Edit your /etc/syslog.conf, and put in the following line:
One caveat: REMEMBER TO USE TABS! syslog doesn't like spaces...
# Dump everything on tty8 *.* /dev/tty8
[email protected]
From a newbie to another, here is a short script that eases looking for and viewing howto documents. My howto's are in /usr/doc/faq/howto/ and are gzipped. The file names are XXX-HOWTO.gz, XXX being the subject. I created the following script called "howto" in the /usr/local/sbin directory:
When called without argument, it displays a directory of the available howto's. Then when entered with the first part of the file name (before the hyphen) as an argument, it unzips (keeping the original intact) then displays the document.
#!/bin/sh if [ "$1" = "" ]; then ls /usr/doc/faq/howto | less else gunzip -c /usr/doc/faq/howto/$1-HOWTO.gz | less fi
For instance, to view the Serial-HOWTO.gz document, enter:
$ howto Serial
[email protected]
Here comes a short script which will check from time to time that there is enough free space available on anything which shows up in mount (disks, cdrom, floppy...)
If space runs out, a message is printed every X seconds to the screen and 1 mail message per filled device is fired up.
#!/bin/sh # # $Id: check_hdspace,v 1.18 1996/12/11 22:33:29 root Exp root $ # # # Since I got mysterious error messages during compile when # tmp files filled up my disks, I wrote this to get a warning # before disks are full. # # If this stuff saved your servers from exploding, # send praising email to [email protected]. # If your site burns down because of this, sorry but I # warned you: no comps. # If you really know how to handle sed, please forgive me :) # # # Shoot and forget: Put 'check_hdspace &' in rc.local. # Checks for free space on devices every $SLEEPTIME sec. # You even might check your floppies or tape drives. :) # If free space is below $MINFREE (kb), it will echo a warning # and send one mail for each triggering device to $MAIL_TO_ME. # If there is more free space than trigger limit again, # mail action is also armed again. # # TODO: Different $MINFREE for each device. # Free /*tmp dirs securely from old junk stuff if no more free space. DEVICES='/dev/sda2 /dev/sda8 /dev/sda9' # device; your put disks here MINFREE=20480 # kb; below this do warning SLEEPTIME=10 # sec; sleep between checks MAIL_TO_ME='root@localhost' # fool; to whom mail warning # ------- no changes needed below this line (hopefully :) ------- MINMB=0 ISFREE=0 MAILED="" let MINMB=$MINFREE/1024 # yep, we are strict :) while [ 1 ]; do DF="`/bin/df`" for DEVICE in $DEVICES ; do ISFREE=`echo $DF | sed s#.\*$DEVICE" "\*[0-9]\*""\*[0-9]\*" "\*## | sed s#" ".\*##` if [ $ISFREE -le $MINFREE ] ; then let ISMB=$ISFREE/1024 echo "WARNING: $DEVICE only $ISMB mb free." >&2 #echo "more stuff here" >&2 echo -e "\a\a\a\a" if [ -z "`echo $MAILED | grep -w $DEVICE`" ] ; then echo "WARNING: $DEVICE only $ISMB mb free. (Trigger is set to $MINMB mb)" \ | mail -s "WARNING: $DEVICE only $ISMB mb free!" $MAIL_TO_ME MAILEDH="$MAILED $DEVICE" MAILED=$MAILEDH # put further action here like cleaning # up */tmp dirs... fi elif [ -n "`echo $MAILED | grep -w $DEVICE`" ] ; then # Remove mailed marker if enough disk space # again. So we are ready for new mailing action. MAILEDH="`echo $MAILED | sed s#$DEVICE##`" MAILED=$MAILEDH fi done sleep $SLEEPTIME done
If you're like me, you have a list with 430 subscribers, plus 100+ messages per day coming in over UUCP. Well, what's a hacker to do with these huge logs? Install chklogs, that's what. Chklogs is written by Emilio Grimaldo, [email protected]
, and the current version 1.8 available from ftp.iaehv.nl:/pub/users/grimaldo/chklogs-1.8.tar.gz. It's pretty self explanatory to install(you will, of course, check out the info in the doc subdirectory). Once you've got it installed, add a crontab entry like this:
While you're at it, mention to the author how nice a peice of software this is:)
# Run chklogs at 9:00PM daily. 00 21 * * * /usr/local/sbin/chklogs -m
[email protected]
Create a file called rmcores(the author calls it handle-cores) with the following in it:
#!/bin/sh USAGE="$0 <directory> <message-file>" if [ $# != 2 ] ; then echo $USAGE exit fi echo Deleting... find $1 -name core -atime 7 -print -type f -exec rm {} \; echo e-mailing for name in `find $1 -name core -exec ls -l {} \; | cut -c16-24` do echo $name cat $2 | mail $name done
And have a cron job run it every so often.
[email protected]
Quick way to move an entire tree of files from one disk to another
[ Change from cd /source/directory; tar....etc. to prevent possibility of trashing directory in case of disaster. Thanks to Jim Dennis, [email protected], for letting me know. -Maint. ]
(cd /source/directory && tar cf - . ) | (cd /dest/directory && tar xvfp -)
[email protected]
Ever wondered which directories are the biggest on your computer? Here's how to find out.
du -S | sort -n
Kudos go to John Fisk, creator of the Linux Gazette. This is an excellent e-zine plus, it's FREE!!! Now what more could you ask? Check it out at:
BTW, It turns out that (1) LG is now out on a monthly basis, and (2) John Fisk no longer maintains it, the fellows at SSC do.
http://www.linuxgazette.com
[email protected]
I don't know if many people have this problem, but there is a "feature" of GNU make version 3.70 that I don't like. It is that VPATH acts funny if you give it an absolute pathname. There is an extremely solid patch that fixes this, which you can get from Paul D. Smith <[email protected]>
. He also posts the documentation and patch after every revision of GNU make on the newsgroup "gnu.utils.bug" Generally, I apply this patch and recompile gmake on every system I have access to.
