Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: ls -l : response time slow
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users ls -l : response time slow Post 32484 by Perderabo on Wednesday 27th of November 2002 08:40:34 AM
Old 11-27-2002
Is "ls -ln" any faster?
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Response time under packet loss

I am experiencing a problem where under a dial condition I am experiencing packet loss, which is failrly normal, but the response to the packet loss is taking bewteen 6 and 10 seconds. Could someone please advise what the industry standard is on the response time under a packet loss senario. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: shane
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Response time & IO max

in HP-UX how i can measure the response time and how can i find the maximum IO (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: salhoub
1 Replies

3. SCO

Slow cd response

Hi All We have one SCO Server here and it never gives us any trouble. Until Now!! Well its not earth shattering but we have one user who is complaining of a very slow response time when changing to his Home Directory. Other users who have similar profiles are OK. I have su'd to this user and I can... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: JohnOB
0 Replies

4. IP Networking

Apache mod_proxy +DNS slow response problem

My company has a private network, including a Apache web server (Linux) and some WinXP machines. The web server had been configured to use mod_proxy to connect to window update site via another company proxy server. It works for few years. Recently, some parties had setup a DNS server on the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: donaldfung
2 Replies

5. Emergency UNIX and Linux Support

Urgent help - intermittent slow response with client

Hi, My application runs on AIX, and clients complain of 3am slowdowns. This seems to have increased in the recent past. Can someone guide me what are the various things that I need to be looking at on he AIX box, that could be causing slowdowns. Thanks in Advance. (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ggayathri
4 Replies

6. AIX

Slow FTP response on WAN

Hi All. We are using AIX 5.3 ML9. There is 1 Gig NIC installed on two servers (Primary and Secondary) with Full Duplex Mode. We have scheduled a cronjob to copy the backup from primary to secondary thru FTP on WAN. The total data size is 15 GB and it took 9 Hours and 18 Mins with transfer rate... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: lodhi1978
6 Replies

7. Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators

Slow response from website

Hi, I am experiencing slow response of unix.com from past 3-4 days. like- - most of the time the page does not reload instantly (when I do a manual reload from browser) - not able to view graphics. ( displays only text). - when posting into forum, the page gets stuck for considerably long... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: clx
6 Replies

8. Solaris

slow response on solaris terminal

Solaris terminal responding very slow .. we have recently put a T3 hardware in to production , the applications running are it are perfectly and no complaints from user ..but when i ssh to the server ... the terminal response is very very slow .. it takes 3 seconds to show the character i type ..... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: skamal4u
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Processes running response time

Hi All I have been asked to write scripts within our monitoring tool for a vast requirement set. One of the requirements is below: • Lowest, Highest & Average response times of the Documentum process threads serving client requests Essentially they want a view where we can see the... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: simpsa27
4 Replies
vboxgetty.conf(5)					    Linux System Administration 					 vboxgetty.conf(5)

NAME
vboxgetty.conf - config file for vboxgetty Description The file /etc/isdn/vboxgetty.conf is used to configure vboxgetty. Please read the man page vboxgetty(8) for a description of how vboxgetty works. Everything after "#" is ignored, as are empty lines. All arguments must be separated by whitespace (spaces, tabs). Arguments may not con- tain whitespace. All settings before the first port command are global settings, after a port command they only affect the current port. port <string> ISDN device to configure. modeminit <string> Command to initialize the modem. You should set the MSN/EAZ on which vboxgetty should listen for incoming calls. Default is "ATZ". user <string> Name of the user that vboxgetty will use. This user must exist in /etc/passwd and you must use this parameter. group <string> Name of the group that vboxgetty will use. This group must exist in /etc/group and you must use this parameter. umask <number> Vboxgetty will use this umask when creating new files. You must give the umask as an octal number. Default is 077. dropdtrtime <seconds> Number of milliseconds to hold the DTR-Line low to reset the modem. Default value is 800. initpause <number> Number of milliseconds to wait after initializing the modem. This is used to compensate the delay of the "NO CARRIER" response. Default value is 1500. badinitsexit <number> Maximum failures with modeminit. If this number is reached, vboxgetty exits. Default is 0. ringtimeout <number> Time in seconds to wait for a RING. If no RING is received within this time, no call is taken. Default is 5. echotimeout <number> Time in seconds to wait for the echo from the modem. Default is 4. commandtimeout <number> Time in seconds to wait for a response to a modem command. Default is 4. alivetimeout <number> After this time in seconds vboxgetty will check if the modem is still responding to modem commands. Default is 1800. compression <string> Audio compression to use to record new messages. Possible values are ADPCM-2, ADPCM-3, ADPCM-4 and ULAW. The ALAW compression mode is no longer supported. Default is ULAW. spooldir <string> Spool directory to use. This directory must exist. It's used for control files of several programs. Default is /var/spool/vbox/<user>. vboxconfig <string> Full path of the vbox config file. Default value is <spooldir>/vbox.conf. freespace <number> Number of bytes that must be available on the partition with the spool directory, so that a call may be taken. Default is 0. FILES
/etc/isdn/vboxgetty.conf this configuration file SEE ALSO
vboxgetty(8), vbox(5), vboxtcl(5) AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Andreas Jellinghaus <aj@dungeon.inka.de>, for Debian GNU/Linux and isdn4linux. ISDN 4 Linux 3.1pre4 2000/09/15 vboxgetty.conf(5)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:58 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy