Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: What level are you?
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? What level are you? Post 52685 by pressy on Wednesday 23rd of June 2004 06:44:50 PM
Old 06-23-2004
read(0, 0xFFBFF7E7, 1)
read(0, " b", 1) = 1
write(2, " b", 1) = 1
getcontext(0xFFBFF688)
read(0, " e", 1) = 1
write(2, " e", 1) = 1
getcontext(0xFFBFF688)
read(0, " g", 1) = 1
write(2, " g", 1) = 1
getcontext(0xFFBFF688)
read(0, " i", 1) = 1
write(2, " i", 1) = 1
getcontext(0xFFBFF688)
read(0, " n", 1) = 1
write(2, " n", 1) = 1
getcontext(0xFFBFF688)
read(0, " n", 1) = 1
write(2, " n", 1) = 1
getcontext(0xFFBFF688)
read(0, " e", 1) = 1
write(2, " e", 1) = 1
getcontext(0xFFBFF688)
read(0, " r", 1) = 1
write(2, " r", 1) = 1
getcontext(0xFFBFF688)
read(0, 0xFFBFF7E7, 1) (sleeping...)

.....
something says me this post will be ignored *hehe*
.....

difficult to say, i think it belongs on your job.....
on my opinion there are 3 jobs in the large EDP sector

programmer&developer:
tries to write OS&Applications which should work
system engineer:
tries to integrate and implement the OS&Applications
administrators:
tries to keep the implementations running...

greetings Preßy

Last edited by pressy; 06-23-2004 at 07:53 PM..
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

patch level

Hi, how do you check that the latest service packs/patches are installed on the server, When i look at the OS Modules file, all i see is these numbers like 117176-02 etc, what is currently the latest patch level for sunOS 5.9? thnaks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: narik007
1 Replies

2. AIX

ML level went backwards?

Hi all. I've been put in charge of updating one of our AIX 5.2 servers to ML7. (perhaps not wise since I'm an absolute n00b, but hey, it's good experience to fly by the seat of one's pants). So: a) I typed "oslevel -r" and got back "5200-04" b) I went to IBM's Fix Central and downloaded... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pschlesinger
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

level 0 dump

need help to create a level 0 dump of the /usr filesystem on the first tape device using compression and then start a level 3 dump of /var after the level 0 completes, is it dump -0ucf /dev/rmt0 /usr (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jo calamine
1 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

OS level backup

I am not a DBA or an unix admin (I am a developer) and I have a question I need clarification for. Recently one of our oracle ebusiness suite server (apps tier, red hat 4) crashed and the unix admin had to rebuild the server. We had backups for the file system under applmgr and oracle. And... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: bodhi2000
3 Replies

5. Solaris

Difference between run level & init level

what are the major Difference Between run level & init level (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: rajaramrnb
2 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Trying to AWK beyond my level

Hey everyone, So I have a task that I want to complete with awk (+ find, or something similar), but can't quite achieve it by myself... I have 60 GB of files that I want to modify. They each consist of 2 columns of numbers, with up to 50,000 lines in a file. e.g. 1.607743 ... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: symphonic1985
5 Replies

7. AIX

AIX OS level

I currently have 2 servers running AIX 6.1 on them, but the OS level is listed differently in WSM. I am fairly new to AIX and just re-installed the OS on one of the boxes that originally had 5.1 on it. It now shows 6.1.0.0, whereas the other one shows 6.1.3.0. I have been trying to figure out how... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: rifamilyguy
2 Replies

8. Red Hat

SSL certificate generation on OS level or application level

We have a RHEL 5.8 server at the production level and we have a Java application on this server. I know of the SSL certificate generation at the OS (RHEL) level but it is implemented on the Java application by our development team using the Java keytool. My doubt is that is the SSL generation can... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: RHCE
3 Replies
getcontext(2)							System Calls Manual						     getcontext(2)

NAME
getcontext, setcontext - Initiates and restores user level context switching SYNOPSIS
#include <ucontext.h> int getcontext( ucontext_t *ucp ); int setcontext( const ucontext_t *ucp ); STANDARDS
Interfaces documented on this reference page conform to industry standards as follows: getcontext(), setcontext(): XSH5.0 Refer to the standards(5) reference page for more information about industry standards and associated tags. PARAMETERS
Provides a pointer to a ucontext structure, defined in the <ucontext.h> header file. The ucontext structure contains the signal mask, exe- cution stack, and machine registers. (See ucontext(5) for more information about the format of the ucontext structure.) DESCRIPTION
Using both the getcontext() and setcontext() functions enables you to initiate user level context control, switching between multiple threads of control within a single process. When you call getcontext(), it initializes the ucp argument to the current user context of the calling process. Use the setcontext() function to restore the state of the user context pointed to by the ucp argument. The setcontext() function, if suc- cessful, does not return; application execution continues from the point specified by the ucontext structure you pass to the setcontext() function. The ucontext structure that you pass to the setcontext() function must have been created by a call to the getcontext() function or the makecontext() function, or have been passed as the third argument to a signal handler. (The third argument in a call to the sigaction() function determines the action to be performed when a signal is delivered. For more information, see sigaction(2).) When a context structure is created by the getcontext() function, execution of the program continues as if the corresponding call of the getcontext() function had just returned. When a context structure is created by the makecontext() function, program execution continues with the function passed to makecontext(). When that function returns, the thread continues as if after a call to setcontext() with the context structure argument that was input to makecontext(). If the uc_link member of the ucontext_t structure pointed to by the ucp argument is 0 (zero), then this context is the main context, and the thread will exit when this context returns. The effects of passing a ucp argument from any other source are unspecified. NOTES
When a signal handler executes, the current user context is saved and a new context is created by the kernel. If the process leaves the signal handler using the longjmp() function, the original context cannot be restored, and the result of future calls to the getcontext() function are unpredictable. Use the siglongjmp() or setcontext() functions in signal handlers, instead of the longjmp() function. RETURN VALUES
The setcontext() function does not return upon success. The getcontext() function returns 0 (zero) upon success. Upon failure, both the setcontext() and getcontext() functions return a value of -1. SEE ALSO
Functions: bsd_signal(2), makecontext(2), sigaction(2), sigaltstack(2), sigprocmask(2), setjmp(3), sigsetjmp(3) Files: ucontext(5) Standards: standards(5) getcontext(2)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:53 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy