Dumps NetVault logs to a text or binary file.
|
Specifies the name of the file to which logs are exported. Depending on the dump format selected, the dump files are created in the binary or text directories under <NetVault home>\logs\dumps (on Windows) or <NetVault home>/logs/dumps (on Linux). If you omit the -filename option, NetVault creates a file named CLI_DUMP_<YYYYMMDD>_<HHMMSS> in the specified format. The binary file has the extension “.nlg” and the text file has “.txt” extension. | |
|
Exports logs in text format, and the text file has “.txt” extension. If you omit this option, then logs are dumped in binary format. | |
|
Specifies the time that serves as the starting point for the log dump. The format to specify start time is YYYYMMDDHHMMSS. | |
|
Specifies the time that serves as the stopping point for the log dump. The format to specify end time is YYYYMMDDHHMMSS. |
At least the jobid option or a combination of the starttime and endtime options must be specified to properly use this utility. A combination of the options jobid, starttime, and endtime can be specified to dump logs for a particular job that were generated within the given period.
Purges log entries up to the specified time.
|
Specifies the time that serves as the end point for the log purge. The format to specify purge time is YYYYMMDDHHMMSS. |
|
Specifies the start date; it is specified as the number of days before the current date. | |
|
Starts the output from midnight preceding the number of days specified with the -b option. You must use this option with the -b option. For example, at 3 P.M., you specify -b 1, logs starting from 3 P.M. the day before are displayed. With the -m option, log messages starting from the midnight of previous day are displayed. If you specify -m without the -b option or with -b 0, log messages starting from the midnight of current day are displayed. If you issue this command at 3 P.M., 15 hours of logs are displayed. | |
|
Specifies one or more characters that you want to use as delimiters. For example, -d followed by two spaces would separate each displayed item with two spaces. | |
|
Displays specific messages. For example, if you specify -o failed, only messages that contain the word “failed” are displayed. You can specify multiple strings using comma as a separator. |
|
• |
|
| |||||
|