Check the polarity of your box -- make sure your power cord is plugged in the right way around, the wider prong in the correct side. If plugged in correctly, -m will show threads. If your machine's polarity is reversed, however, the -m hides threads.
/s. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Scott S. Goodwin e: [EMAIL PROTECTED] | u: http://scottg.net aim: scottgnet ----- Original Message ----- From: "Dossy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Wednesday, December 25, 2002 7:58 AM Subject: Re: [AOLSERVER] 3.5.1 no response from webserver and only one nsd process > On 2002.12.24, Scott S. Goodwin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > What OS are you running on? I believe the more recent versions of Linux have > > stopped showing multiple threads as separate entries in ps by default. > > > > Try doing a 'ps -eafm'. The 'm' tells it to show threads. > > That's pretty funny. My ps shows threads normally, and requires -m in > order to hide them. > > # ps -ef | grep nsd | grep www.panoptic.com | wc -l > 8 > > # ps -efm | grep nsd | grep www.panoptic.com | wc -l > 1 > > According to the manpage, -m is "show threads" ... so it gave me a good > chuckle this morning. > > Merry Christmas. > > -- Dossy > > -- > Dossy Shiobara mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Panoptic Computer Network web: http://www.panoptic.com/ > "He realized the fastest way to change is to laugh at your own > folly -- then you can let go and quickly move on." (p. 70) > >
