Difference between revisions of "CSC220 Lab 1 2010"
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=Question Group 1= | =Question Group 1= | ||
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− | + | : What is the '''path''' of your account? In other words, what subdirectories does one have to traverse to reach your account. | |
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+ | ;Question 2 | ||
+ | : What other subdirectories are at the same height as yours in the directory tree? | ||
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* You will notice that all user accounts are in a major directory called '''Users'''. The ''old'' standard for users on a linux system is to have the users in a directory called '''home''' in the '''root''' directory. | * You will notice that all user accounts are in a major directory called '''Users'''. The ''old'' standard for users on a linux system is to have the users in a directory called '''home''' in the '''root''' directory. | ||
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+ | ;Question 3 | ||
+ | : You will notice that some user accounts still exist in '''home'''. Which are they? | ||
=Question Group 2= | =Question Group 2= |
Revision as of 13:21, 7 September 2010
You can work in pairs on this lab if you wish. Otherwise work individually.
Login
- Login to a Linux box around you using your CSC220a account.
Question Group 1
- Question 1
- What is the path of your account? In other words, what subdirectories does one have to traverse to reach your account.
- Question 2
- What other subdirectories are at the same height as yours in the directory tree?
- You will notice that all user accounts are in a major directory called Users. The old standard for users on a linux system is to have the users in a directory called home in the root directory.
- Question 3
- You will notice that some user accounts still exist in home. Which are they?
Question Group 2
- With Linux, the name of the printers supported are listed in a file called /etc/printcap. Look at its contents.
- Figure out a way to get only the entries from this file that represent printers that are in Ford Hall.
Question Group 3
- Open a browser window and load up the following URL: http://maven.smith.edu/~hadoop/log.txt
- Notice that it is a long log of the output of a research program I have been running recently. It is very long and contains a lot of information: some useful, some not.
- You are going to get a copy of this file into your account. Instead of copying and pasting the text into a file, you are going to use a useful utility called wget. Wget is a Linux utility that allows you to grab Web pages from Web sites, without using a browser.
- Try it:
wget http://maven.smith.edu/~hadoop/log.txt
- Check that the file is in your directory
- Question 1
- How many lines of text does the file contain?
- Question 2
- The second question is to list only the lines that list the real execution time. These lines look like this:
real 23m6.777s
- Go ahead, list the real execution times. What is the shortest time recorded? The longest?
- List not only the real execution times, but also the lines of the form:
processing noTasks = 17240 maxNoTasks = 8, splitSize = 33554432L