02-08-2005
Quote:
Originally Posted by hmaiida
what does a system admin have to do every day, every week and every month!
A system administrator have to:
- administering users of the system, creating new users, and ensuring that existing users have access to the resources they need.
- monitoring the system to ensure that the machine is running as efficiently as possible.
- installing and managing applications, and ensuring that the machine is kept up-to-date and patched.
- installing and configuring new devices and systems.
- setting up security systems and ensuring that the security of your machine is not broken.
- ensuring your machine's stability, including providing suitable services and monitoring a system to ensure it's not about to fail.
-- Martin C. Brown's "The Complete Idiot's Guide To Solaris 9" --
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ruptime(1) General Commands Manual ruptime(1)
NAME
ruptime - show status of local machines
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
outputs a status line for each machine on the local network that is running the daemon. status lines are formed from packets broadcast
once every 3 minutes between daemons (see rwhod(1M)) on each host on the network. Each status line has a field for the name of the
machine, the status of the machine (up or down), how long the machine has been up or down, the number of users logged into the machine, and
the 1-, 5- and 15-minute load averages for the machine when the packet was sent.
The status of the machine is reported as ``up'' unless no report has been received from the machine for 11 minutes or more.
The length of time that the machine has been up is shown as:
Load averages are the average number of jobs in the run queue over the last 1-, 5- and 15-minute intervals when the packet was sent.
An example status line output by might be:
The above status line would be interpreted as follows:
is presently ``up'' and has been up for 1 day, 5 hours and 15 minutes. It currently has 7 users logged in. Over the last 1-minute inter-
val, an average of 1.47 jobs were in the run queue. Over the last 5-minute interval, an average of 1.16 jobs were in the run queue. Over
the last 15-minute interval, an average of 0.80 jobs were in the run queue.
If a user has not used the system for an hour or more, the user is considered idle. Idle users are not shown unless the option is speci-
fied.
Options
If no options are specified, the listing is sorted by host name. Options change sorting order as follows:
Sort by load average.
Sort by up time.
Sort by the number of users.
Reverse the sort order.
DIAGNOSTICS
No status report files in
Ask the system administrator to check whether the daemon is running.
AUTHOR
was developed by the University of California, Berkeley.
FILES
Data files
SEE ALSO
rwho(1), rwhod(1M).
ruptime(1)