Or that... :P
On 7/24/05, Joe Wollard [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
As always, look for someone else's existing project and see how they
did it. ;-)
http://phpsysinfo.sourceforge.net/
Good Luck!
-Joe
On Jul 23, 2005, at 9:25 AM, André Medeiros wrote:
First of all, you want to have the
First of all, you want to have the two values in seperate variables.
After reading the contents from the file, do something like:
-8-
function parseUptimeSeconds( $seconds ) {
$resultArray = Array( 'weeks' =
As always, look for someone else's existing project and see how they
did it. ;-)
http://phpsysinfo.sourceforge.net/
Good Luck!
-Joe
On Jul 23, 2005, at 9:25 AM, André Medeiros wrote:
First of all, you want to have the two values in seperate variables.
After reading the contents from the
Vidyut Luther wrote:
Hello,
I have a question on how to get Server side system specific
information via PHP, or just general direction on how to parse some of
the information found in /proc
I just use file_get_contents() on the files in /proc. I would expect
that would be a lot faster
Ok,
If I use the file_get_contents.. how do I actually parse the
contents on /proc/uptime
cat /proc/uptime
1400293.13 1317047.64
What do I do with those two numbers ?
man uptime doesn't really talk about that file.. :/
On Jul 22, 2005, at 2:42 AM, Jasper Bryant-Greene wrote:
Vidyut
On 7/23/05, Vidyut Luther [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Ok,
If I use the file_get_contents.. how do I actually parse the
contents on /proc/uptime
cat /proc/uptime
1400293.13 1317047.64
The first number is the total uptime in seconds, the second number is
the total idle time.
--
ramil
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