[email protected]
Q: How do I stop e2fsck from checking my disk every time I boot up.
A: When you rebuild the kernel, the filesystem is marked as 'dirty' and so your disk will be checked with each boot. The fix is to run:
rdev -R /zImage 1
This fixes the kernel so that it is no longer convinced that the filesystem is dirty.
Note: If using lilo, then add read-only
to your linux setup in your lilo config file (Usually /etc/lilo.conf)
[email protected]
If you often get device busy errors on shutdown that leave the filesystem in need of an fsck upon reboot, here is a simple fix:
To /etc/rc.d/init.d/halt
or /etc/rc.d/rc.0
, add the line
for all your mounted filesystems except /, before the call to umount -a. This means if, for some reason, shutdown fails to kill all processes and umount the disks they will still be clean on reboot. Saves a lot of time at reboot for me.
mount -o remount,ro /mount.dir
Simon Amor, [email protected]
ls -l | sort +4n
Or, for those of you really scrunched for space this takes awhile but works great:
cd / ls -lR | sort +4n
[email protected]
#!/bin/sh # /usr/local/bin/print # a simple formatted printout, to enable someone to # 3-hole punch the output and put it in a binder cat $1 | pr -t -o 5 -w 85 | lpr
[email protected]
I call this script 'forall'. Use it like this:
Here's forall:
forall /usr/include grep -i ioctl forall /usr/man grep ioctl
#!/bin/sh if [ 1 = `expr 2 \> $#` ] then echo Usage: $0 dir cmd [optargs] exit 1 fi dir=$1 shift find $dir -type f -print | xargs "$@"
[email protected]
Here is a simple two-liner which recursively descends a directory hierarchy removing emacs auto-save (#) and backup (~) files, .o files, and TeX .log files. It also compresses .tex files and README files. I call it 'squeeze' on my system.
#!/bin/sh #SQUEEZE removes unnecessary files and compresses .tex and README files #By Barry tolnas, [email protected] # echo squeezing $PWD find $PWD \( -name \*~ -or -name \*.o -or -name \*.log -or -name \*\#\) -exec rm -f {} \; find $PWD \( -name \*.tex -or -name \*README\* -or -name \*readme\* \) -exec gzip -9 {} \;
[email protected]
-OR-
ps -aux | sort +4n
ps -aux | sort +5n
Tips-HOWTO Maintainer
I do a lot of C programming in my spare time, and I've taken the time to rig vi to be C friendly. Here's my .exrc:
set autoindent set shiftwidth=4 set backspace=2 set ruler
What does this do? autoindent causes vi to automatically indent each line following the first one indented, shiftwidth sets the distance of ^T to 4 spaces, backspace sets the backspace mode, and ruler makes it display the line number. Remember, to go to a specific line number, say 20, use:
vi +20 myfile.c
Most hackers already have ctags on their computers, but don't use it. It can be very handy for editing specific functions. Suppose you have a function, in one of many source files in a directory for a program you're writing, and you want to edit this function for updates. We'll call this function foo(). You don't where it is in the source file, either. This is where ctags comes in handy. When run, ctags produces a file named tags in the current dir, which is a listing of all the functions, which files they're in and where they are in said files. The tags file looks like this:
ActiveIconManager iconmgr.c /^void ActiveIconManager(active)$/ AddDefaultBindings add_window.c /^AddDefaultBindings ()$/ AddEndResize resize.c /^AddEndResize(tmp_win)$/ AddFuncButton menus.c /^Bool AddFuncButton (num, cont, mods, func, menu, item)$/ AddFuncKey menus.c /^Bool AddFuncKey (name, cont, mods, func, menu, win_name, action)$/ AddIconManager iconmgr.c /^WList *AddIconManager(tmp_win)$/ AddIconRegion icons.c /^AddIconRegion(geom, grav1, grav2, stepx, stepy)$/ AddStartResize resize.c /^AddStartResize(tmp_win, x, y, w, h)$/ AddToClientsList workmgr.c /^void AddToClientsList (workspace, client)$/ AddToList list.c /^AddToList(list_head, name, ptr)$/
To edit, say AddEndResize() in vim, run:
This will bring the appropriate file up in the editor, with the cursor located at the beginning of the function.
vim -t AddEndResize
[email protected]
This is a fairly common problem, almost to the point of being a FAQ. I don't know if RedHat has fixed this bug in their distribution, but you can repair it yourself. If you look in your /etc/hosts file, you will find it looks something like:
127.0.0.1 localhost yourbox
When sendmail starts, it does a lookup on your hostname(in this example, yourbox). It then finds that the IP for yourbox is 127.0.0.1, sendmail doesn't like this, so it does the lookup again. It continues with this for a while until it eventually gives up and exits. Fixing the problem is extremely easy, edit your /etc/hosts file and change it to something like this:
127.0.0.1 localhost 10.56.142.1 yourbox
[email protected]
RedHat's distribution comes with color-ls, however why they don't configure it for colour use by default is beyond me. Here's to fix it.
First, type eval `DIRCOLORS`
Next, alias ls='ls --color=auto'
And put the 'alias.....' in your /etc/bashrc
[email protected]
What if you're compiling and you've missed a library that needed linking in? All gcc reports are function names... Here's a simple command that'll find what you're looking for:
for i in *; do echo $i:;nm $i|grep tgetnum 2>/dev/null;done
Where tgetnum is the name of the function you're looking for.
You probably compiled the program into a binary named test, didn't you? Linux has a program called test, which tests if a certain condition is true, it never produces any output on the screen. Instead of just typing test, try: ./test