Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Redirecting script output to terminal Post 302739981 by phunk on Wednesday 5th of December 2012 09:14:53 AM
Old 12-05-2012
Holy mother of God that first post was a pain to read...

Can you [ code ] your shell script for me?

I'm not entirely sure what you're issue is. Try /user/documents/ravi/folder2/folder3.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

redirecting one terminal into an other??

Hi guys; I want to show what am I doing on a terminal into another. I did something close but its not working really good. Example: cat /dev/pts/12 >/dev/pts/13 where 12 is my terminal and 13 its the other terminal. This is usefull for me to share my small unix knowledge to other people... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: piltrafa
4 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Redirecting to standard output from within called script

Hi, How to achieve this? Let us assume the following: There are 2 scripts a.ksh and b.ksh $ cat a.ksh sh b.sh 2>&1 >> /work/log/a_log.txt $ cat b.sh echo "abcd" My requirement is, is there a way to display this abcd in standard output also alongside of writing into a_log.txt?... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: vigneshra
8 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

redirecting SQL output from within a shell script

Hi all I would like to open a SQL session from within a shell script and then redirect the output of the SQL command to a file. e.g. #!/bin/bash sqlplus "/ as sysdba" <<EOF @$HOME/recovery_space.sql EOF I want to redirect the output of the SQL command to a temp file, because... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: soliberus
2 Replies

4. Programming

Redirecting Terminal to Local Application!

i wanted to execute some terminal commands on local linux, parse their output and display it to the user, i checked netcat source code but i couldnt understance it since im new to c (and linux at the same time). so i was wondering if there is away to run an instance of terminal hidden, read and... (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: JonhyM
15 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

redirecting the script output to more than 1 file

Hi, I want to redirect my script output to more than one file without printing the result to the screen. How to do that? ex: echo "hi" >> a.txt b.txt cat a.txt hi b.txt :confused: (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: boopathyvasagam
2 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

redirecting the terminal to file

Hi, I want to save the whole Output of the terminal in a file. I dont want to redirect a single command to a file (ls -l > test.txt), I want to redirect the whole last 40 lines into a file. Maybe i can read out the terminal while working with it, but i cant find a way to save the whole... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: niratschi
2 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

redirecting script output

Hello, I am interested in taking the output from a script i wrote and using it as input to a different script i wrote. So for example i want to take the output from program2 and use it as a parameter for program1. I didnt think i could use the >> symbols because i think that is just for .txt... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: GmGeubt
4 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Redirecting output for the entire script

Hi All, I am trying to redirect output for every line in a korn shell script that is going to generate output and append it to a log file. I have been doing this after EACH and every line that is going to produce output: command 1 >> test.log command 2 >> test.log command 3 >>... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: MIA651
5 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Redirecting command output to a file in a shell script

Hello All, I have some unique requirement. I have written a very lengthy script which calls number of resource script to execute a particular task. What I want is output of each command(called from main script and resource scripts) should go to a... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: anand.shah
3 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Redirecting terminal to variable

when i do something like this: bona=$(echo hi2 > /dev/pts/1 ; printf '%s\n' "" | sed '/^$/d') i get: hi2 and the $bona variable is empty, when I run: echo ${bona} i get the result "hi2" outside of the variable. I want it stored in the bona variable with nothing outputted to the... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: SkySmart
6 Replies
addresses(5)                                                    File Formats Manual                                                   addresses(5)

