table of contents
RUP(1) | General Commands Manual | RUP(1) |
NAME¶
rup
— remote
status display
SYNOPSIS¶
rup |
[-dshlt ] [host ...] |
DESCRIPTION¶
rup
displays a summary of the current
system status of a particular
host or
all hosts on the local network. The output shows the current time of day,
how long the system has been up, and the load averages. The load average
numbers give the number of jobs in the run queue averaged over 1, 5 and 15
minutes.
The following options are available:
-d
- For each host, report what its local time is. This is useful for checking time syncronization on a network.
-s
- Print time data in seconds (seconds of uptime or seconds since the epoch), for scripts.
-h
- Sort the display alphabetically by host name.
-l
- Sort the display by load average.
-t
- Sort the display by up time.
The rpc.rstatd(8) daemon must be running on the
remote host for this command to work. rup
uses an
RPC protocol defined in /usr/include/rpcsvc/rstat.x.
EXAMPLE¶
example% rup otherhost otherhost up 6 days, 16:45, load average: 0.20, 0.23, 0.18 example%
DIAGNOSTICS¶
- rup: RPC: Program not registered
- The rpc.rstatd(8) daemon has not been started on the remote host.
- rup: RPC: Timed out
- A communication error occurred. Either the network is excessively congested, or the rpc.rstatd(8) daemon has terminated on the remote host.
- rup: RPC: Port mapper failure - RPC: Timed out
- The remote host is not running the portmapper (see portmap(8) ), and cannot accomodate any RPC-based services. The host may be down.
SEE ALSO¶
HISTORY¶
The rup
command appeared in SunOS.
August 15, 1999 | Linux NetKit (0.17) |