Tested on Solaris.
The format is JJJJJ YR-MO-DA HH:MM:SS TT L DUT1 msADV UTC(NIST) OTM and is explained more fully here: http://tf.nist.gov/service/acts.htm Show Sample Output
This will give you a friendly warning if a command doesn't exists. Show Sample Output
I wasn't sure how to display the image, so I thought I'd try xml for a different twist. Show Sample Output
Same thing just a different way to get there. You will need lynx
On my cluster a D in the states column means it is time to reboot the server.
For disk space constraint testing. Leaves a little space available for creating temp files, etc. Easily free up the used disk space again by deleting the dummy00 file. Can tailor the testing by building smaller 'blocks' to suit the needs of the testing. WARNING: do not do this to the '/' (root) filesystem unless you know what you are doing... on some systems it could crash the OS.
Mirror the entire NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day archive, all the way from 1995. The archive is close to 2.5 GB, with lots of files, so give it some time. The logs can be redirected to a file using '-o somefile'. You might also want to try '-nH' and the '--cut-dirs' options
Especially for sysadmins when they don't want to waste time to add -p flag on the N processes of a processname.
In the old school, you did ;
pgrep processname
and typing strace -f -p 456 -p 678 -p 974...
You can add -f argument to the function. That way, the function will deal with pgrep to match the command-line.
Example :
processname -f jrockit
for Mac OS X Show Sample Output
Not perl but shorter.
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