02-01-2006
8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
gurus,
normally to stop a process ,i need to kill all its child & then parent process.
i do it manually as follows
bash-2.03$ ps -ef | grep bpm|grep -v grep
tibadmin 21882 21875 0 May 27 ? 0:00 /bin/sh ./bpmse_20.sh -Xms512m -Xmx512m /tibco/UpdateCustomer/dat/UpdateCustome
... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: abhijeetkul
0 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
ptree command is not working in zsh. Could anyone let me know the equivalent of ptree command in zsh. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: dhams
3 Replies
3. Gentoo
at work, I'm a UNIX administrator, but at home I use openSUSE 11. One of the commands that I use to assist me in trouble shooting A LOT is called ptree process tree. does anyone know of a ptree for linux? yes, I can just use ps -ef and see who the parent pid is and then 'ps -ef | grep <parent... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: james.witte
4 Replies
4. Red Hat
Can someone tell me the Linux equivalent for pstack and pfiles and ptree which are Solaris commands. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bdsffl
1 Replies
5. Solaris
Hi,
How to kill the processes running under ptree ?
I am noticing lot of processes running under ptree with ssh ? I tried to kill with -9 option which is not working ?
Thanks,
Radhika. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: radhirk
2 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I know how to figure out the list of PID from my application name :
ptree `pgrep MyApp` | awk '{print $1}'
But I dont know how to pipe it for prstat -p <pidlist>
ptree `pgrep MyApp` | awk '{print $1}' | prstat -p ???
I would like to monitor every ptree PID from my application. ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: RickTrader
4 Replies
7. Solaris
Hi,
Recently did a ptree on a vsh PID and found that the only child process underneath the vsh parent is rlogin (telnet session(s)). Is there any way to drill down further from here? What causes rlogin to make vsh go high or is it rlogin? The cpu utilization at times is at 48-49%. We want to... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: troystevens
0 Replies
8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Unix (and Linux) uses a process tree that gives a natural security, by simple inheritance of attributes.
The following ptree script shows it. It runs on all Linux flavors.
Mostly useful for debugging.
#!/bin/sh
# Solaris style ptree
&& exec /usr/bin/ptree "$@"
... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: MadeInGermany
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
manconv
MANCONV(1) Manual pager utils MANCONV(1)
NAME
manconv - convert manual page from one encoding to another
SYNOPSIS
manconv -f from-code[:from-code...] -t to-code [-dqhV] [filename]
DESCRIPTION
manconv converts a manual page from one encoding to another, like iconv. Unlike iconv, it can try multiple possible input encodings in
sequence. This is useful for manual pages installed in directories without an explicit encoding declaration, since they may be in UTF-8 or
in a legacy character set.
If an encoding declaration is found on the first line of the manual page, that declaration overrides any input encodings specified on man-
conv's command line. Encoding declarations have the following form:
'" -*- coding: UTF-8 -*-
or (if manual page preprocessors are also to be declared):
'" t -*- coding: ISO-8859-1 -*-
OPTIONS
-f encodings, --from-code encodings
Try each of encodings (a colon-separated list) in sequence as the input encoding.
-t encoding, --to-code encoding
Convert the manual page to encoding.
-q, --quiet
Do not issue error messages when the page cannot be converted.
-d, --debug
Print debugging information.
-h, --help
Print a help message and exit.
-V, --version
Display version information.
SEE ALSO
iconv(1), man(1)
AUTHOR
Colin Watson (cjwatson@debian.org).
2.8.3 2018-04-05 MANCONV(1)