I am a linux newbie and I am learning. I need a script that will monitor a port and if active -- only active, not listening or waiting -- then pipe some commands to the screen as if they were typed on the keyboard. Can a bash or perl script do this and if so, could someone help me out?
Hello. I am installing Kali Linux on a laptop with no monitor. The installation goes fine through the external monitor and I can see the GRUB menu on boot, but once it comes time to log in it acts like my non existant laptop screen is my main monitor to type my login info on while my external is... (14 Replies)
Hey everyone,
I have a KVM or External monitor (19" Dell) that I am trying to hook up to a laptop running RHEL 6.3 (via VGA which is the only option). When I connect it, and go to System->Preferences->Display, the max resolution option it provides me for these external devices is 1280x1024. ... (2 Replies)
Hi
We're looking for linux touch screen module (driver) for Dell ST222OT Monitor.
BTW Has someone already tried to use this monitor under linux and the touch screen works? (0 Replies)
Hi,
I have recently installed autosys R11 on my a container in solaris 10. the container has solaris 10. I am now trying to configure the autosys workload contol center on a windows VM. but i can not get the contol center to log into the the autosys server.
when i try to estiblish a... (4 Replies)
is there a better way to check if a port is active on linux and sunos systems?
this is currently what I'm using in my script:
netstat -an | egrep -i "$PORT"
i know this isn't the best way as there could be numbers in that output that has my port number in it but isn't necessarily a... (0 Replies)
Hi,
Can anyone please tell me how to check the status of the serial port ??
for example,in Sun os we use the command pmadm to see the status of the serial port--
So is there any command or method in AIX,So that i can see the serial port status ??
thanks in advance ... (1 Reply)
Hey,
I was trying to configure my laptop's xorg.conf file so I could use a external monitor. But things got messed up and now I can't get the original back (meaning a high resolution desktop on the laptop). What went wrong? How is it possible that the server always gets stuck at the line: ... (1 Reply)
I have been looking for a monitor wich i can hold in my hands comfortably and just sit back and relax with it doing my computer work on it via touch screen. Is it possible since the gps has usb to control my pc wich it? and view my desktop? If not does anyone know of a monitor that would work. Im... (3 Replies)
MOD-ACTIVE(8) System Manager's Manual MOD-ACTIVE(8)NAME
mod-active - batch processing of ctlinnd newgroup/rmgroup/changegroup
SYNOPSIS
mod-active [ ctlinnd_command_file ]
DESCRIPTION
mod-active is a perl script that updates the active file based on its input lines of ctlinnd newgroup, rmgroup and changegroup commands.
It pauses the server briefly while the existing active file is read and rewritten, which not only keeps innd from updating the active file
but also locks against other instances of mod-active.
The input to mod-active can come either from one or more files named on the command line, or from the standard input. Typically its input
is the output from the docheckgroups or actsync commands. Every line which contains the string "ctlinnd newgroup", "ctlinnd rmgroup" or
"ctlinnd changegroup", optionally preceded by whitespace and/or the path to ctlinnd, is noted for the update. Redundant commands, such as
a newgroup directive for a group that already exists, are silently ignored. All other lines in the input are also silently ignored.
After the new active file has been generated, the existing one is renamed to active.old and the new one is moved into place. The script
then displays the differences between the two files.
Any groups that were added to the active file are also added to the active.times file with the string "checkgroups-update".
BUGS
Though innd is paused while mod-active works, it is not inconceivable that there could be a conflict if something else tries to update the
active file during the relatively short time that mod-active is working. The two most realistic ways I can think of for this to happen are
either by an administrator concurrently doing a manual ctlinnd command, or by innd receiving a control message, then mod-active pausing the
server, then the control message handler script that innd forked running its own ctlinnd command while mod-active is working. I've been
using mod-active regularly for several years, though, and never had either problem.
HISTORY
Written by David C Lawrence <tale@isc.org>.
SEE ALSO active(5), actsync(8), ctlinnd(8), innd(8).
MOD-ACTIVE(8)