8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Solaris
Hello all.
I am new hear and would like to ask a question regarding to the Solaris Crash Analysis Tool.
We are analyzing the results of "thread summary" but not quite sure what the asterisk represents.
Following are the items that asterisk were attached.
50* threads sleeping on a semaphore (49... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: YuW
1 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have a script below for extracting xml from a file.
for i in *.txt
do
echo $i
awk '/<.*/ , /.*<\/.*>/' "$i" | tr -d '\n'
echo -ne '\n'
done
.
I read about using multi threading to speed up the script.
I do not know much about it but read it on this forum.
Is it a... (21 Replies)
Discussion started by: chetan.c
21 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have a unix directory where a million of small text files getting accumulated every week.
As of now there is a shell batch program in place which merges all the files in this directory into a single file and ftp to other system.
Previously the volume of the files would be around 1 lakh... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: vk39221
2 Replies
4. Red Hat
Hello
I have been asked to provide a security patch analysis of servers in my environment. For HPUX and Solaris there are tools wich can be loaded onto the servers to do this. However I do not know of one for Redhat . At this point I must mentioned that the Redhat servers are behind a firewall... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: dmsmith32
2 Replies
5. Solaris
I have installed IBM Java Runtime V1.4.2 in solaris. but when i give java -version, it gets me this:java version "1.5.0_20"
Java(TM) 2 Runtime Environment, Standard Edition (build 1.5.0_20-b02)
Java HotSpot(TM) Client VM (build 1.5.0_20-b02, mixed mode, sharing)
can you please tell me how do i... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ichwaiznicht
3 Replies
6. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi,
I just wanted to know is there any tool avaliable for core analysis on hp-ux. I have heard about q4 utility. But I think it is used for analysis of system crash dump and not for core dump produced by a user process.
gdb doesn't give much information unless the binary is debug-build.
... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: shriashishpatil
0 Replies
7. Solaris
Does anyone know where I can download this software from , or is it part of a software package that has to be bought.
Thanks (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: markdr011
0 Replies
8. Programming
hi all,
can anyone tell me some good site for the mutithreading tutorials, its application, and some code examples.
-sushil (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: shushilmore
2 Replies
DACS.JAVA(7) DACS Miscellaneous Information DACS.JAVA(7)
NAME
dacs.java - DACS Java support
DESCRIPTION
This document describes support for Java provided by DACS.
To enable Java support, DACS must be configured using the --enable-java flag. It may also be necessary to specify the location of the Java
commands and include files. See dacs.install(7)[1].
Note
Java support is currently very limited and should be considered experimental. It is currently only possible to call dacsauth(1)[2] and
dacscheck(1)[3] using the Java Native Interface (JNI) provided. The command line arguments to both of these commands are exactly as
documented in their manual pages. Each argument is passed as a String.
The code is not thread-safe and is probably not suitable for being called many times within a particular process due to assumptions it
makes about dynamic memory allocation.
There are no immediate plans to improve or extend Java support. Using the existing capability to build the JNI layer, however, it
should not be difficult for an experienced Java programmer to build upon the example Java code provided.
With Java support enabled, building DACS will copy the JNI shared library and a .jar file to the library directory (default:
/usr/local/dacs/lib), and the JNI include files to the include directory (default: /usr/local/dacs/include).
The tools/java/jni distribution directory contains a simple script called javarun that demonstrates how to run dacsauth or dacscheck as a
Java application. For example, to validate the Unix password for user somebody, run (as root):
./javarun dacsauth -m unix suff -user somebody -prompt
DIAGNOSTICS
The return codes are as documented in the command's manual page.
AUTHOR
Distributed Systems Software (www.dss.ca[4])
COPYING
Copyright2003-2012 Distributed Systems Software. See the LICENSE[5] file that accompanies the distribution for licensing information.
NOTES
1. dacs.install(7)
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacs.install.7.html
2. dacsauth(1)
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacsauth.1.html
3. dacscheck(1)
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/dacscheck.1.html
4. www.dss.ca
http://www.dss.ca
5. LICENSE
http://dacs.dss.ca/man/../misc/LICENSE
DACS 1.4.27b 10/22/2012 DACS.JAVA(7)