I just had this idea of using Android (a linux derivative) to monitor heart rates of patients with a history of cardiac problems. There are plenty apps around that monitor heart rates, but none for people that require medical attention when their heart rate drops below a certain level for more than, say, a minute. The app could automatically alert the nearest medical staff when the individual is incapacitated. While smart phones make our lives easier, soon they will also be utilised in areas where they can save lives.
Hello,
can someone please suggest how do I configure heartbeat communication to user broadcasting instead of multicasting for redhat cluster setup.
Thanks, (3 Replies)
Hi everyone. Our professor in Operating Systems gave us a research work about the Heart OS and Love OS. We were told that they were old operating systems from UNIX but I couldn't find any information about them from google. I hope someone here could point me to the right direction. Thanks! (7 Replies)
Hi,
May i know the tools which will give the below details in a consolidated fashion for some 'X' duration in single and multicore processors,
1) How many times and how long scheduler code and kernel threads are executing ?
2) Details about each process, time spent in each state (run, wait... (0 Replies)
I just upgraded to Android 2.2 from 2.1. The GPS issue that was troublesome in 2.1 seems to have been fixed. Some of web browsing seems faster, but it could just be my connection is better today ;) Flash works in some browsers but not very good and it is too slow for Flash apps designed for... (0 Replies)
Hello,
I have a quick question regarding POWER HA ( HACMP ) 5.5 ;
I have four ethernet adapters
en0
en1
en2
en3
en0 is configured as BOOT_IP with IP address
all other ethernet adapters are empty en1 / en2 / en3
so when I configure the service IP and start HACMP , the service IP... (2 Replies)
IP-MONITOR(8) Linux IP-MONITOR(8)NAME
ip-monitor, rtmon - state monitoring
SYNOPSIS
ip [ ip-OPTIONS ] monitor [ all | OBJECT-LIST ] [ file FILENAME ]
DESCRIPTION
The ip utility can monitor the state of devices, addresses and routes continuously. This option has a slightly different format. Namely,
the monitor command is the first in the command line and then the object list follows:
ip monitor [ all | OBJECT-LIST ] [ file FILENAME ]
OBJECT-LIST is the list of object types that we want to monitor. It may contain link, address, route, mroute, prefix, neigh and netconf.
If no file argument is given, ip opens RTNETLINK, listens on it and dumps state changes in the format described in previous sections.
If the file option is given, the program does not listen on RTNETLINK, but opens the given file, and dumps its contents. The file should
contain RTNETLINK messages saved in binary format. Such a file can be generated with the rtmon utility. This utility has a command line
syntax similar to ip monitor. Ideally, rtmon should be started before the first network configuration command is issued. F.e. if you
insert:
rtmon file /var/log/rtmon.log
in a startup script, you will be able to view the full history later.
Nevertheless, it is possible to start rtmon at any time. It prepends the history with the state snapshot dumped at the moment of starting.
SEE ALSO ip(8)AUTHOR
Original Manpage by Michail Litvak <mci@owl.openwall.com>
iproute2 13 Dec 2012 IP-MONITOR(8)