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 sysadm/runcatalog(1) -- run a system administration manager
    runcatalog runs a system administration manager. catalog-descriptor is a catalog descriptor file that contains a specification of the library that implements the manager and any privileges needed by the manager. Catalog descriptor files contain the pathname to the DSO that implements the catalog, the pathname to the DSO that implements the status panel for the object type monitored by the catalog, and a title, description, and list of keywords for the catalog....
 sysadm/runexec(1) -- run an executable program described in an executable descriptor file
    runexec Runs the executable described by executable-descriptor, which is an executable descriptor file. The purpose of an executable descriptor file is to specify certain auxiliary information about a program that can by used by the System Manager (sysmgr(1M)). If operand is specified, it is passed on the command line to the executable described in executable-descriptor.
 runon(1) -- run a command on a particular cpu
    runon executes command, assigning it to run only on cpu n, where n varies between 0 and the number of processors on the system minus one. (For single-processor systems, then, there is only cpu 0.) This cpu affinity is inherited across fork() and exec() system calls. A sysmp(2) call can change the cpu affinity. Note that command may still run on other processors, briefly, to perform i/o or other hardwarespecific actions. runon can not run a command on a cpu that is part of a cpuset unless the use...
 sysadm/runpanel(1) -- run a system administration status panel
    runpanel runs a system administration status panel. A status panel displays the status for an object on the system such as a user account. catalog-descriptor is a catalog descriptor file that specifies which class of system administration objects the status panel is for. object specifies which object in that class to display.
 sysadm/runpriv(1) -- run privileged commands
    runpriv checks to see if you have been granted privilege, and if so it runs the command privilege found in the directory /usr/sysadm/privbin with the remaining arguments. runpriv succeeds if any one of following conditions are met: 1. You are running as root. 2. There is no root password on the system. 3. The file /var/sysadm/defaultPrivileges/privilege exists and has the string "on" as its first line (see defaultPrivileges(4)). 4. There is an entry in the privilegedUsers(4) database granting ...
 sysadm/runtask(1) -- run a system administration active guide
    runtask runs a system administration active guide specified by task- descriptor. Task descriptor files are located in /usr/sysadm/taskdf, and specify the library that implements the task, the privileges it requires, and a task name, description, and keywords used for the search feature in System Manager (sysmgr(1M)). Active guides typically use runtask(1M) to implement their actions.
 rup(1) -- show host status of local machines (RPC version)
    Rup gives a status similar to uptime for remote machines; it broadcasts on the local network, and displays the responses it receives. Normally, the listing is in the order that responses are received, but this order can be changed by specifying one of the options listed below. When host arguments are given, rather than broadcasting rup will only query the list of specified hosts. Any sorting options are ignored in this case. A remote host will only respond if it is running the rstatd daemon, whi...
 ruptime(1) -- show host status of local machines
    Ruptime gives a status line like uptime for each machine on the local network; these are formed from packets broadcast by each host on the network every three minutes. Machines for which no status report has been received for 11 minutes are shown as being down. Users idle an hour or more are not counted unless the -a flag is given. Normally, the listing is sorted by host name. The -l , -t , and -u flags specify sorting by load average, uptime, and number of users, respectively. The -r flag rever...
 rusers(1) -- who's logged in on local machines (RPC version)
    The rusers command produces a listing of users on remote machines. It broadcasts on the local network, and prints the responses it receives. Normally, the listing is in the order that responses are received, but this order can be changed by specifying one of the options listed below. When host arguments are given, rather than broadcasting rusers will only query the list of specified hosts. The default is to print out a listing with one line per machine. When the -l flag is given, a who(1) style ...
 rusersd(1) -- network username server
    rusersd is an rpc(4) server that returns a list of users on the network. The rusersd daemon is normally invoked by inetd(1M).
 rwall(1) -- write to all users over a network
    Rwall reads a message from standard input until end-of-file. It then sends this message, preceded by the line ``Broadcast Message ...'', to all users logged in on the specified host machines. With the -n option, it sends to the specified network groups, which are defined in netgroup(4). A machine can only receive such a message if it is running rwalld(1m), which is normally started up by the daemon inetd(1m)....
 rwalld(1) -- network rwall server
    Rwalld is a server that handles rwall(1) and shutdown(1) requests. It is implemented by calling wall(1) to all the appropriate network machines. The rwalld daemon is normally invoked by inetd(1M).
 rwho(1) -- who's logged in on local machines
    The rwho command produces output similar to who, but for all machines on the local network. If no report has been received from a machine for 5 minutes then rwho assumes the machine is down, and does not report users last known to be logged into that machine. If a user hasn't typed to the system for a minute or more, then rwho reports this idle time. If a user hasn't typed to the system for an hour or more, then the user will be omitted from the output of rwho unless the -a flag is given....
 rwhod(1) -- system status server
    Rwhod is the server which maintains the database used by the rwho(1C) and ruptime(1C) programs. Its operation is predicated on the ability to broadcast or multicast messages on a network. Rwhod is started at system initialization if the configuration flag rwhod is set ``on'' with chkconfig(1M). Site-dependent options and arguments to rwhod belong in the file /etc/config/rwhod.options. Rwhod operates as both a producer and consumer of status information. As a producer of information it periodic...
 s2p(1) -- Sed to Perl translator
    S2p takes a sed script specified on the command line (or from standard input) and produces a comparable perl script on the standard output.
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