Hello,
One of the most command utility commands to see snapshot usage of memory is the "free" command. On openSUSE it is /usr/bin/free and can give something similar to:
total used free shared buffers cached
Mem: 3983588 3513392 470196 0 53568 1090832
-/+ buffers/cache: 2368992 1614596
Swap: 1048572 1047288 1284
Good day.
yeah yeah
To check memory utilization on a system, you can use various tools depending on the operating system. On Windows, you can open the Task Manager (Ctrl + Shift + Esc) and view the Performance tab for memory usage details. On Linux, the free -h command provides a summary of memory usage, while top or htop shows real-time utilization. Additionally, on macOS, the Activity Monitor can be used to view memory statistics.
It is not a command. It is an option for a command. Depending on the command it can modify the actions taken.For cp, mv and rm it makes the command interactive (are you sure). For ls it shows the inodes of files.
You can use the DOS command MEM to show total and available memory, but it only shows the memory for the process that is running the command shell. It will not show the memory in terms of Windows, nor will it work at all for Windows 7.
You can use the ip a command in Linux to display the current network configuration. This command shows detailed information about all network interfaces, including IP addresses, subnet masks, and link status. Alternatively, you can also use the ifconfig command, though it is considered deprecated in favor of the ip command on many modern distributions.
exportfs lists the directory shared and the access control list/home/stuff 192.168.6.100showmount --all also shows exports.
Linux certification is a programming certification. It shows you have a lot of knowledge in programming.
Depends on where exactly you are seeing the letter "s" - could mean a setuid or setgid program.
To display active TCP or UDP connections, you can use the command netstat -an in the command prompt or terminal. This command shows all active connections and listening ports, along with their respective IP addresses and port numbers. For a more detailed view, you can use ss -tuln on Linux systems, which provides similar information with additional options for filtering.
exposition and trade shows
to get the current shell :echo $0also Use the command ps with -p {pid} option, which selects the processes whose process ID numbers appear in pid. Use following command to find out what shell you are in:ps -p $$
what command allows you to configure an administrative distance