03-30-2004
Doing
lsof /var/tmp/dead.letter
will tell you which PIDs and users are accessing the file at the time.
8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Solaris
My SUN V210 refuses to fully boot up. We had a power outage (ie. someone tripped the cord) and thereafter the Sun will not come up, and the OS is not starting. The LED on the front is not lit.
Monitor gets no feed, so I plugged in via the management port.
The system comes up to:
Trap 3e. and... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: ireeneek
7 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all can you please help me what is dead.letter file ?
when it is created ? for the first time i have seen this file getting created in my current directory?
I am using SunOs.
Any IDEA ?? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: jambesh
2 Replies
3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Sorry for this one ladies and gents, it's probably very easy but I don't know how to, sound familiar :-)
I'm using sendmail on a web server that sends some mail through forms, not many.
I've got sendmail configured to use our networks relay host and everything was working well.
The power... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mjdavies
4 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have created a script that has some sql queries in it. It seem to work fine and e-mails me the output file but when i use this command 'col email format a20' it creates a dead.letter file and i never get the e-mail
I am using mailx -s command to send out the e-mail.
Any help would... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: shawnk
0 Replies
5. What is on Your Mind?
On servers i check there seems to be no news at all. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Action
3 Replies
6. Emergency UNIX and Linux Support
Hi,
Can someone pls tell me how do i mail the contents of my dead.letter to my mail id. The problem is that the content is a multi-part message in MIME format. How do i get the original message mailed to me.
i used uuencode, but that does not work, says "uuencode not found"
Any help... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: raghu_shekar
7 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello everybody,
I'm new to bash scripting (and scripting in general) but I'm making decent progress in the hands-on solutions I need...
I've encountered a problem that seemed very simple to me at first, but had me going on for hours. Maybe you can help me.
Say I have an input text file like... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: origamisven
2 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Good afternoon all,
I want to ask how to change some letter in my file with other letter in spesific line
eg.
data.txt
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
for example i want to change the 4th line with character 1.
How could I do it by SED or AWK.
I have tried to run this code but actually did not... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: weslyarfan
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
xfs_estimate
xfs_estimate(8) System Manager's Manual xfs_estimate(8)
NAME
xfs_estimate - estimate the space that an XFS filesystem will take
SYNOPSIS
xfs_estimate [ -h ] [ -b blocksize ] [ -i logsize ]
[ -e logsize ] [ -v ] directory ...
xfs_estimate -V
DESCRIPTION
For each directory argument, xfs_estimate estimates the space that directory would take if it were copied to an XFS filesystem. xfs_esti-
mate does not cross mount points. The following definitions are used:
KB = *1024
MB = *1024*1024
GB = *1024*1024*1024
The xfs_estimate options are:
-b blocksize
Use blocksize instead of the default blocksize of 4096 bytes. The modifier k can be used after the number to indicate multiplica-
tion by 1024. For example,
xfs_estimate -b 64k /
requests an estimate of the space required by the directory / on an XFS filesystem using a blocksize of 64K (65536) bytes.
-v Display more information, formatted.
-h Display usage message.
-i, -e logsize
Use logsize instead of the default log size of 1000 blocks. -i refers to an internal log, while -e refers to an external log. The
modifiers k or m can be used after the number to indicate multiplication by 1024 or 1048576, respectively.
For example,
xfs_estimate -i 1m /
requests an estimate of the space required by the directory / on an XFS filesystem using an internal log of 1 megabyte.
-V Print the version number and exits.
EXAMPLES
% xfs_estimate -e 10m /var/tmp
/var/tmp will take about 4.2 megabytes
with the external log using 2560 blocks or about 10.0 megabytes
% xfs_estimate -v -e 10m /var/tmp
directory bsize blocks megabytes logsize
/var/tmp 4096 792 4.0MB 10485760
% xfs_estimate -v /var/tmp
directory bsize blocks megabytes logsize
/var/tmp 4096 3352 14.0MB 10485760
% xfs_estimate /var/tmp
/var/tmp will take about 14.0 megabytes
xfs_estimate(8)