Introduction to PowerExchange Logger for Linux, UNIX, and Windows Commands
Introduction to PowerExchange Logger for Linux, UNIX, and Windows Commands
Use the PowerExchange Logger for Linux, UNIX, and Windows commands to control or stop a PowerExchange Logger process or to display information about PowerExchange Logger processing.
With these commands, you can perform the following tasks:
Stop a PowerExchange Logger process.
Cold start the PowerExchange Logger with an encryption password to enable the encryption of PowerExchange Logger log files.
Display the following statistics about PowerExchange Logger processing:
Status information for the PowerExchange Logger Writer and Command Handler subtasks
Counts of change records processed since the PowerExchange Logger started and for the active logging cycle, current Logger log file, and each PowerExchange Logger group definition
Number of change records that have not yet been flushed to log files on disk for each PowerExchange Logger group definition
CPU time used by the PowerExchange Logger
Memory use, total and for each PowerExchange Logger task
Manually switch to a new set of log files.
Manually have the Writer subtask resume reading source data during a wait interval.
You must issue the commands, except those for starting the PowerExchange Logger, against an active PowerExchange Logger process that is running on Linux, UNIX, or Windows. The command descriptions describe the purpose, syntax, and usage of each command and provide example output, where appropriate. The descriptions focus on issuing commands against a PowerExchange Logger process that is running in foreground mode.
Alternatively, you can use the pwxcmd program to send commands to a PowerExchange Logger process that is running in background or foreground mode on the same system or on a different system. You must use the pwxcmd program to issue commands if you run the PowerExchange Logger process in background mode. You can issue a pwxcmd command from the command line, a batch file, or a script.