NAME
addresses - formats for Internet mail addresses INTRODUCTION
A mail address is a string of characters containing @. Every mail address has a local part and a domain part. The domain part is everything after the final @. The local part is everything before. For example, the mail addresses God@heaven.af.mil @heaven.af.mil @at@@heaven.af.mil all have domain part heaven.af.mil. The local parts are God, empty, and @at@. Some domains have owners. It is up to the owner of heaven.af.mil to say how mail messages will be delivered to addresses with domain part heaven.af.mil. The domain part of an address is interpreted without regard to case, so God@heaven.af.mil God@HEAVEN.AF.MIL God@Heaven.AF.Mil all refer to the same domain. There is one exceptional address that does not contain an @: namely, the empty string. The empty string cannot be used as a recipient address. It can be used as a sender address so that the real sender doesn't receive bounces. QMAIL EXTENSIONS
The qmail system allows several further types of addresses in mail envelopes. First, an envelope recipient address without an @ is interpreted as being at envnoathost. For example, if envnoathost is heaven.af.mil, the address God will be rewritten as God@heaven.af.mil. Second, the address #@[] is used as an envelope sender address for double bounces. Third, envelope sender addresses of the form pre@host-@[] are used to support variable envelope return paths (VERPs). qmail-send will re- write pre@host-@[] as prerecip=domain@host for deliveries to recip@domain. Bounces directly from qmail-send will come back to pre@host. CHOOSING MAIL ADDRESSES
Here are some suggestions on choosing mail addresses for the Internet. Do not use non-ASCII characters. Under RFC 822 and RFC 821, these characters cannot be used in mail headers or in SMTP commands. In prac- tice, they are regularly corrupted. Do not use ASCII control characters. NUL is regularly corrupted. CR and LF cannot be used in some combinations and are corrupted in all. None of these characters are usable on business cards. Avoid spaces and the characters "<>()[],;: These all require quoting in mail headers and in SMTP. Many existing mail programs do not handle quoting properly. Do not use @ in a local part. @ requires quoting in mail headers and in SMTP. Many programs incorrectly look for the first @, rather than the last @, to find the domain part of an address. In a local part, do not use two consecutive dots, a dot at the beginning, or a dot at the end. Any of these would require quoting in mail headers. Do not use an empty local part; it cannot appear in SMTP commands. Avoid local parts longer than 64 characters. Be wary of uppercase letters in local parts. Some mail programs (and users!) will incorrectly convert God@heaven.af.mil to god@heaven.af.mil. Be wary of the following characters: $&!#~`'^*|{} Some users will not know how to feed these characters safely to their mail programs. In domain names, stick to letters, digits, dash, and dot. One popular DNS resolver has, under the banner of security, recently begun destroying domain names that contain certain other characters, including underscore. Exception: A dotted-decimal IP address in brackets, such as [127.0.0.1], identifies a domain owned by whoever owns the host at that IP address, and can be used safely. In a domain name, do not use two consecutive dots, a dot at the beginning, or a dot at the end. This means that, when a domain name is broken down into components separated by dots, there are no empty components. Always use at least one dot in a domain name. If you own the mil domain, don't bother using the address root@mil; most users will be unable to send messages to that address. Same for the root domain. Avoid domain names longer than 64 characters. ENCODED ADDRESSES IN SMTP COMMANDS
RFC 821 defines an encoding of mail addresses in SMTP. For example, the addresses God@heaven.af.mil a"quote@heaven.af.mil The Almighty.One@heaven.af.mil could be encoded in RCPT commands as RCPT TO:<God@heaven.af.mil> RCPT TO:<a"quote@heaven.af.mil> RCPT TO:<The Almighty.One@heaven.af.mil> There are several restrictions in RFC 821 on the mail addresses that can be used over SMTP. Non-ASCII characters are prohibited. The local part must not be empty. The domain part must be a sequence of elements separated by dots, where each element is either a component, a sequence of digits preceded by #, or a dotted-decimal IP address surrounded by brackets. The only allowable characters in components are letters, digits, and dashes. Every component must (believe it or not) have at least three characters; the first character must be a let- ter; the last character must not be a hyphen. ENCODED ADDRESSES IN MAIL HEADERS
RFC 822 defines an encoding of mail addresses in certain header fields in a mail message. For example, the addresses God@heaven.af.mil a"quote@heaven.af.mil The Almighty.One@heaven.af.mil could be encoded in a To field as To: God@heaven.af.mil, <@brl.mil:"a"quote"@heaven.af.mil>, "The Almighty".One@heaven.af.mil or perhaps To: < "God"@heaven .af.mil>, "a"quote" (Who?) @ heaven . af. mil , God<"The Almighty.One"@heaven.af.mil> There are several restrictions on the mail addresses that can be used in these header fields. Non-ASCII characters are prohibited. The domain part must be a sequence of elements separated by dots, where each element either (1) begins with [ and ends with ] or (2) is a nonempty string of printable ASCII characters not including any of ".<>()[],;: and not including space. SEE ALSO
envelopes(5), qmail-header(5), qmail-inject(8), qmail-remote(8), qmail-smtpd(8) addresses(5)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:22 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy