Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: VI opens slow
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers VI opens slow Post 8089 by Moca4444 on Friday 5th of October 2001 11:26:11 AM
Old 10-05-2001
VI opens slow

Well, we are running at 100mb ethernet and the size of the file is 789k. I tried "cat filename | wc -l" but it didn't work. It returned a number and then a prompt.

The slowness happens whenever I open a file located on another machine. If I open a local file, then no problem.
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. AIX

Vi opens automatically when i login to a unix box

When I login to a unix box using a putty session , I'm landed in a vi editor, instead of my home directory,I'm guessing instead of pointing me to my home directory, the system points me to /usr/bin/vi. As a result, everytime I log into the system I open up a vi editor and am in there. how do i... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ramky79
3 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Selectionbox, script which opens more than one file at once?

hello everybody I´m very new at shell and programming :eek: and i have the following question/problem: I need a script for framemaker (based on shell) which opens a new document from a template (.fm). Then imports a .doc file and then save it as a .mif. Actually my script works with one... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: tio86
3 Replies

3. Linux

Port that a process opens up

Hi all, I have a process with PID as 12456. Could you please let me know how do i find out what is the port that process listens upon in Linux? Thanks in Advance, Pankajakshan (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Pankajakshan
1 Replies

4. IP Networking

Port that a process opens up

Hi all, I have a process with PID as 12456. Could you please let me know how do i find out what is the port that process listens upon in Linux? Thanks in Advance, Pankajakshan (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Pankajakshan
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Position to last line when vi opens a file.

Any Idea without entering any keystroke I can go to end of line in vi when I opening the file. When I am opening Vi I want to goto last line. when I give vi + filename it does not work. Any clue why it does not work. Thanks. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ekb
3 Replies

6. OS X (Apple)

Programatically change which opens a file type

Hi there, If we have 2 apps on our customers machines that can both open files of a certain file extension, is there any way via shell commands to set which application should be the default? Essentially, I'm hoping to replicate Get Info > Open With > Change All, but using a script. Thanks... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: davewg
0 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Bash menu opens and closes

Ever since I added these two code blocks to my bash menu it just opens and closes right away. I use a batch file that worked fine until these codes were added and I am not sure what is wrong. Basically, what I am trying to do in the additional section is if the answer is "Y" then it goes back... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
13 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

[bash] Extra tab opens

Hello everyone, This code is working right using mate-terminal but with xfce4-terminal for some reason, it open up an extra tab... Could someone please help me out to understand why this is happening? #!/bin/bash cd "$(dirname "$0")"/files tab=" --tab" title=" --title" options=()... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: soichiro
2 Replies
ARPWATCH(8)						      System Manager's Manual						       ARPWATCH(8)

NAME
arpwatch - keep track of ethernet/ip address pairings SYNOPSIS
arpwatch [ -dN ] [ -f datafile ] [ -i interface ] [ -n net[/width ]] [ -r file ] [ -u username ] [ -e username ] [ -s username ] DESCRIPTION
Arpwatch keeps track for ethernet/ip address pairings. It syslogs activity and reports certain changes via email. Arpwatch uses pcap(3) to listen for arp packets on a local ethernet interface. The -d flag is used enable debugging. This also inhibits forking into the background and emailing the reports. Instead, they are sent to stderr. The -f flag is used to set the ethernet/ip address database filename. The default is arp.dat. The -i flag is used to override the default interface. The -n flag specifies additional local networks. This can be useful to avoid "bogon" warnings when there is more than one network running on the same wire. If the optional width is not specified, the default netmask for the network's class is used. The -N flag disables reporting any bogons. The -r flag is used to specify a savefile (perhaps created by tcpdump(1) or pcapture(1)) to read from instead of reading from the network. In this case, arpwatch does not fork. If -u flag is used, arpwatch drops root privileges and changes user ID to username and group ID to that of the primary group of username. This is recommended for security reasons. If the -e flag is used, arpwatch sends e-mail messages to username rather than the default (root). If a single `-' character is given for the username, sending of e-mail is suppressed, but logging via syslog is still done as usual. (This can be useful during initial runs, to collect data without being flooded with messages about new stations.) If the -s flag is used, arpwatch sends e-mail messages with username as the return address, rather than the default (root). Note that an empty arp.dat file must be created before the first time you run arpwatch. Also, the default directory (where arp.dat is stored) must be owned by username if -u flag is used. REPORT MESSAGES
Here's a quick list of the report messages generated by arpwatch(1) (and arpsnmp(1)): new activity This ethernet/ip address pair has been used for the first time six months or more. new station The ethernet address has not been seen before. flip flop The ethernet address has changed from the most recently seen address to the second most recently seen address. (If either the old or new ethernet address is a DECnet address and it is less than 24 hours, the email version of the report is suppressed.) changed ethernet address The host switched to a new ethernet address. SYSLOG MESSAGES
Here are some of the syslog messages; note that messages that are reported are also sysloged. ethernet broadcast The mac ethernet address of the host is a broadcast address. ip broadcast The ip address of the host is a broadcast address. bogon The source ip address is not local to the local subnet. ethernet broadcast The source mac or arp ethernet address was all ones or all zeros. ethernet mismatch The source mac ethernet address didn't match the address inside the arp packet. reused old ethernet address The ethernet address has changed from the most recently seen address to the third (or greater) least recently seen address. (This is similar to a flip flop.) suppressed DECnet flip flop A "flip flop" report was suppressed because one of the two addresses was a DECnet address. FILES
/usr/operator/arpwatch - default directory arp.dat - ethernet/ip address database ethercodes.dat - vendor ethernet block list SEE ALSO
arpsnmp(8), arp(8), bpf(4), tcpdump(1), pcapture(1), pcap(3) AUTHORS
Craig Leres of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Network Research Group, University of California, Berkeley, CA. The current version is available via anonymous ftp: ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov/arpwatch.tar.gz BUGS
Please send bug reports to arpwatch@ee.lbl.gov. Attempts are made to suppress DECnet flip flops but they aren't always successful. Most error messages are posted using syslog. 4th Berkeley Distribution 8 October 2000 ARPWATCH(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:31 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy