10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
I am trying to use the text of one file as a text file name with and the text of another as the contents of that text file. Is this possible? Thank you :).
For example, in the two files attached, target.txt has:
1.txt
2.txt
and out_parse.txt has:
13 20763642 20763642 C G... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
5 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I have friends that this command worked perfectly, but I would like to save the result in a variable, which I have not achieved
var=prueba.txt
echo $var | cut -d "." -f 1
prueba
I need to do this but does not work me
salida=echo $var | cut -d "." -f 1
echo "result:$salida"
... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: tricampeon81
8 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
I want to do an Unix Script to save the 'nmon' output on a text file and I don't know how to do it.
I need a Script for each monitoring and also one to multiple monitorings.
Thanks (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Javi1990
6 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Guys,
I have blank file A.txt
I will run the script xyz.sh
First i want to open a.txt file...
Now i will enter some data like
XYZ
ABC
PQR
..
Save it and keep continue my script....
END of my script.
Thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: asavaliya
1 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
If I type:
ls -l *txt | awk '{print $8}'
I get the file listing if I am in the directory.
If I try to do the same from a job flow, doing also other things, I can't do
ls -l directory/*txt | awk '{print $8}' > directory/result.txt
or
echo ls -l directory/*txt | awk '{print... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: essemario
8 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Does anybody know any alternative way to save output result of a program into another new file?
I got try the command below:
program_used input_file > new_output_file
program_used input_file >> new_output_file
Unfortunately, both the ">" and ">>" is not work at this case to save the output... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: patrick87
6 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I'am using "time" to check execution time of some script. Is there any possibility to save time command result into a file ? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Physix
2 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi i have wriiten a script which fetches the data from text file, and saves in the output in a text file itself, but i want that the output should save in different columns.
I have the output like:
For Channel:response_time__24.txt
1547 data points
0.339
0.299
0.448
0.581
7.380
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rohitkalia
1 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
I am displaying my result in HTML format using tables.
I want to save the results in file in the same format along with the table only.
How do i do that in perl?
I have attached the table structure .
I want to save like that itself .
with regards (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: vanitham
2 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello all
im using allot with the method of getting file list from misc place in unix and copy them into text file
and then doing misc action on this list of files using
foreach f (`cat file_list.txt`)
do something with $f
end
can I replace this file_list.txt with some place in memory? ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: umen
1 Replies
SMRSH(8) System Manager's Manual SMRSH(8)
NAME
smrsh - restricted shell for sendmail
SYNOPSIS
smrsh -c command
DESCRIPTION
The smrsh program is intended as a replacement for sh for use in the ``prog'' mailer in sendmail(8) configuration files. It sharply limits
the commands that can be run using the ``|program'' syntax of sendmail in order to improve the over all security of your system. Briefly,
even if a ``bad guy'' can get sendmail to run a program without going through an alias or forward file, smrsh limits the set of programs
that he or she can execute.
Briefly, smrsh limits programs to be in a single directory, by default /usr/lib/sendmail.d/bin/ allowing the system administrator to choose
the set of acceptable commands, and to the shell builtin commands ``exec'', ``exit'', and ``echo''. It also rejects any commands with the
characters ``', `<', `>', `;', `$', `(', `)', `
' (carriage return), or `
' (newline) on the command line to prevent ``end run'' attacks.
It allows ``||'' and ``&&'' to enable commands like: ``"|exec /usr/local/bin/filter || exit 75"''
Initial pathnames on programs are stripped, so forwarding to ``/usr/bin/vacation'', ``/usr/bin/vacation'', ``/home/server/mydir/bin/vaca-
tion'', and ``vacation'' all actually forward to `/usr/lib/sendmail.d/bin/vacation''.
System administrators should be conservative about populating the /usr/lib/sendmail.d/bin/ directory. For example, a reasonable additions
is vacation(1), and the like. No matter how brow-beaten you may be, never include any shell or shell-like program (such as perl(1)) in the
/usr/lib/sendmail.d/bin/ directory. Note that this does not restrict the use of shell or perl scripts in the /usr/lib/sendmail.d/bin/
directory (using the ``#!'' syntax); it simply disallows execution of arbitrary programs. Also, including mail filtering programs such as
procmail(1) is a very bad idea. procmail(1) allows users to run arbitrary programs in their procmailrc(5).
COMPILATION
Compilation should be trivial on most systems. You may need to use -DSMRSH_PATH="path" to adjust the default search path (defaults to
``/bin:/usr/bin'') and/or -DSMRSH_CMDDIR="dir" to change the default program directory (defaults to ``/usr/lib/sendmail.d/bin/'').
FILES
/usr/lib/sendmail.d/bin/ - default directory for restricted programs on SuSE Linux
SEE ALSO
sendmail(8)
$Date: 2004/08/06 03:55:35 $ SMRSH(8)