Want to know what files are open ?
lsof
Want to know what files are opened by a specific process ?
lsof -p <pid>
- as an example, I've identified that WebSphere Portal is running as process ID ( pid ) 7725 so I use lsof -p 7725 to see all the files opened by that process
Want to know how large a file is ?
ls -lh
Want to see a file listing in order of modification ?
ls -ltrc
- shows the most recently modified at the bottom of the list
Want to search a binary file ?
grep --text <pattern> <filename>
or
grep -a <pattern> <filename>
- this gets around the error Binary file /opt/IBM/WebSphere/AppServer/java/bin//java matches
- I needed this to search a couple of logs files that contained some binary characters
Want to see files by type e.g. executable ?
ls -lF <filename>
- for example, this adds an asterisk to the listing to mark executable files
Want to list files without typing ls -alF ?
ll <filename>
- this is a useful little alias, as defined in ~/.bashrc
Want to know more about a process ?
Using the above example of WebSphere Portal running as process ID (pid) 7725, there are a bunch of files under the directory /proc/7725/ including: -
cat /proc/7725/status - shows memory utilisation etc.
cat /proc/7725/limits - shows various ulimits including open files etc.
- the first one was useful in confirming that my addition of ulimits -f 40000 to /opt/IBM/WebSphere/wp_profile/bin/setupCmdLine.sh had "taken" - this helped me overcome a "Too many open files" exception
No comments:
Post a Comment