Open System Services Management and Operations Guide (G06.25+, H06.03+)
Managing Servers
Open System Services Management and Operations Guide—527191-002
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Determining Usage and Configuration of Network
Services Servers
The following additional information is displayed when you specify the DETAIL option
in the INFO SERVER command:
•
The user who created the server configuration, when it was created, the user who
last modified the configuration, and when it was last modified
•
The automatic startup settings for the server (AUTORESTART, DESIREDSTATE,
and PERSISTENCECOUNT attributes)
•
If the server is an OSS name server:
°
The size of the inode cache
°
The size of the link cache
°
The timeout value used for input or output with the SQL catalog server
•
If the server is the OSS message-queue server:
°
The maximum number of bytes allowed in a message queue
°
The maximum number of message queue IDs allowed at any time
°
The maximum number of messages allowed on all message queues on a node
°
The maximum size of a message in bytes
The information displayed is the configuration to be used the next time the server is
started. The currently running server process might be using different values.
Additional information about recent server errors is available using the DETAIL option
of the OSS Monitor SCF STATUS SERVER Command.
For the OSS message-queue server, you can also obtain information about current
usage by entering the ipcs command from an OSS shell prompt. For more
information about the ipcs command, see the ipcs(1) reference page either online
or in the Open System Services Shell and Utilities Reference Manual.
Determining Usage and Configuration of Network Services
Servers
To determine information about a running inetd, rshd, or rexecd process, use the
ps command. To check the most recent configuration information for inetd, use a text
editor in the environment in which the configuration file actually resides to view the
content of the file.
To determine information about a running portmap process, use the RPCINFO
command. Examples of RPCINFO use can be found in relevant product manuals, such
as the Open System Services NFS Management and Operations Guide.
To check the most recent configuration for portmap, you need to know how the
process was started; the OSS shell show_define command or the TACL SHOW
DEFINE command might be useful if you know that DEFINEs were used when the
process was started.