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 dtsdate(1m) -- Sets local clock from a remote dtsd server host
    The dtsdate command sets the local clock of a system to be the same as the host remote_host, running a dtsd server. The purpose of dtsdate is to ensure that clock skew is minimized at initial cell configuration or at host instantiation, because it is difficult to start DCE and its components if the skew is too great. Clocks among all DCE components must be within five minutes of each other, to pre...
 dts_intro(1m) -- Introduction to the DCE DTS commands
    The DCE Distributed Time Service (DTS) provides the following facilities: + The dtsd daemon + The DTS control program (dtscp) + The DTS local clock setting program (dtsdate) The DTS is implemented in the dtsd process. Both clerks and servers use the same daemon. The behavior of the dtsd daemon is determined by the dtscp command. The dtscp control program allows you to synchronize, adjust, and main...
 dts_update(1m) -- Gradually adjusts the clock on the local node to the specified time
    The update command gradually adjusts the system clock to a new time, beginning at the time specified in the argument. The difference between the current clock value and the absolute time specified in the argument is used to adjust the clock.
 du(1) -- summarize disk usage
    The du command gives the number of 512-byte blocks allocated for all files and (recursively) directories within each directory and file specified by the name operands. The block count includes the indirect blocks of the file. A file with two or more links is counted only once. If name is missing, the current working directory is used. By default, du generates an entry only for the name operands an...
 dump(1m) -- incremental file system dump, local or across network
    The dump and rdump commands copy to magnetic tape all files in the filesystem that have been changed after a certain date. This information is derived from the files /var/adm/dumpdates and /etc/fstab. option specifies the date and other options about the dump. option consists of characters from the set 0123456789bdfnsuWw. The dump and rdump commands work only on file systems of type hfs. If the gi...
 dumpfs(1m) -- dump file system information
    The dumpfs command prints the super block and cylinder group information for an HFS file system to the standard output. The file system may be specified by its root directory or the name of the device special file on which it resides. The information is very long and detailed. This command can be used to find file system information such as the file system block size or the minimum free space perc...
 dumpfs_hfs(1m) -- dump file system information
    The dumpfs command prints the super block and cylinder group information for an HFS file system to the standard output. The file system may be specified by its root directory or the name of the device special file on which it resides. The information is very long and detailed. This command can be used to find file system information such as the file system block size or the minimum free space perc...
 dumpmsg(1) -- create message catalog file for modification
    The findmsg command extracts messages from a C program source file and writes them to the standard output in a format suitable for input to gencat (see gencat(1)). The input file will be preprocessed using cpp (see cpp(1)) in order to select print specifiers and handle ifdef, ifndef... conditional cpp primitives. If multiple input files are specified and the -a option is not used, the files are pr...
 dump_clerk_cache(1m) -- Displays the contents of the clerk cache
    The dump clerk cache command displays the contents of the clerk cache on the screen. Use this command when solving CDS problems.
 echo(1) -- echo (print) arguments
    echo writes its arguments separated by blanks and terminated by a new-line on the standard output. It also understands C-like escape conventions; beware of conflicts with the shell's use of \: \a write an alert character \b backspace \c print line without appending a new-line \f form-feed \n new-line \r carriage return \t tab \v vertical tab \\ backslash \n the 8-bit character whose A...
 ed(1) -- line-oriented text editor
    The ed command executes a line-oriented text editor. It is most commonly used in scripts and noninteractive editing applications because, even though it can be used interactively, other editors such as vi and ex are typically easier to use in an interactive environment. If file is specified, ed performs an e command (see below) on the named file; that is to say, the file is read into ed's buffer ...
 edit(1) -- extended line-oriented text editor
    The ex program is the line-oriented personality of a text editor that also supports screen-oriented editing (see vi(1)). (XPG4 only.) Certain block-mode terminals do not have all the capabilities necessary to support the complete ex definition, such as the full-screen editing commands (visual mode or open mode). When these commands cannot be supported on such terminals, this condition shall neithe...
 edquota(1m) -- edit user disk quotas
    The edquota command is the quota editor. One or more user names can be specified on the command line. For each username, a temporary file is created with a textual representation of the current disk quotas for that user, and an editor is invoked on the file. The quotas can then be modified, new quotas added, etc. Upon leaving the editor, edquota reads the temporary file and modifies the binary quo...
 efi_cp(1m) -- copy to or from EFI file
    efi_cp copies files between HP-UX and EFI file systems. The EFI file system is based on the FAT file system and used by the Itanium-based system BIOS to locate an HP-UX bootloader. See efi(4). Without the -u option, efi_cp copies from an HP-UX file system to the EFI volume specified by devicefile; in this case, the destination should be relative to the root of the EFI volume specified by devicefil...
 efi_fsinit(1m) -- write an EFI file system header on a device file
    efi_fsinit writes an EFI file system header on a device file. The EFI file system is based on the FAT file system and used by the Itanium(R)-based system BIOS to locate an HP-UX bootloader. See efi(4). Before any other EFI commands can be run, efi_fsinit must be run to initialize the file system on a device file.
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