I have some questions.First, how can i obtain a process execution time ( after it terminated)??? Second, in a multi-core system like SMP how can i run different processes on different cores explicitly? i.e. how can i assign a process to a specific core?
I am outstation and having laptop with windows and internet connection. I want to check one small program on linux. kindly tell if some free linux server is available on internet where I can upload my program, compile and execute. The program is generic and there is no restrictions regarding linux version.
I'm just wondering what the limits for time are. I have a program that always takes exactly 20 ms, so I assume this is the lowest it can measure, but I want to see if there's some sort of documentation of this.
i m using gcc to compile certain programs.they get successfully compiled but fail to execute.Here is a sample code and the error [tommy@tommy cprog]$ vi test.c
#include<stdio.h> int main() {[code]....
a similar problem arises with codeblocks for the same program.the error is the same even when it is just main() and absence of return 0; the problem exists also on c++.i m using Fedora 15
I went to an interview last week and there was this guy who asked a simple question that i have been trying to solve for a couple of days. I tried google but i just cant get the search keywords right. The result were just useless. Well, the question is : "How can we allocate a limited memory to a process before we start its execution" well, the question is related to an X11 system so may be some flags must be set to limit its memory.
In gui validation if user enters string in integer requiring field, a dialog box pops out. So on clicking the button i want to stop the program execution and return to the previous jframe(either the same one or newly created object of it).
How can i handle this in java. I tried calling main(); but it doesn't work. Also System.exit(0); doensn't work.
In my program(C++), I have a ping function call which will ping the specified IP and returns the result. The problem is, my code does not print the o/p to the terminal window after calling the ping fucntion for the first time. but, the cout statements exist before the ping function call, works fine. When i debug it using strace i found that output filedescriptor is getting closed some where through close(1), before returning from ping call. What would be the issue, can u please some one explains me what the problem is.
I'm trying to figure out how to continue execution of a Python program while a background task is going on.
In bash, it is adding "&" to the end as in:
Code: #! /bin/bash find / -iname "*.py" > /tmp/all_pys & echo "looking for all python scripts and putting them in /tmp/all_pys" (yes, I know I could just put the echo BEFORE the find but I just use it for example)
Say I do that in python (not necessarily running the shell, but perhaps using scriptutil.ffind or something similar), but want to allow the user to be doing something else while running that search in the background, how would I thread, fork, subprocess (not to be confused with the module and Popen) [or whatever I should call it] that?
How can I change the automatic fsck execution at boot time to be above 30 boots? I reboot the system sometimes 3 to 4 times a day. Intel 3 GHz, tower, i386 lenny vmlinuz-2.6.31-686
I want to record an internet radio station starting at 2:00am tomorrow morning. The specific program on the radio station lasts until 6:00am. The command I need to run to record the station is: Code:mplayer http://wjcu.jcu.edu:8001/listen.pls -ao pcm:file=indie_heat_of_the_night.wav -vc dummy -vo nullI'd use cron, but 1. I'm not sure how to and 2. it seems unnecessarily complicated for something that I only want to run once. If cron is the only/easiest solution, I guess I'll just have to resort to that, but I'd rather not.
i wanted to know how can I make my programs or script automatically start at boot time ,for example if I restart my server at any time they start at boot time automatically with no need to any body to start them.
I have a script I would like to have automatically invoked every time the screen is unlocked. Does Ubuntu provide some support for users who wish to do this?
Linux bash inline command to execute a program and limit the resource.As I know, to limit the resource I can use ulimit command.But, the problem is when I set the CPU time limit 1 second, and then I want to execute another program with CPU limit 2s, the ulimit command return an error like this: bash: ulimit: CPU time: cannot modify limit: Operation not permitted and absolutely my program killed in 1 second.So, How can I make the second program running with the CPU time limit 2 seconds?
I have a script that executed 100000 C Programs, reads the commands from a file and executes them. There is a requirement to measuer the time that each of this 100K C programs running.If it exceeds 120 sec I want to Kill that Process.Any Idea to embed this in my shell script?
So, I usually write/find a test case generator for any code that I write. This type of code generally leads to some file output. To be thorough, I try and generate many different files to test my code on.
Say the command is like this:
Is there a way to automate this for many different values of the parameters and generate many different files?
I tried:
I wasn't able to use the $i in the filename, and without it the command gave me no errors, but did nothing else either. I know the Unix command line is very powerful, and I have a feeling that this should be possible, but I just don't know how to do it.
I am trying to write a script to set the SGE job execution order. I named each job with 'job1', 'job2' and 'job3'. I want my script to do: When 'job1' execution is complete, 'job2' is executed; when both 'job1' and 'job2' are complete, 'job3' is executed.
First, I tried this following script and it worked well:
I have seen command like $rm aa dd cc bb ee then something like $ >> zz // it removes zz also Where aa dd cc bb ee zz are the files in my directory. Do not know exactly.
Now my script is able to start server, But I am still have some problem with my script. When the start server command is executed, the control does not pass the line and does not execute further of that line.what is the problem and how can I get smooth execution of the my script. My Script:
I have never set-up a chroot-jailed environment before and I am afraid I need some help to do it well.To explain shortly what this is all about: I have a webserver to which users send python scripts to process various files that are stored on the server (the system is for Research purpose).Everyday a cron job starts the execution of the uploaded scripts via a command of this kind: /usr/bin/python script_file.pyAll of this is really insecure and I would like to create a jail in which I would copy the necessary files (uploaded scripts, files to process, python binary and dependencies).
I already looked at various utilities to create jails but none of them seemed up-to-date or were lacking solid documentation (ie. the links proposed in How can I run an untrusted python script)Could anyone guide me to a viable solution to my problem? like a working example of a script that creates a jail, put some files in it and executes a python script?
I am using CentOS release 5.4 ( 2.6.18-164.9.1.el5xen ) and created an HPC cluster by using NIS ( for user authentication ) NFS ( as file system ) and mpich1 as parallel compilers and utilities and TORQUE as job scheduler. I want to make sure all users should use scheduler for job submission and should not submit the job directly ( qsub job.sh ).
I want to prevent all users from executing executable files created by self , from its home directory .
Suppose if a user create an executable a.out and if he tries to execute by ./a.out it should display an error.We should also allow users to execute normal user level linux commands .How can I implement such a set up in my environment
i need to take the backup some folders encryption formate with password i used gpg encription in the script but it is not taking the password it throos errorthe syntax is#!/bin/bashtar -cvzf test.tar.gz target ; echo "test" | gpg -c test.tar.gz --stdin
Get the list of virtual addresses being accessed by any application during its execution time. I don't want the complete memory map but just the pages which were accessed during an application's execution?
I am calling a service using http post through wget, the command is successfully executing but for each execution its creating a file and saving variable names n data n it. I want to execute this command without creation of a file. Would anyone suggest me what needs to be done in this regard.
My command: wget --post-data 'var1=99&var2=200' http://xyz.example.com:5555/invoke/Samples:httpInvoke For every execution, its creating the files with names: Samples:httpInvoke1 Samples:httpInvoke2 Samples:httpInvoke3
How to get the list of virtual addresses being accessed by any application during its execution time. I don't want the complete memory map but just the pages which were accessed during an application's execution?