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Full Discussion: controlling terminal
Top Forums Programming controlling terminal Post 31994 by Vishnu on Saturday 16th of November 2002 05:13:37 AM
Old 11-16-2002
A daemon may or may not be associated to a terminal - by association we mean being able to writes its stderr and stdout to the terminal... on unix systems normally long running jobs, routine jobs and many administrative tasks are either daemons themselves or started by daemons... for example when you log on to a unix system thru telnet server on your machine, the telnetd daemon which continuously tiks on the host unix system takes your request and calls the init-getty-login-shell sequence... for example your shell is a daemon that can write its stderr and stdout to the terminal.. if you type a wrong command you can see the shell daemon write an error message...

Hope this helps...

Cheers!
Vishnu.

Last edited by Vishnu; 11-16-2002 at 06:35 AM..
 

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lockd(8c)																 lockd(8c)

Name
       lockd - network lock daemon

Syntax
       /usr/etc/lockd [ -t timeout ] [ -g graceperiod ]

Description
       The  daemon processes lock requests that are either sent locally by the kernel or remotely by another lock daemon.  The NFS locking service
       makes this advisory locking support possible by using the system call and the subroutine.  The daemon forwards  lock  requests  for  remote
       data  to  the  server  site's lock daemon.  The daemon then requests the status monitor daemon, for monitor service.  The reply to the lock
       request is not sent to the kernel until the status daemon and the server site's lock daemon have replied.

       If either the status monitor or server site's lock daemon is unavailable, the reply to a lock request for remote data is delayed until  all
       daemons become available.

       When  a server recovers, it waits for a grace period for all client site daemons to submit reclaim requests.  Client site daemons are noti-
       fied by of the server recovery and promptly resubmit previously granted lock requests.  If a client site's daemon fails	to  secure  previ-
       ously  granted  locks  at  the server site, the daemon sends the signal SIGLOST to all the processes that were previously holding locks and
       cannot reclaim them.

Options
       -t timeout      The daemon uses timeout (in seconds) as the interval instead of the default value  of  15  seconds  to  retransmit  a  lock
		       request to the remote server.

       -g graceperiod  The daemon uses graceperiod (in seconds) as the grace period duration instead of the default value of 45 seconds.

See Also
       fcntl(2), lockf(3), signal(3), statd(8c)

																	 lockd(8c)
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