This document provides summaries of various Solaris commands for obtaining system information and performing administrative tasks. It lists commands for checking file systems, processes, processors, network connections, installed packages, disk usage, tape operations, NFS mounts, clearing locks, and more. Many examples are given showing the commands in use.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
This document provides summaries of various Solaris commands for obtaining system information and performing administrative tasks. It lists commands for checking file systems, processes, processors, network connections, installed packages, disk usage, tape operations, NFS mounts, clearing locks, and more. Many examples are given showing the commands in use.
This document provides summaries of various Solaris commands for obtaining system information and performing administrative tasks. It lists commands for checking file systems, processes, processors, network connections, installed packages, disk usage, tape operations, NFS mounts, clearing locks, and more. Many examples are given showing the commands in use.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
This document provides summaries of various Solaris commands for obtaining system information and performing administrative tasks. It lists commands for checking file systems, processes, processors, network connections, installed packages, disk usage, tape operations, NFS mounts, clearing locks, and more. Many examples are given showing the commands in use.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as doc, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 2
f -n (or fstyp device) show type of file system (ufs/vxfs)
fuser and pfiles open files
prtconf -V OBP level pgrep, pkill, prstat -a process info and manipulation logins -p|-d local users without passwords | duplicate uids mpstat, prtdiag, psrinfo -v processor information and more traceroute since Solaris 7 troff -man man.1 | dpost | lp print old style man pages sgml2roff lpfilter.1m | troff -man | dpost | lp print sgml (new) man pages fstyp -v list superblock including minfree % tput nice screen output what, ldd, strings information about binaries ctrl-V in vi insert control character ftp> get README | more ufsdump 0f - /filesystem | (cd /mnt; ufsrestore rf -); rm /mnt/restoresymtable dump restore pipe echo \007 get bell to ring comm common (non-common) lines from two files pkgchk -lp /usr/bin/ls which package does ls belong to? df -oi -F ufs free inodes icheck -b blockno filesystem block to file mapping dircmp, rsync, filesync compare directories, sync utilities for things which have to complete nohup /var/tmp/myscript.ksh > /var/tmp/myscript.out & (no risk of terminal being logged out) netstat -pn arp like output when name services are down pwdx, pldd, ptree and more in /usr/proc/bin uname -X basic system information - one item on each line (useful for scripts) read read a line listusers another way of listing users tcopy copy tape nfsstat -m (or check /etc/rmtab) current nfs mount clear_locks clear nfs locks since Solaris 9 - output in powers of df -h, du -h, ls -lh 1024 odin#rpcinfo -u localhost mountd program 100005 version 1 ready and waiting program 100005 version 2 ready and waiting program 100005 version 3 ready and waiting odin# rpcinfo -u localhost nfs program 100003 version 2 ready and waiting program 100003 version 3 ready and waiting odin# updated: 20030206 created: 20021218