9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
hi,
working on Solaris 10. need your help on ping behaviour that I encountered.
I ping from source to destination
-bash-3.2# ping -s -t 128 10.10.10.200
PING 10.10.10.200: 56 data bytes <===== stops here for 2 minutues before getting reply back
64 bytes from 10.10.10.200:... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: ghostdog74
9 Replies
2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
hi, anyone can help on this piece of truss output?
8094: 0.7028 write(4, 0x0043BE90, 236) = 236
8094: T S H \0\0\0EC020101\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0 "02\0\0 303\0\0 I D
8094: \f %\0\0\0\0 2\0F67F\0\0\0\0 @06FFC99A ;
8094: L D6\0 303
8094: ... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: ghostdog74
6 Replies
3. AIX
On my VIo I see the following for my disks:
$ lspath | grep hdisk6
Enabled hdisk6 fscsi0 200600a0b82193f7,4000000000000
Enabled hdisk6 fscsi0 200700a0b82193f7,4000000000000
Enabled hdisk6 fscsi2 200600a0b82193f8,4000000000000
Failed hdisk6 fscsi2 200700a0b82193f8,4000000000000
$ lspath |... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: petervg
8 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
I'm writing a Korn script but am having trouble because the shell interprets the asterisk in this case. Can anyone tell me if there is a way to fix this so that grep takes in STDIN without the interpretation?
line="30 09 * * 1-4 /home/user01/bin/start"
echo "$line" | grep 'start' (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: sprucio
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5. Solaris
Hi
What means Solaris 10 5/09 and Solaris 10 10/09, I mean the suffix 5/09 and 10/09 ?
thx for help. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: presul
1 Replies
6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
I get the message NOTICE HTFS :No Space on dev hd (1/104), What does (1/104) mean? Is there any link, I can get material on understanding unix message log?
thanks. (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: scomrade
4 Replies
7. IP Networking
Hi Guys,
This is really really urgent. Am looking out for some quick answers.
I'm developing a DNS Resolver client that interprets DNS Query repsonses & pass on the needful to DNS applications.
When an ENUM query(modified to an nslookup naptr query) is issued & an NAPTR RR(Resource Record)... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: smanu
1 Replies
8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I have used SAR -b to get some Unix cache / buffer metrics and the results are confusing me a bit.
The pread/s & pwrit/s are showing 0. However the lread/s and lwrit/s are showing figures. I note also that the bread/s and bwrit/s are showing figures. I believe that pread/s and pwrit/s is not... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jimthompson
3 Replies
9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I executed the following command in the korn shell:
$ variable1="qwerty" ls | sort
and the shell executed the 'ls | sort' command.
I would have expected an error message from the shell, but instead of that the shell ran the 'ls | sort' command and didn't realize the variable assignement. ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: PhilippeCrokaer
1 Replies
sag(1) User Commands sag(1)
NAME
sag - system activity graph
SYNOPSIS
sag [-e time] [-f file] [-i sec] [-s time] [-T term] [-x spec] [-y spec]
DESCRIPTION
The sag utility graphically displays the system activity data stored in a binary data file by a previous sar(1) run. Any of the sar data
items may be plotted singly or in combination, as cross plots or versus time. Simple arithmetic combinations of data may be specified. sag
invokes sar and finds the desired data by string-matching the data column header (run sar to see what is available). The sag utility
requires a graphic terminal to draw the graph, and uses tplot(1) to produce its output. When running Solaris 2.x and OpenWindows, perform
the following steps:
1. Run an "xterm" as a Tektronics terminal: prompt# xterm -t
2. In the "xterm" window, run sag specifying a tek terminal: prompt# sag -T tek options
OPTIONS
The following options are supported and passed through to sar (see sar(1)):
-e time Select data up to time. Default is 18:00.
-f file Use file as the data source for sar. Default is the current daily data file /usr/adm/sa/sadd.
-i sec Select data at intervals as close as possible to sec seconds.
-s time Select data later than time in the form hh[:mm]. Default is 08:00.
-T term Produce output suitable for terminal term. See tplot(1) for known terminals. Default for term is $TERM.
-x spec x axis specification with spec in the form:
name[op name]...[lo hi]
name is either a string that will match a column header in the sar report, with an optional device name in square brackets, for
example, r+w/s[dsk-1], or an integer value. op is + - * or / surrounded by blank spaces. Up to five names may be specified.
Parentheses are not recognized. Contrary to custom, + and - have precedence over * and /. Evaluation is left to right. Thus,
A/A+B*100 is evaluated as (A/(A+B))*100, and A+B/C+D is (A+B)/(C+D). lo and hi are optional numeric scale limits. If unspecified,
they are deduced from the data.
Enclose spec in double-quotes ("") if it includes white space.
A single spec is permitted for the x axis. If unspecified, time is used.
-y spec y axis specification with spec in the same form as for -x. Up to 5 spec arguments separated by a semi-colon (;) may be given for
-y. The -y default is:
-y"%usr0100;%usr+%sys0100;%usr+%sys+%wio0100"
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Examples of the sag command.
To see today's CPU utilization:
example$ sag
To see activity over 15 minutes of all disk drives:
example$ TS=`date +%H:%M`
example$ sar -o /tmp/tempfile 60 15
example$ TE=`date +%H:%M`
example$ sag -f /tmp/tempfile -s $TS -e $TE -y "r+w/s[dsk]"
FILES
/usr/adm/sa/sadd daily data file for day dd
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWaccu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO
sar(1), tplot(1), attributes(5)
SunOS 5.10 4 Mar 1998 sag(1)