeData information. Currently I'm mapping the whole file at
once (yep!) but of course the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: emitrax
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7. Solaris
Is it possible to restrict physical memory in solaris zone with zone.max-locked-memory just like we can do with rcapd ? I do not want to used rcapd (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: fugitive
1 Replies
8. Programming
Hi,
I wanted to know whether the POSIX message queues are statically allocated memory by the kernel based on the parameters specified in the open or as and when we send messages, memory are allocated?
Does the kernel reserve the specified memory for the message queue irrespective of whether... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sumtata
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9. Solaris
Hi Experts,
Our servers running Solaris 10 with SAP Application. The memory utilization always >90%, but the process on SAP is too less even nothing.
Why memory utilization on solaris always looks high?
I have statement about memory on solaris, is this true:
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10. UNIX and Linux Applications
ssmtp has been running well under Kubuntu 12.04.1 for plain text messages. I would like to send html messages with ssmtp -t < /path/to/the/message.txt, but I cannot seem to get the message.txt file properly formatted. I have tried various charsets,
Content-Transfer-Encoding, rearranging the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Ronald B
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LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
show-installed
show-installed(1) show-installed(1)
NAME
show-installed - show installed RPM packages and descriptions
SYNOPSIS
show-installed [options]
DESCRIPTION
show-installed gives a compact description of the packages installed (or given) making use of the comps groups found in the repositories.
OPTIONS
-h, --help
show this help message and exit
-f FORMAT, --format=FORMAT
yum, kickstart or human; yum gives the result as a yum command line; kickstart the content of a %packages section; "human" readable
is default.
-i INPUT, --input=INPUT
File to read the package list from instead of using the rpmdb. - for stdin. The file must contain package names only separated by
white space (including newlines). rpm -qa --qf='%{name}
' produces proper output.
-o OUTPUT, --output=OUTPUT
File to write the result to. Stdout is used if option is omitted.
-q, --quiet
Do not show warnings.
-e, --no-excludes
Only show groups that are installed completely. Do not use exclude lines.
--global-excludes
Print exclude lines at the end and not after the groups requiring them.
--global-addons
Print package names at the end and not after the groups offering them as addon.
--addons-by-group
Also show groups not selected to sort packages contained by them. Those groups are commented out with a "# " at the begin of the
line.
-m, --allow-mandatories
Check if just installing the mandatory packages gives better results. Uses "." to mark those groups.
-a, --allow-all
Check if installing all packages in the groups gives better results. Uses "*" to mark those groups.
--ignore-missing
Ignore packages missing in the repos.
--ignore-missing-excludes
Do not produce exclude lines for packages not in the repository.
Florian Festi 21 October 2010 show-installed(1)