Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Nohup Command
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Nohup Command Post 60782 by blazix on Friday 21st of January 2005 03:09:18 PM
Old 01-21-2005
The nohup is the current working directory if given at the command line.
If I use in the shell script it is the home directory of the user ie., /opt/user is the default home dir for the user when he logins in.

I have hardcoded the path and also used as a variable but it still remains the same
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Nohup command on Solaris

Hi, I have a general question on using the "nohup" command. As far as I've got it, submmitting a job with no hang up specified, should result in the job running until completion, regardless of whether the session that submitted the job(parent) is still active. This is very helpful when doing... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: errolg
1 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

What's the command for nohup in Oracle

Hello, I need running the process from Oracle in backround. Thank you for your help. C.Abarca (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: cabarcaj
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

nohup command o/p redirection

Hi I am using nohup command in script(say nohup ls- ltr > somefile 2>&1 & ). I dont want any kind of output to be displayed on screen. When i tried the above nohup it still gives me some out put on screen like 2991 Done >somefile 2>&1 Please you let me know what is... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ammu
3 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Problem with nohup command

Hello folks, I have got a script which telnets to different boxes and runs a certain script with 3 run time args. The line from the script which does it is: (sleep 1; echo $USERID ; sleep 1; echo $PASSWD ; sleep 1 ; echo y ; sleep 1 ; echo "\r" ; sleep 1 ; echo "cd $FILEPATH" ; sleep 1 ; sleep 1... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Rajat
1 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

nohup command in a script.......

I want to know how to use a nohup command in the script........ I have to run following command nohup /tmp/app/statuscheck.sh & After typing this command I will type ctrl D to come to the prompt and the that command will run in backround. I want to include that command in a... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: jayaramanit
2 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

nohup command in the script....

I want to know how to use a nohup command in the script........ I have to run following command nohup /tmp/app/statuscheck.sh & After typing this command I will type ctrl D to come to the prompt and the that command will run in backround. Even after pressing & the command is not... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jayaramanit
3 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

nohup command..

Hi.. Can anybody tell me, what exactly the nohup command does & when is it used? Your help is appreciated. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Amol21
3 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Issue with nohup command

Hi everyone, I am starting a nohup from a script (via scheduling system) as follows: ssh user@server "nohup command & ; exit 0" This command is not returning the command prompt untless I press "ENTER". This is causing the schedule to hang at this job and not continue with the rest of the jobs.... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: nimo
12 Replies

9. AIX

Nohup command

I'm trying to run a compress script in the background, but I even though the script is running in the background I get "Sending nohup output to nohup.out." and the screen just stays there. How can I make the script run in background and make my command prompt come back. I was using: nohup... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: NycUnxer
2 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

ssh a nohup command

I have a script I'm creating to spawn netcat listeners on a remote server for copying files at high speeds. The issue I'm running into is that after running the "nohup nc -l -p 12345 | tar -xvf - &" commands I can't get the remote shell to terminate. I'm not sure if this is working as intended or... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: headcr4sh
2 Replies
mnthome(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						mnthome(1)

NAME
mnthome -- mount an AFP (AppleShare) home directory with the correct privileges SYNOPSIS
mnthome [-v] [-d] [-m mntpath] [-n] [-b] [-p password] [-i] [-x mount point] [-u] [-s] DESCRIPTION
The mnthome command unmounts the AFP (AppleShare) home directory that was automounted as guest, and remounts it with the correct privileges by logging into the AFP server using the current username and password. This command also allows you to have guest access turned off on your AFP server too and still have AFP home directories work with "su". When you ssh into another computer using an account that has an AFP home directory or you "su <netuser>" where <netuser> is an AFP home directory user, then the resulting home directory will not have the correct access privileges. This is because automount is assuming NFS behavior which assumes that all computers share the same user/group privileges and mounts volumes using "no security" and lets the client enforce privileges based on the current user. AFP is different since the privileges are based on the user that logged into the server. Since automount does not put up an authentication dialog asking for an user name and password, automount mounts the fileserver using guest login. Thus you end up with getting the world access privileges and the privileges are shown via "mapping". You also would have to allow guest access to the server to that sharepoint. Mapping makes all the files/folders appear like they are owned by the current user. Even those items not really owned by the current user show up as being owned by the current user. The server provides user access rights (UARights) which is a summary of what the access rights are regardless of the category (owner, group, world) from which they were obtained. When doing "mapping", the AppleShare client will take these UARights and show them as the owner rights. So, everything looks like it is owned by the current user and the owner rights are set to the UARights. Thus if you had access to that file/folder before, then you still do. The options are: -v Display version number. -d Print debugging information. -m Alternative mount point is specified with the -m option followed by a path to an existing directory. Normally, the volume is mounted in /Network/Servers/ or /var/automount/Network/Servers/. -n Do not force the unmount of the previous mount point. -b Exec the user's shell after mount of home. -p A password may be specified with the -p option followed by a password. If this option is not used, then the user will be prompted to enter in a password. -i Display information about the AFP home mount point. -u Attempt to unmount the current home directory mount. -x This option must be followed by a path to an existing AFP mount point. Display information about the mount point. -s Skip preflight check to see if the currently mounted home directory is already correctly mounted for the user. EXAMPLES
The following example illustrates how to mount an AFP home directory: mnthome This example shows how to print the debugging information and provide a password: mnthome -d -p foobar SEE ALSO
mount(2), unmount(2), mount(8) mount_afp(8) BUGS
I get the mounting url from the "home_loc" attribute and the mountpath from the "home" attribute (with the path from home_loc subtracted out). If your AFP home directory automounts in a different location, then you need to use the -m option to specify an alternative mount point. I cant figure out how to cd out of the current home dir so I can do the unmount and then restore the user back into the new home dir. If you are in the AFP home directory when you use mnthome, you automatically get put back into that same directory when mnthome leaves. If mnthome works, then your current directory is a dead directory and you need to "cd ~" to get to your new home directory. If the server with the home directory was already mounted by another user, you will not be able to replace it with a mount made by your user id. The original mount must be first unmounted by the mounting user or root. HISTORY
The mnthome command first appeared Mac OS X version 10.3. RETURN VALUES
0 mnthome successfully remounted the AFP home directory. [EINVAL] Invalid arguements were passed in. [EPERM] The current AFP home directory could not be unmounted by mnthome because the current user does not have the correct access. The current AFP home directory was probably mounted by another user first. [EAUTH] Incorrect password. Mac OS X August 4, 2004 Mac OS X
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:29 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy