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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting How to get memory size in HP and not as user root? Post 54284 by zazzybob on Monday 9th of August 2004 06:08:41 AM
Old 08-09-2004
You could grep the /var/adm/syslog/syslog.log (depending on permissions)

i.e. grep "Physical" /var/adm/syslog/syslog.log

You could also run the top command, and look at the statistics there. If you want to capture top's output, do something like top -d 1 > top.out (at the top of the file you'll probably get some gibberish from the escape characters) - you'll see Memory (Real/Virtual) used, as well as free memory. You can then do a "grep "Memory" top.out" and then process with awk.

Cheers
ZB
 

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syslog.auth(4)						     Kernel Interfaces Manual						    syslog.auth(4)

NAME
syslog.auth - authorization file for accepting remote syslog messages SYNOPSIS
# format: Each fully qualified host name on a separate line hostname.domain_name DESCRIPTION
The /etc/syslog.auth file specifies which remote hosts are allowed to forward syslog messages to the local host. For the sake of security, only messages coming from remote hosts listed in the local /etc/syslog.auth file will be logged by the syslogd daemon. If the /etc/syslog.auth file does not exist, then messages coming from any host will be accepted. Each remote host name should appear in a separate line in /etc/syslog.auth. A line started with the # character is considered as a comment and is thus ignored. A host name must be a complete domain name such as trout.zk3.dec.com. If a domain host name is given, it must either appear in the local /etc/hosts file or be able to be resolved by the local name server (BIND). Note that a host name can have at most as many characters as defined by the MAXHOSTNAMELEN constant in <sys/param.h>, although each line in the /etc/syslog.auth file can have up to 512 characters. The /etc/syslog.auth file must be owned by root and has a permission of 0600. To invoke a new version of the /etc/syslog.auth file, run the following command (as the super user) to initialize the syslogd daemon: kill -HUP `cat /var/run/syslog.pid` EXAMPLES
The following example provides a typical authorization file: # format: Each fully qualified host name on a separate line c3poid.rvo.dec.com r2d2id.ckt.dec.com FILES
Location of the authorization file. RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: syslogd(8), syslog(1) System Administration delim off syslog.auth(4)
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