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lmgrd(1)

lmutil(1)



lmstat(1)                                                            lmstat(1)



NAME
     lmstat - report status on license manager daemons and feature usage

SYNOPSIS
     lmstat [ -a ] [ -A ] [ -c license_file ] [ -i [feature] ] [ -f [feature]
     ] [ -s [server] ] [ -S [DAEMON] ]

DESCRIPTION
     lmstat provides information about the status of the server nodes, vendor
     daemons, vendor features, and users of each feature.  Information can be
     optionally be qualified by specific server nodes, vendor damons, or
     features.

OPTIONS
     -a        Display everything.

     -A        List all active licenses.

     -c license_file
               Use the specified license_file.  If this switch is not
               specified, lmstat looks for the environment variable
               LM_LICENSE_FILE.  If that environment variable is not set,
               lmstat looks for the file
               /usr/local/flexlm/licenses/license.dat.

     -i [feature]
               Prints information about the named feature, or all features if
               no feature name is given. Note that lmstat -i does not
               communicate with the server, and therefore reports raw data
               from the license file, which may differ from what the server
               actually supports.  -f [feature] List all users of the
               specified feature(s).

     -s [server]
               Display the status of the specified server node(s).

     -S [daemon]
               List all users of the specified daemon's features.

ENVIRONMENT
     If no -c option is specified, lmstat looks for the environment variable
     LM_LICENSE_FILE in order to find the license file to use.  If that
     environment variable is not set, lmstat looks for the file
     /usr/local/flexlm/licenses/license.dat.

NOTES
     lmstat -a is a potentially expensive command. With lots of active users,
     this call can generate a lot of network activity, and therefore shouldn't
     be used too often.  In particular, avoid writing scripts that
     automatically call lmstat often.





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lmstat(1)                                                            lmstat(1)



SEE ALSO
     lmgrd(1), lmutil(1).





















































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