Vreme: 10/11/2011 08:07 AM, hadi motamedi piše:
On 10/10/11, John Doejdmls@yahoo.com wrote:
From: Eero Volotineneero.volotinen@iki.fi
2011/10/10 hadi motamedimotamedi24@gmail.com:
I have installed an announcement application on my centos 6.0 server that calls for putting specific voice announcement files under /usr/local/srf/bin/prompt to be played in response to certain conditions occurred . There are a huge number of files in the announcement directory and it seems that just one of these voice files is corrupt . Can you please let me know how can I trace in real time to see which application is going to use this folder and which of these files will be accessed at the moment ? My goal is to find that corrupted voice file in real time .
How about something like this: watch -n 1 lsof /path/to/files
Or maybe: inotifywait -m -e access --format "%T %f" --timefmt "%D %T" -r /path/to/files
JD _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Excuse me, the announcement application program is accessing this folder from time to time to play the appropriate voice announcement file . As there are a huge number of voice files inside this folder, so I need some way to trace to see which file is being accessed when hearing the corrupted voice file . I tried for your "watch"& "inotifywait" utilities but I didn't see any log even when intentionally trying to ftp some files into this folder. It seems that my previous explanation of the problem was not so clear. Sorry again . What can I do to find an appropriate trace method for my case in your opinion ?
Maybe this can help: http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/howto-linux-get-list-of-open-files/
Basically, monitor that application to see what files it opens. Maybe grep to filter only files from specific directory.