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IBM Exam S1000-007 Topic 6 Question 40 Discussion

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Natalie
12 days ago
Ah, the age-old question of how to check system tunables. I say we just unplug the server and see what happens. That's the real test of a good admin!
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Dorthy
15 days ago
I'm torn between C and D, but I think D is the way to go. Who wants to run a bunch of random commands just to find out what changed?
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Ria
3 days ago
I agree, D seems like the most efficient option.
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Vanda
17 days ago
Haha, tunsave -f ./currentconfig? That's like saving your homework in a file called 'currenthomework'. I'm definitely not picking that one!
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Eladia
12 days ago
User 1: I agree, that option sounds too obvious.
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Chantay
24 days ago
Option B seems like a straightforward way to check the changes in the system tunables. I'm going with that.
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Darrel
2 days ago
User 2: I agree, viewing the /etc/tunables/currentconfig file and searching for change marks seems efficient.
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Mollie
9 days ago
User 1: I think option B is the best way to check for changes in system tunables.
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Otis
26 days ago
I would go with option D, using lstuncfg to find changed tunables.
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Malcom
1 months ago
I think the correct answer is D. The lstuncfg -l | grep -v DEFAULT command will show the system tunables that have been changed from their default values.
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Oretha
5 days ago
I think the correct answer is D.
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Helene
7 days ago
Thanks for the clarification!
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Karan
10 days ago
Yes, you are right. Running lstuncfg -l | grep -v DEFAULT will show the changed system tunables.
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Bobbye
20 days ago
I think the correct answer is D.
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Viva
1 months ago
I'm not sure, but I think option A could also work.
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Deane
2 months ago
I agree with Ben, checking the /etc/tunables/currentconfig file makes sense.
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Ben
2 months ago
I think the answer is B.
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