a frined from china,welcome me


 
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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? a frined from china,welcome me
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Old 04-12-2007
a frined from china,welcome me

i come from china


my name is merlin

i love linux ,i think you too !! Smilie

if you want to be friends with me ,ask me ,my msn is merlin@live.cn it is my e-mail too

an my blog is http://merlin.cublog.cn

tell everyone a good china linux&unix web http://www.chinaunix.com

if you speak chinese too ,welcom you to there ,

Last edited by merlin; 04-13-2007 at 03:15 AM..
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uustat(1)						      General Commands Manual							 uustat(1)

NAME
uustat - Reports status of and provides job control for remote file transfer requests and other operations SYNOPSIS
uustat [-a | -k job_number | -m | -p | -q | -r job_number] [-s system] [-u user] The uustat command displays status information about several types of file transfer operations. STANDARDS
Interfaces documented on this reference page conform to industry standards as follows: uustat: XCU5.0 Refer to the standards(5) reference page for more information about industry standards and associated tags. OPTIONS
The following options are mutually exclusive; you can use only one at a time with the uustat command: [Tru64 UNIX] Displays information about all the jobs in the holding queue, regardless of the user who issued the original command. There are two types of queues: The current queue lists the jobs queued to run on or currently running on one or more specified com- puters. Use the uustat -q command to examine this queue. The holding queue, displayed with uustat -a, lists all jobs that have not executed during a set period of time. After the set time period has elapsed, the entries in the holding queue are deleted manually with the uucleanup command or automati- cally with the file /var/spool/cron/crontabs/uucp (includes uudemon.cleanu), which is started by cron. When sending files to a sys- tem that was not contacted recently, it is a good idea to use the uustat command to see when the last access occurred, as the remote system might be out of service. Cancels (kills) the process specified by job_number. The person using this option must be the one who made the uucp request now being canceled, or must be operating with superuser authority. This option cancels a process only when that job is still on the local computer. Once the job has been moved to a remote system for execution, -kjob_number cannot be used to cancel the remote job. [Tru64 UNIX] Reports the status of the most recent attempt to contact the specified system. If the request was completed, the status report is SUCCESSFUL. If the job was not completed, the status report is an error message, such as LOGIN FAILED. [Tru64 UNIX] Runs a ps -flp (process status: a full, long list of speci- fied process IDs) for all PID numbers in the lock files. Lists the jobs currently queued to run on each system; these jobs are either waiting to execute or are in the process of executing. If a status file exists for the system, its date, time, and status information are reported. Once the job is finished, that job listing is removed from the current queue. In a status report, a number in parentheses next to the number of a C.* (command) file or an X.* (execute) file represents the age in days of the oldest C.*/X.* file for that system. The retry field represents the number of times the command could not be exe- cuted because of such factors as a failed login, locked files, an unavailable device, and so on. Marks the files in the holding queue specified by job_number with the current date and time. Use this option to ensure that a cleanup operation does not delete files until the job's modification time reaches the end of the specified period. You can use either one or both of the following options with uustat: Reports the status of requests for the system specified by system. The system name must contain only ASCII characters. Reports the status of requests by the specified user for any system. DESCRIPTION
The uustat command is particularly useful in monitoring transfer (copy) requests issued with the uucp and uuto commands, and requests made with the uux command to run commands on a remote system. In addition, uustat also gives a user limited control over jobs queued to run on remote systems. By issuing the command with the appropri- ate option, a user can check the general status of connections to other systems, and cancel copy requests made with uucp and uuto. If uustat is issued without any options, the command reports the status of all requests issued by the current user since the last time the holding queue was cleaned up. Such status reports are displayed in the following format: job_number date/time status system user size file See EXAMPLES for an explanation of this format. EXAMPLES
To display the status of all jobs in the holding queue, enter: uustat -a The system responds with a message similar to the following: heraC3113 Wed Nov 06 17:47:25 1991 S hera amy 289 D.venus471afd8 zeusN3130 Wed Nov 06 09:14:30 1991 R zeus geo 338 D.venus471bc0a merlinC3120 Tue Nov 05 16:02:33 1991 S merlin amy 828 /u/amy/tt merlinC3119 Tue Nov 05 12:32:01 1991 S merlin msg rmail amy The first field is the job ID of the operation, which is followed by the date and time the command was issued. The third field is either an S or an R, depending on whether the job is to send or request a file. The fourth field is the name of the system on which the command was entered, followed by the user ID of the person who issued the command. The sixth field is the size of the file, or, in the case of a remote execution like the last entry in the example, the name of the remote command. When the size of the file is given, the filename is also displayed. The filename can be either the name given by the user, as in the /u/amy/tt entry, or a name that is assigned internally to data files associated with remote executions, such as D.venus471afd8. To display the status of all jobs in the current queue, enter: uustat -q The system responds with a message similar to the following: merlin 3C Mon Jul 15 11:02:35 1991 NO DEVICES AVAILABLE hera 2C Mon Jul 15 10:55:22 1991 SUCCESSFUL zeus 1C (2) Mon Jul 15 10:59:48 1991 CAN'T ACCESS DEVICE The output tells how many C.* (command) files are waiting for each system. The date and time refer to the current interaction with the system, followed by a report of the status of the interaction. The (2) in the third line of the example indicates that the C.* file has been in the queue for 2 days. [Tru64 UNIX] To display all process IDs in the lock file, enter: uustat -p [Tru64 UNIX] To cancel a job in the current queue, first determine the job ID and then issue the command (uustat -k) to cancel the job. To determine the job ID, enter: uustat -a The system responds with a message similar to the following: heraC3113 Wed Nov 06 17:47:14 1991 S hera amy 289 D.venus471afd8 mer- linC3119 Wed Nov 06 17:49:37 1991 S merlin geo 338 D.venus471bc0a To cancel the job with the ID of heraC3113: uustat -k heraC3113 To report the status of jobs requested by system hera, enter: uustat -s hera The system responds with a message similar to the following: heraNlbd7 Mon Jul 15 12:09:44 1991 S hera amy 522 /user/amy/A heraClbd8 Mon Jul 15 12:10:30 1991 S hera amy 59 D.3b2a12ce4924 heraC3119 Mon Jul 15 12:11:11 1991 S hera amy rmail msg To report the status of jobs requested by user amy, enter: uustat -u amy This option displays output similar to that produced by the -s option. FILES
Prevents multiple use of device. Spooling directory. SEE ALSO
Commands: cron(8), ct(1), cu(1), echo(1), ps(1), rmail(1), stty(1), tip(1), uucico(8), uucleanup(8), uucp(1), uulog(1), uuname(1), uupick(1), uusched(8), uusend(1), uuto(1), uux(1) Standards: standards(5) uustat(1)