by Cath Jennings, ComputerWeekly.comA few years ago, everyone was talking about the real-time enterprise and how it was destined to be the future. The idea was that companies would be instantaneously aware of any important business events taking place so that they could respond appropriately and immediately.But that has not happened because of both the [...]
Hi
Not sure if this can be achieved by unix , but still would like to know if there is any way by which I can do the below given logic
cat sam1 > out1
cat sam2 > out2
when either one of this finished the the next file shd be written in that file, meaning
cat sam3 >> out1/out2... (2 Replies)
Dear experts,
I have an epoch time input file such as : -
1302451209564
1302483698948
1302485231072
1302490805383
1302519244700
1302492787481
1302505299145
1302506557022
1302532112140
1302501033105
1302511536485
1302512669550
I need the epoch time above to be converted into real... (4 Replies)
hello every1,
i'm very hope so anyone here have experience with lib rt like aio linux based.
In first I've a problem with receiving data from aio_buf, i.e. I have received it, but if the next data size less then pervious I've got a noise from a socket. I've tried to fix it by different ways, but... (0 Replies)
Hi friends,
I am new to solaris and looking for a job, when ever i attend interview i get most of the questions on real time problems, every one sak me the same questions what are the problems you face daily.. and what are the types?
i know few like, disk extension,swap memory increasing,... (2 Replies)
Newbie question:
I wrote korn shell script that lets me connect to a cisco switch thru telnet from sun server. I'm wodering if or what command i would use to capture info that is being sent to standard output when the script is running. Putting part of my script below and results.
#!/bin/ksh... (2 Replies)
hi all :confused:
i am wondering if there is a way to convert from EPOCH time to the standard tim, may be using a script or some thing else???????
thanks............................ (5 Replies)
ISGREATER(3) BSD Library Functions Manual ISGREATER(3)NAME
isgreater, isgreaterequal, isless, islessequal, islessgreater, isunordered -- compare two floating-point numbers
LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS
#include <math.h>
int
isgreater(real-floating x, real-floating y);
int
isgreaterequal(real-floating x, real-floating y);
int
isless(real-floating x, real-floating y);
int
islessequal(real-floating x, real-floating y);
int
islessgreater(real-floating x, real-floating y);
int
isunordered(real-floating x, real-floating y);
DESCRIPTION
Each of the macros isgreater(), isgreaterequal(), isless(), islessequal(), and islessgreater() takes arguments x and y and returns a non-zero
value if and only if its nominal relation on x and y is true. These macros always return zero if either argument is not a number (NaN), but
unlike the corresponding C operators, they never raise a floating point exception.
The isunordered() macro takes arguments x and y, returning non-zero if either x or y is NaN. For any pair of floating-point values, one of
the relationships (less, greater, equal, unordered) holds.
SEE ALSO fpclassify(3), math(3), signbit(3)STANDARDS
The isgreater(), isgreaterequal(), isless(), islessequal(), islessgreater(), and isunordered() macros conform to ISO/IEC 9899:1999
(``ISO C99'').
BSD December 1, 2008 BSD