10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. AIX
Hi,
What are the differences between concurrent and enhanced concurrent VGs.?
Any advantages of enhanced concurrent VG over normal concurrent vg
Regards,
Siva (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ksgnathan
2 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
I have a folder with sql files that need to be inserted in a DB with SQL*Plus. The thing is that it takes too long to insert them all one by one, so I want to insert them five at a time.
Currently what I use is this:
for $FILENAME in *.sql
do
sqlplus -s $DBUSER@$SID << EOF
... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tr0cken
0 Replies
3. Linux
Hi Guys,
I just wondering if any of the AIX gurus with some exposure to Linux Redhat can tell me whether in Linux ( Red Hat or OpenSuse ) we have a similar option/capability like the CIO (Concurrent I/O) which is currently available on AIX. The reason I'm asking is because in the past we... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: arizah
2 Replies
4. AIX
Hi,
on normal (non concurrent) vgs, it's possible to extend a lun on san-storage , and use chvg -g to rewrite vgda, and use disks with the new size for lvm operations
is the same procedure possbile on a hacmp-cluster (2 node in our case) with concurrent vgs in active/passive mode?
cheers... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: funksen
5 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
We have a very large text file..contains almost 100K lines.
We want to process this file to generate another text file as per our data requirement.
As for now the parsing of data takes 20-25 mins each , for 100K lines.
the current script uses :
While Read Each Line
do parsing..
Done
... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Amruta Pitkar
6 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi
I have a ksh that can have multiple instances running at the same time.
The script (each instance) uses the SAME log file to write to.
Should this cause a problem or is the ksh clever enough to queue write requests to the file?
Thanks.
GMMIKE (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: GNMIKE
2 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
i have a program which uses a java thread that concurrently copies table data with many DB connections (one for each thread)
new to unix, wanted to know if its possible to do a similar thing in a shell script.
for eg
script.sh
trigger 2 stored procs at the same time which are... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: siva_jm
6 Replies
8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi,
I notice in my Sun Solaris 8 sparc workstatin, I am able to login concurrently using a same user ID.
Is there a way to disallow this? That is, at anyone time, the user can have only 1 login session.
How can it be done?
Thanks (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: champion
10 Replies
9. Filesystems, Disks and Memory
Hi
I am fairly new to the Unix environment and need to understand how Unix handles concurrent access to files and how it differs to Win NT.
Any help would be greatly appriciated :) (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: beechwood
1 Replies
10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Can someone guide me in telling me what is a good definition of concurrent users. Is there a website I can go to to get this definition? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mpshaw
2 Replies
userstat(1M) userstat(1M)
NAME
userstat - check status of local user accounts
SYNOPSIS
[parm]...
[parm]...
DESCRIPTION
checks the status of local user accounts and reports abnormal conditions, such as account locks.
If any parm arguments are specified, abnormal status is displayed only for those parameters, otherwise abnormal status is displayed for all
parameters. The section describes the various parameter values that can be used for parm.
Each account with an abnormal status is displayed on a single line. Each line contains the username followed by one or more parameters,
indicating what abnormal conditions exist for the account. The section describes the various parameters that can be displayed.
Options
The following options are recognized:
Display the status of all users listed in
(Quiet) Do not print anything to standard output.
This can be used when interested only in the return value.
Check the status of only the specified user
name. The user must be a local user listed in
Parameters
The parameters that could be displayed to indicate abnormal account status, or that could be used with the option, include the following:
is displayed if an administrator lock is present on the account. This lock indicates that the encrypted password in or begins with An
administrator lock can be set, for example, with
is displayed if the account is locked because the account expiration
date has been reached. days is the number of days that the account has been expired. See the description of the expiration field
in shadow(4).
is displayed if the account's password has expired.
days is the number of days that the password has been expired. days is displayed only if its value can be determined.
is displayed if the account is locked because there have been no logins
to the account for a time interval that exceeds the maximum allowed. days is the number of days that the account has been inactive.
See the description of the attribute in security(4).
is displayed if the account is locked because the number of
consecutive authentication failures exceeded the maximum allowed. num is the number of consecutive authentication failures. See
the description of the attribute in security(4).
is displayed if the account is locked because the account has
a null password and is not allowed to have a null password. See the description of the attribute in security(4).
is displayed if the account has a time-of-day login restriction.
times defines the time periods that the user may login. See the description of the attribute in security(4).
Security Restrictions
Users invoking this command must have the authorization. See authadm(1M).
is not supported for trusted systems.
RETURN VALUE
exits with one of the following values:
did not find abnormal status
found abnormal status
invalid usage or user not found
EXAMPLES
The following example reports all abnormal status for all local accounts.
The following example shows that the account for user is not locked due to too many consecutive authentication failures.
FILES
standard password file
shadow password file
user database
SEE ALSO
authadm(1M), passwd(4), security(4), shadow(4), userdb(4).
userstat(1M)