239 lines
6.5 KiB
Groff
239 lines
6.5 KiB
Groff
.\" Copyright (c) 1992 Carnegie Mellon University
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.\" All Rights Reserved.
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.\"
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.\" Permission to use, copy, modify and distribute this software and its
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.\" documentation is hereby granted, provided that both the copyright
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.\" notice and this permission notice appear in all copies of the
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.\" software, derivative works or modified versions, and any portions
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.\" thereof, and that both notices appear in supporting documentation.
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.\"
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.\" CARNEGIE MELLON ALLOWS FREE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE IN ITS "AS IS"
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.\" CONDITION. CARNEGIE MELLON DISCLAIMS ANY LIABILITY OF ANY KIND FOR
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.\" ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
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.\"
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.\" Carnegie Mellon requests users of this software to return to
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.\"
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.\" Software Distribution Coordinator or Software_Distribution@CS.CMU.EDU
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.\" School of Computer Science
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.\" Carnegie Mellon University
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.\" Pittsburgh PA 15213-3890
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.\"
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.\" any improvements or extensions that they make and grant Carnegie Mellon
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.\" the rights to redistribute these changes.
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.\"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
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.\" HISTORY
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.\" $Log: supservers.8,v $
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.\" Revision 1.1.1.1 1993/05/21 14:52:16 cgd
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.\" initial import of CMU's SUP to NetBSD
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.\"
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.\" Revision 1.3 92/08/11 12:08:50 mrt
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.\" Documented -C switch
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.\" [92/08/11 mrt]
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.\"
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.TH SUPSERVERS 8 1/16/86
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.CM 1
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.SH "NAME"
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supfilesrv, supscan \- sup server processes
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.SH "SYNOPSIS"
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supfilesrv
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[
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.I
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-l
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] [
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.I
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-q
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] [
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.I
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-N
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] [
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.I
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-P
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] [
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.I -C MaxChildren
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]
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.br
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supscan [
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.I
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-v
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] [
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.I
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-s
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] [
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.I
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collection
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] [
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.I
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basedir
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]
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.SH "DESCRIPTION"
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.I
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Supfilesrv
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is the server processes used to interact with
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.I
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sup
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client processes via the IP/TCP network protocol.
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This server
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normally is expected to be running on server machines at all times.
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Each machine with files of interest to users on other machines is
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expected to be a file server and should run
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.I
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supfilesrv.
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A file server machine will service requests for both "private" and
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"system" file collections.
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No special action is necessary to support
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private collections, as the client user is expected to supply all
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necessary information.
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For system collections, if the base directory
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is not the default (see FILES below), an entry must be put into
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the directory list file; this entry is a single text line containing
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the name of the collection, one or more spaces, and the name of the
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base directory for that collection.
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Each collection should have
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an entry in the host list file; this entry is a single text line
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containing the name of the collection, one or more spaces, and
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the name of the host machine acting as file server for that collection.
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Details of setting up a file collection for the file server are
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described in the manual entry for
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.I
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sup(1).
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.I
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Supfilesrv
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generally runs as a network server process that listens for connections,
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and for each connection (double-)forks a process to handle the interaction
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with the client.
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However, with the -l flag, no forking will take place:
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the server will listen for a network connection, handle it, and exit.
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This is useful for debugging the servers in "live" mode rather than as
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daemons.
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For debugging purposes, the -P "debugging ports" flag can be used.
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It will cause the selection of an alternate, non-privileged set of
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TCP ports instead of the usual ports, which are reserved for the
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active server processes. The -N "network debugging" flag can be used
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to produce voluminous messages describing the network communication
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progress and status. The more -N switches that you use the more output
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you get. Use 3 (separated by spaces: -N -N -N) to get a complete record
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of all network messages. Log messages are printed by
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.I syslog
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on
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.I daemon.log .
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To suppress
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log messages, the -q "quiet" flag can be used.
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Normally the
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.I supfilesrv
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will only respond to 3 requests simultaneously, forking a child
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process for each client. If it gets additional requests it will respond
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with the error FSSETUPBUSY. The -C MaxChildren switch can be used
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to increase (or decrease) this number.
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.SH "SUPSCAN"
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It is possible to pre-compile a list of the files in a collection
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to make
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.I
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supfilesrv
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service that collection much faster. This can be done by running
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.I
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supscan
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on the desired collection on the repository machine. This produces a
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list of all the files in the collection at the time of the
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.I
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supscan;
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subsequent upgrades will be based on this list of files rather than
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actually scanning the disk at the time of the upgrade. Of course,
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the upgrade will consequently bring the client machine up to the status
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of the repository machine as of the time of the
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.I
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supscan
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rather than as of the time of the upgrade; hence, if
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.I
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supscan
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is used, it should be run periodically on the
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collection.
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This facility is useful for extremely large file collections
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that are upgraded many times per day, such as the CMU UNIX system
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software. The "verbose" flag
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.I
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-v
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will cause
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.I
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supscan
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to produce output messages as it scans the files in the collection.
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The "system" flag
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.I
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-s
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will cause
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.I
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supscan
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to scan all system collections residing on the current host.
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The
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.I
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basedir
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parameter must be specified if the collection is a private
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collection whose base directory is not the default.
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.SH "FILES"
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.TP
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/usr
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default base directory for a collection
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.TP
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/usr/cs/lib/supfiles/coll.dir
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directory list file for file server
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.TP
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/usr/cs/lib/supfiles/coll.host
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host list file for system sups.
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.TP
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<base-directory>/sup/<collection>/*
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files used by file server (see
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.I
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sup(1))
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.TP
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<base-directory>/sup/<collection>/list
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list file used by
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.I
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supscan
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to create file list
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.TP
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<base-directory>/sup/<collection>/scan
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file list created by
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.I
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supscan
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from list file
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.i0
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.DT
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.PP
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.SH "SEE ALSO"
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sup(1)
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.br
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.I
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The SUP Software Upgrade Protocol,
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S.
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A.
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Shafer, CMU Computer Science Dept., 1985.
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.SH "DIAGNOSTICS"
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The file server places log messages on the
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standard and diagnostic output files.
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The process name and process
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id number generally accompany each message for diagnostic purposes.
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.SH "HISTORY"
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.TP
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31-July-92 Mary Thompson (mrt) at Carnegie Mellon University
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Removed references to supnameserver which has not existed for
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a long time. Update a few file names. Added -C switch.
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.TP
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21-May-87 Glenn Marcy (gm0w) at Carnegie-Mellon University
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Updated documentation for 4.3; changed /usr/cmu to /usr/cs.
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.TP
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15-Jan-86 Glenn Marcy (gm0w) at Carnegie-Mellon University
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Updated documentation; -s switch to supscan.
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.TP
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23-May-85 Steven Shafer (sas) at Carnegie-Mellon University
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Supscan created and documented; also -N flag.
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.TP
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04-Apr-85 Steven Shafer (sas) at Carnegie-Mellon University
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Created.
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