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1. Shell Programming and Scripting
In bash, you can do something like this:
#!/bin/bash
echo -n "What is your name? " > /dev/tty
read thename < /dev/tty
How can I do the same in python?
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4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I am not sure if I am using the correct terminology but somehow my tty keeps changing on me. The man pages are confusing to me on what exactly the tty is. This is what I see when I run the tty command. Could anyone explain why my tty keeps changing?
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/dev/pts/1
~ $ tty
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5. Linux
It's happened multiple times and I can't figure out why it's happening or how to undo it, but hitting CTRL-S seems to disable the given TTY on 'nixes of various flavors. Killing the pid doesn't bring the tty back, I end up having to use other tty's until I reboot.
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When I do a who command I get the following:
mohit :0 2009-04-07 14:07
mohit pts/0 2009-04-07 17:25 (:0.0)
mohit pts/1 2009-04-09 12:07 (:0.0)
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mohit pts/3 2009-04-16 16:09 (:0.0)
mohit pts/4 ... (1 Reply)
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hi iam very new to linux can anyone tell me about pts and tty
acctually today morning i logged into my pc at 9:51
when i have given #who
it has given
sam tty7 9:51
sam pts/1 10:11
so what does it mean (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: praneel2k
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9. AIX
Hi All
can anyone tell me what is the meaning of tty,or give me an example of this? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: magasem
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10. Programming
Hi gurus,
Need help to code some tools dealing with all the tty thingies, raw mode etc ....
Can you juss point me to some cool links related to tty programming, i've tried google but found none so far :confused:
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cmruncl(1m) cmruncl(1m)
NAME
cmruncl - run a high availability cluster
SYNOPSIS
cmruncl [-f] [-v] [-n node_name...] [-t | -w none]
DESCRIPTION
cmruncl causes all nodes in a configured cluster or all nodes specified to start their cluster daemons and form a new cluster.
To start a cluster, a user must either be superuser(UID=0), or have an access policy of FULL_ADMIN allowed in the cluster configuration
file. See access policy in cmquerycl(1m).
This command should only be run when the cluster is not active on any of the configured nodes. This command verifies the network configu-
ration before causing the nodes to start their cluster daemons. If a cluster is already running on a subset of the nodes, the cmrunnode
command should be used to start the remaining nodes and force them to join the existing cluster.
If node_name is not specified, the cluster daemons will be started on all the nodes in the cluster. All nodes in the cluster must be
available for the cluster to start unless a subset of nodes is specified.
Options
cmruncl supports the following options:
-f Force cluster startup without warning message and continuation prompt that are printed with the -n option.
-v Verbose output will be displayed.
-t Test only. Provide an assessment of the package placement without affecting the current state of the nodes or packages.
The -w option is not required with the -t option as -t does not validate network connectivity, but assumes that all the
nodes can meet any external dependencies such as EMS resources, package subnets, and storage.
-n node_name...
Start the cluster daemon on the specified subset of node(s).
-w none By default network probing is performed to check that the network connectivity is the same as when the cluster was config-
ured. Any anomalies are reported before the cluster daemons are started. The -w none option disables this probing. The
option should only be used if this network configuration is known to be correct from a recent check.
RETURN VALUE
cmruncl returns the following value:
0 Successful completion.
1 Command failed.
EXAMPLES
Run the cluster daemon:
cmruncl
Run the cluster daemons on node1 and node2:
cmruncl -n node1 -n node2
AUTHOR
cmruncl was developed by HP.
SEE ALSO
cmquerycl(1m), cmhaltcl(1m), cmhaltnode(1m), cmrunnode(1m), cmviewcl(1m), cmeval(1m).
Requires Optional Serviceguard Software cmruncl(1m)