Sponsored Content
Operating Systems AIX Installing software on a large number of Systems Post 69076 by StuBob on Monday 11th of April 2005 10:26:12 AM
Old 04-11-2005
Installing software on a large number of Systems

Hi,

I'm new to the unix world and I would like to know if anyone can give me some pointers as to how to install and run a program on a large number of servers easily. Can anyone offer any pointers please?

F.y.i I have developed a program in C to collect performance data from AIX systems. Installing and collecting on a single system is easy but doing it over 500 systems is a different ball game altogether.

Any suggestions would be appreciated.

Cheers



Stuart
 

7 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers

installing new software

Hello, I recently downloaded and installed fedora core 3, and I am triyng to install other software like movie players and so on, when ever I download software for this operating system, I recieve with the software a text file explaining how to install it. The installation instrucions are allways... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: st_matan
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Backup Software for UNIX systems

Hi, which software is recommended for backup of UNIX systems ( e.g. SUN, Solaris ). Backup software and database e.g. Oracle. One possibility is Networker, but license is expensive and also service contract. Best regards Dieter (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: rhacodactylus
2 Replies

3. Solaris

Installing SNMP Agent on Solaris Systems

Hi, I am trying to apply the steps in the below link: http://manageengine.adventnet.com/products/applications_manager/help/appendix/snmp-agent-discovery.html#solaris but I couldn't continue with the step number 2 ... what is the path of C compiler. export PATH=<gcc path>:$PATH ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: adel8483
3 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Installing Software on Multiple Systems

I have been given the task of installing subversion on rhe4 32 and 64 bit, suse9 ia64, hpux 11.22 ia64, hpux 11.11 pa_risc, solaris 2.8 sparc, and irix 6.5. How can I do this? I know that rhe5 and debian have things like yum and apt for packages. What are the equivalents for these systems? ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ldb88
4 Replies

5. SuSE

installing software

hi, i have installed suse linux (10) at my home. can anyone tell me how do i install the softwares like players , messengers etc. i am new to linux ,i am learning now. can anyone suggest or post any material so that i can easily go through and learn. thanks in advance. vishwa. (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: viswareddy.32
6 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Installing Software

Hi all, So I remotly log on to one of the unix boxes we have at work. I want to use a software that is not installed on the server. What's better? to install it locally in my home folder and use it, or to ask the system admin to install it on the server? and what's the main difference? I asuume... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Rachel Ross
1 Replies

7. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers

Installing software

Greetings, all. I'm a newcomer here, and I appreciate the forum to ask questions. Here is the situation: I am installing software on a network hard-drive (NAS), to add functionality to it. The OS is in a read-only flash partition. Someone else hacked the firmware to install Busybox on this... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jhansen
1 Replies
USERLIST(8)						      Finger-type Userlisting						       USERLIST(8)

NAME
userlist - Userlisting of who's on your system. SYNOPSIS
userlist DESCRIPTION
This program simply gives you a listing of who is connected to your system. It is used primarily in the sorted listing of cfingerd, which utilitizes the same method of display for a more uniform output between systems. (It also made more sense to do it this way instead of having jumbled up display listings in sorted finger displays. Besides, it made more sense to do this than use finger. :) This program functions with the same types of things in mind that cfingerd does. If the user has a .nofinger file, their username will not be displayed in the userlisting. Example output is shown as: Username Real Name Idletime TTY Remote console username I'm real ... 9d 23:59 0 (remote.site.com) where it would display the user's login name, the user's real name, their idle time given in the format "dd hh:mm", their TTY, and their remote location (or where they're telnetting from). If the username is over 8 characters, the program will not search for their information in the passwd file, since it may be too long. Besides, it checks getpwnam, anyway. :) OPTIONS
-c Give standard CFINGERD (custom) output. -n List only people idle less than one day. ADDITIONAL
Although userlist is not required to run as suid root, it is a good idea. The reason is it checks each users' directory for a .nofinger file. If indeed that user has a .nofinger file in his/her directory, that user will not be shown in the userlisting. If you change the program to run as nobody.nobody, you are free to do so. But you will also show the users if they are online, regardless of whether or not they have a ".nofinger" file (as long as their directory is NOT world-readable.) CONTACTING
If you like this program, have any suggestions on how it could be modified, or have bug reports, please write to: khollis@bitgate.com. Your continued Public Domain support is appreciated! Thanks. SEE ALSO
cfingerd.conf(5), cfingerd(8), finger(1). cfingerd 1.4.2 29 August 1999 USERLIST(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:33 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy