BOS_GETDATE(8) | AFS Command Reference | BOS_GETDATE(8) |
bos_getdate - Displays the time stamps on an AFS binary file
bos getdate
-server <machine name>
-file <files to check>+
[-dir <destination dir>]
[-cell <cell name>]
[-noauth] [-localauth] [-help]
bos getd
-s <machine name>
-f <files to check>+
[-d <destination dir>]
[-c <cell name>] [-n] [-l]
[-h]
The bos getdate command displays the time stamps on the current version," .BAK" version (if any) and ".OLD" version (if any) of each binary file named by the -file argument. (The BOS Server automatically creates ".BAK" and ".OLD" versions when new binaries are installed with the bos install command.) The files must reside in the /usr/lib/openafs directory on the server machine named by the -server argument unless the -dir argument indicates an alternate directory.
To revert to the ".BAK" version of a binary, use the bos uninstall command. To remove obsolete binary files from the /usr/lib/openafs directory, use the bos prune command.
All server machines of the same AFS system type show the same timestamps if the binaries were installed properly on the binary distribution machine for this machine's system type, and if all other machines of that type are running the appropriate "upclientbin" process.
For each file specified with the -file argument, the output displays the time stamp on the current (unmarked), ".BAK", and ".OLD" version. The output explicitly reports that a version does not exist, rather than simply omitting it.
The following command examines the time stamps on the files with basename "kaserver" on the machine "fs2.example.com":
% bos getdate -server fs2.example.com -file kaserver File /usr/lib/openafs/kaserver dated Mon Jan 4 10:00:36 1999. .BAK file dated Wed Dec 9 18:55:04 1998, no .OLD file.
None
KeyFile(5), KeyFileExt(5), bos(8), bos_install(8), bos_prune(8), bos_uninstall(8)
IBM Corporation 2000. <http://www.ibm.com/> All Rights Reserved.
This documentation is covered by the IBM Public License Version 1.0. It was converted from HTML to POD by software written by Chas Williams and Russ Allbery, based on work by Alf Wachsmann and Elizabeth Cassell.
2021-01-27 | OpenAFS |