|
Top Document: comp.unix.aix Frequently Asked Questions (Part 1 of 5) Previous Document: 1.009: Monterey / AIX 5L Next Document: 1.101: How do I turn off the "running man" in smit? See reader questions & answers on this topic! - Help others by sharing your knowledge Using SMIT is probably very different from your normal way of doing system administration, but could prove very useful in the long run. In some areas, in particular TCP/IP, NFS, etc., you can also do things the normal way, but it is unfortunately difficult to know exactly when the normal way works. Again, always using SMIT is probably your best way to go, even when you have to learn a new tool. What SMIT actually does is build up commands with all required options to perform the functions requested and execute them. The commands called and the output they produce are stored in the files smit.script and smit.log in your home directory. Looking in smit.script may teach you more about system administration. Top Document: comp.unix.aix Frequently Asked Questions (Part 1 of 5) Previous Document: 1.009: Monterey / AIX 5L Next Document: 1.101: How do I turn off the "running man" in smit? Part1 - Part2 - Part3 - Part4 - Part5 - Single Page [ Usenet FAQs | Web FAQs | Documents | RFC Index ] Send corrections/additions to the FAQ Maintainer: bofh@mail.teleweb.pt (Jose Pina Coelho)
Last Update November 21 2011 @ 12:57 AM
|
