02/21/84 daily_summary Syntax: daily_summary {-control_args} Function: allows system administrators to print a summary of system usage for the current billing period and a list of projects with overspent accounts. It also places a flag in the SAT for each project that has an overspent account or has passed its termination date. Control arguments: -nocutr do not print a list of projects to be cutoff. -nosat do not flag SAT entries. -nosum do not print a system usage summary. -warn for all projects to be cutoff, use a warning flag that permits users to login. Notes: The segments reqfile and smf.cur.sat are assumed to be present in the working directory and are implicit inputs to the daily_summary command. This command writes the system usage of each project in the reqfile on the sumry I/O switch. The usage figures are cumulative from the time that billing was last run. It also writes a list of projects that have run out of funds or are past the termination date and flags their SAT entries on the cutrpt I/O switch. The information about the closeness of a project to its limits, that is used to decide whether to print a cutoff warning message when users on the project log in, is placed in the SAT by this command. The cutrpt and sumry I/O switches must be attached by the caller. ----------------------------------------------------------- Historical Background This edition of the Multics software materials and documentation is provided and donated to Massachusetts Institute of Technology by Group BULL including BULL HN Information Systems Inc. as a contribution to computer science knowledge. This donation is made also to give evidence of the common contributions of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Bell Laboratories, General Electric, Honeywell Information Systems Inc., Honeywell BULL Inc., Groupe BULL and BULL HN Information Systems Inc. to the development of this operating system. Multics development was initiated by Massachusetts Institute of Technology Project MAC (1963-1970), renamed the MIT Laboratory for Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence in the mid 1970s, under the leadership of Professor Fernando Jose Corbato. Users consider that Multics provided the best software architecture for managing computer hardware properly and for executing programs. Many subsequent operating systems incorporated Multics principles. Multics was distributed in 1975 to 2000 by Group Bull in Europe , and in the U.S. by Bull HN Information Systems Inc., as successor in interest by change in name only to Honeywell Bull Inc. and Honeywell Information Systems Inc. . ----------------------------------------------------------- Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute these programs and their documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted,provided that the below copyright notice and historical background appear in all copies and that both the copyright notice and historical background and this permission notice appear in supporting documentation, and that the names of MIT, HIS, BULL or BULL HN not be used in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution of the programs without specific prior written permission. Copyright 1972 by Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Honeywell Information Systems Inc. Copyright 2006 by BULL HN Information Systems Inc. Copyright 2006 by Bull SAS All Rights Reserved