[CentOS] trace?

hadi motamedi motamedi24 at gmail.com
Tue Oct 11 13:03:08 UTC 2011


On 10/11/11, Les Mikesell <lesmikesell at gmail.com> wrote:
> On Tue, Oct 11, 2011 at 6:53 AM, hadi motamedi <motamedi24 at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>>>>>>  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
>
>> Excuse me, you are right. I tried again with your "inotifywait"
>> utility and it notifies me when touching a file . It seems that my
>> previous attempt had something wrong in it. But it seems that the
>> "watch" utility brings nothing . Am I right?
>
> intofywait should be event-driven where watch would run the specified
> command at intervals so it would be a matter of chance to catch a
> momentary event.  You might also be able to see what files had been
> accessed most recently with 'ls -lurt' in the directory which will
> sort the most recently accessed file to the end of the list.
>
> --
>   Les Mikesell
>      lesmikesell at gmail.com
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>
Thank you very much for your help. I tested again and you are right.
If I have chance the 'watch' utility can capture the required event as
well. At the other hand, you introduced me with the 'ls -lurt' new
utility that is helpful my case . So thank you again



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