It is
or better
Even better is to check for the elapsed time
The *-* matches anything with a dash; this is true if the process is more than one day old. So it will fix your emergency, but leave enough rpm processes running to remind you to do a root cause analysis plus a proper fix.
Hi everybody:
I have a problem. I have a output files which have this pattern:
number1
--space
block1a - 7rows/10columns/65elements
--space
block1b - 7rows/10columns/65elements
--space
block1c - 7rows/10columns/65elements
--space
number2
--space
block2a - 7rows/10columns/65elements... (0 Replies)
Hi, Im very new to the world of sed so I'm really not even sure if this is possible. What i need to do is read from a flat file and every time i see this line:
VAL=123,456
I need to change 456 to 457 for every occurence of this line in the file. The numbers 123 and 456 are different for... (6 Replies)
Hi All,
I am spooling the data some sql queries into a single file but wanted to know how to format the data of the file generated by spool.
#!/bin/sh
unset -f USAGE
USAGE () {
clear
echo "############################USAGE#######################\n"
echo "Incorrect number of... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I need help on how to "access" or manipulate the Linux ARP Cache in C, here is the description of the project i'm working in:
There are a lot of tools that analize ARP frames and send an e-mail to the sysadmin, that's easy. What i want to do is to inspect every ARP frame that arrives... (18 Replies)
Hi,
I am new to awk/unix and am trying to put together a script to manipulate the date column in a csv file.
I have file1.csv with the following contents:
Date,ID,Number,Amount,Volume,Size
01-Apr-2014,WERFG,998,105873.96,10873.96,1342.11
01-Apr-2014,POYFR,267,5681.44,5681.44,462.96
I... (2 Replies)
Hi, I am new to awk and unix programming and trying to manipulate a csv file.
My current csv file looks like this:
col1,col2,col3,col4,col5,col4,col5,col6,col7,col8
223,V,c,2,4,f,r,,y,z
223,V,c,3,2,f,r,,y,z
223,V,c,1,4,f,r,,y,z
223,V,c,4,3,f,r,,y,z
227,V,c,3,1,f,r,,y,z... (8 Replies)
Hello,
I am on a Mac and trying to clean up some monthly files with a very simple SED:
sed '3,10d;/<ACROSS>/,$d' input.txt > output.txt
(from the input, delete lines 3 - 10; then delete from the line containing <ACROSS> to the end of the file)
then output to output.txt
Even when I try... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: verbatim
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
killall
KILLALL(1) User Commands KILLALL(1)NAME
killall - kill processes by name
SYNOPSIS
killall [-e,--exact] [-g,--process-group] [-i,--interactive] [-q,--quiet] [-v,--verbose] [-w,--wait] [-V,--version] [-S,--sid] [-c,--con-
text] [-s,--signal signal] [--] name ...
killall -l
killall -V,--version
DESCRIPTION
killall sends a signal to all processes running any of the specified commands. If no signal name is specified, SIGTERM is sent.
Signals can be specified either by name (e.g. -HUP) or by number (e.g. -1).
If the command name contains a slash (/), processes executing that particular file will be selected for killing, independent of their name.
killall returns a zero return code if at least one process has been killed for each ilisted command. killall returns zero otherwise.
A killall process never kills itself (but may kill other killall processes).
OPTIONS -e, --exact
Require an exact match for very long names. If a command name is longer than 15 characters, the full name may be unavailable (i.e.
it is swapped out). In this case, killall will kill everything that matches within the first 15 characters. With -e, such entries
are skipped. killall prints a message for each skipped entry if -v is specified in addition to -e,
-g, --process-group
Kill the process group to which the process belongs. The kill signal is only sent once per group, even if multiple processes belong-
ing to the same process group were found.
-i, --interactive
Interactively ask for confirmation before killing.
-l, --list
List all known signal names.
-q, --quiet
Do not complain if no processes were killed.
-v, --verbose
Report if the signal was successfully sent.
-V, --version
Display version information.
-w, --wait
Wait for all killed processes to die. killall checks once per second if any of the killed processes still exist and only returns if
none are left. Note that killall may wait forever if the signal was ignored, had no effect, or if the process stays in zombie
state.
-S (Flask only) Specify SID: kill only processes with given SID. Mutually exclusive with -c argument. Must precede other arguments on
command line.
-c (Flask only) Specify security context: kill only processes with given security context. Mutually exclusive with -s. Must precede
other arguments on the command line.
FILES
/proc location of the proc file system
KNOWN BUGS
Killing by file only works for executables that are kept open during execution, i.e. impure executables can't be killed this way.
Be warned that typing killall name may not have the desired effect on non-Linux systems, especially when done by a privileged user.
killall -w doesn't detect if a process disappears and is replaced by a new process with the same PID between scans.
AUTHORS
Werner Almesberger <Werner.Almesberger@epfl.ch> wrote the original version of psmisc. Since version 20 Craig Small <csmall@small.drop-
bear.id.au> can be blamed.
SEE ALSO kill(1), fuser(1), pgrep(1), pidof(1), ps(1), kill(2)Linux March 25, 2001 KILLALL(1)