Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Past Time
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Past Time Post 52793 by norsk hedensk on Saturday 26th of June 2004 09:08:18 AM
Old 06-26-2004
i can never seem to find enough time for my hobbies!

for a while i was into nitro rc cars, those are FUN!
i play a few instruments, like the guitar and piano.

also one of my BIGGEST (and most expensive) hobbies is working on my car. im swapping the engine in a few weeks, just waiting for a few more parts to be shipped.

i really want to learn how to surf, but i dont get the time to go do it.
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

help getting past unzip password

Anyone know how to automate the Unzip password prompt? I need to unzip a window's file in Unix without manually typing in the password. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Ronny Lam
2 Replies

2. Solaris

Can't backup past /etc/magic

Hi, We've gotta bit of a problem regarding backups. Sometimes when we run a backup from a script : find . -print |grep -v "^\.\/newicc" | grep -v "^\.\/proc" >$LST cat $LST | cpio -oBcav > /dev/rmt/1cb It quite often it seems to hang when it reaches the /etc/magic file. This happens... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: PaulC
2 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Get date and time for past 1 hour from current date

Hi, I need to get the date and time for past 1 hour from the current date. Anyone know how to do so? Thanks (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: spch2o
5 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

how can i past environment variables?

i am asking to do somethings like: make use of 2 environment variables: ASS1_DATA_DIR specifies the location of the input data files ASS1_OUTPUT_DIR specifies the location of the output data files i have something like that; #set environment variables set VARIABLE1=ASS1_DATA_DIR... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: mingming88
5 Replies

5. Solaris

NTP force system time in the past

Hello I have a question that may sound stupid after and maybe it is. We are syncing our sytem time via ntp from a reference time server. all works quite well but due to a mall applikation which not accepts timestamps from our servers that in the future, and if it even was 1 ms, we have to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: demwz
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to get past 30 mins time in Solaris?

Hi guys, could you help to find a way to get the past 30 mins time in solaris. version: bash-3.00# uname -a SunOS solaris 5.10 Generic_142910-17 i86pc i386 i86pc I had tried the following ways, it works fine in GNU Linux, but doesn't work in Solaris. # date Tue Apr 2 01:01:49 CST... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ambious
4 Replies

7. UNIX and Linux Applications

From past 10 days my one job is taking lots of time

One of my job is taking long running time. I need to identify from the unix log file can you please help how to troubleshoot. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Nsharma3006
1 Replies

8. Forum Support Area for Unregistered Users & Account Problems

Can't get past google verification

Trying to register the Verification step is blocking me. I've allowed all the intrusive Google trackers and Java. Tried different browsers with no blocking. Nothing is working. Says: "Try again later Your computer maybe ... " What weird is in this forum section I can pass the recaptcha but in... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Unregistered
1 Replies
nischttl(1)							   User Commands						       nischttl(1)

NAME
nischttl - change the time to live value of a NIS+ object SYNOPSIS
nischttl [-AfLP] time name... DESCRIPTION
nischttl changes the time to live value (ttl) of the NIS+ objects or entries specified by name to time. Entries are specified using indexed names (see nismatch(1)). The time to live value is used by object caches to expire objects within their cache. When an object is read into the cache, this value is added to the current time in seconds yielding the time when the cached object would expire. The object may be returned from the cache until the current time is earlier than the calculated expiration time. When the expiration time has been reached, the object will be flushed from the cache. The time to live time may be specified in seconds or in days, hours, minutes, seconds format. The latter format uses a suffix letter of d, h, m, or s to identify the units of time. See the examples below for usage. The command will fail if the master NIS+ server is not running. Setting a high ttl value allows objects to stay persistent in caches for a longer period of time and can improve performance. However, when an object changes, in the worst case, the number of seconds in this attribute must pass before that change is visible to all clients. Setting a ttl value of 0 means that the object should not be cached at all. A high ttl value is a week, a low value is less than a minute. Password entries should have ttl values of about 12 hours (easily allows one password change per day), entries in the RPC table can have ttl values of several weeks (this information is effectively unchanging). Only directory and group objects are cached in this implementation. OPTIONS
The following options are supported: -A Modify all tables in the concatenation path that match the search criterion specified in name. This option implies the -P switch. -f Force the operation and fail silently if it does not succeed. -L Follow links and change the time to live of the linked object or entries rather than the time to live of the link itself. -P Follow the concatenation path within a named table. This option only makes sense when either name is an indexed name or the -L switch is also specified and the named object is a link pointing to entries. EXAMPLES
Example 1: Changing the ttl of an Object The following example shows how to change the ttl of an object using the seconds format and the days, hours, minutes, seconds format. The ttl of the second object is set to 1 day and 12 hours. example% nischttl 184000 object example% nischttl 1d12h object Example 2: Changing the ttl for a password Entry This example shows how to change the ttl for a password entry. example% nischttl 1h30m '[uid=99],passwd.org_dir' Example 3: Changing the ttl of Entries Pointed to by a Link The next two examples change the ttl of the object or entries pointed to by a link, and the ttl of all entries in the hobbies table. example% nischttl -L 12h linkname example% nischttl 3600 '[],hobbies' ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
NIS_PATH If this variable is set, and the NIS+ name is not fully qualified, each directory specified will be searched until the object is found. See nisdefaults(1). EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned: 0 Successful operation. 1 Operation failed. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWnisu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
nis+(1), nischgrp(1), nischmod(1), nischown(1), nisdefaults(1), nismatch(1), nis_objects(3NSL), attributes(5) NOTES
NIS+ might not be supported in future releases of the SolarisTM Operating Environment. Tools to aid the migration from NIS+ to LDAP are available in the Solaris 9 operating environment. For more information, visit http://www.sun.com/directory/nisplus/transition.html. SunOS 5.10 10 Dec 2001 nischttl(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:01 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy