10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Good morning ..,
I have a problem to run my object program. Before, I run my program in cygwin and there is no problem. When I tried in linux (ubuntu), the terminal said that space.exe : command not found.
this is the code in my shell
space.exe gr1
result
space.exe: command not found... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: weslyarfan
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2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello Gurus,
I have written one shell script will check the database healths.
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Thanks-
p (12 Replies)
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3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
I have prepared 1 .sh script that is running fine in UNIX box. Now I wanted to run that script from windows box. I am thinking of converting it to .exe so that can run this in windows server and use it.
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Script basically checks for some values in logs of process running in unix box... (1 Reply)
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4. Homework & Coursework Questions
Hello,
Thank you for reading my Thread.
I am very very new to Perl / Shell Scripting here.
I m assigned some tasks here.
I have an exe file on our server.
I have to navigate to the path and invoke the exe file.
Can someone please guide me with that.
Thanks you,
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Discussion started by: skaranth
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5. Shell Programming and Scripting
guys!
any clue how to extract .exe file in linux?
Regards,
Kiran (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: dddkiran
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6. HP-UX
Hello,
I have an test.exe file under a directory. When i execute the .exe file directory from the prompt, i get following error:
$ test.exe <enter>
ksh: test.exe: not found
How do i solve this error?
TIA,
Ramesh (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: brap45
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7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All
I want a method in shell script which will embed the exe file into rtf file si that the rtf file can be open in word and so my exe.
Actually what is happening in my system at present :
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8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hello all,
how to run windows .exe file in Linux
and vice the versa (3 Replies)
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9. Programming
hi all,
i need your help, want syntax can i write in my programming file
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Discussion started by: lala
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10. Programming
Hi,
I am using dual operating system(windows/linux) in my system.Now the problem is i want to run my .exe(of c languege)
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putty(1) PuTTY tool suite putty(1)
NAME
putty - GUI SSH, Telnet and Rlogin client for X
SYNOPSIS
putty [ options ] [ host ]
DESCRIPTION
putty is a graphical SSH, Telnet and Rlogin client for X. It is a direct port of the Windows SSH client of the same name.
OPTIONS
The command-line options supported by putty are:
--display display-name
Specify the X display on which to open putty. (Note this option has a double minus sign, even though none of the others do. This is
because this option is supplied automatically by GTK. Sorry.)
-fn font-name
Specify the font to use for normal text displayed in the terminal.
-fb font-name
Specify the font to use for bold text displayed in the terminal. If the BoldAsColour resource is set to 1 (the default), bold text
will be displayed in different colours instead of a different font, so this option will be ignored. If BoldAsColour is set to 0 and
you do not specify a bold font, putty will overprint the normal font to make it look bolder.
-fw font-name
Specify the font to use for double-width characters (typically Chinese, Japanese and Korean text) displayed in the terminal.
-fwb font-name
Specify the font to use for bold double-width characters (typically Chinese, Japanese and Korean text). Like -fb, this will be
ignored unless the BoldAsColour resource is set to 0.
-geometry geometry
Specify the size of the terminal, in rows and columns of text. See X(7) for more information on the syntax of geometry specifica-
tions.
-sl lines
Specify the number of lines of scrollback to save off the top of the terminal.
-fg colour
Specify the foreground colour to use for normal text.
-bg colour
Specify the background colour to use for normal text.
-bfg colour
Specify the foreground colour to use for bold text, if the BoldAsColour resource is set to 1 (the default).
-bbg colour
Specify the foreground colour to use for bold reverse-video text, if the BoldAsColour resource is set to 1 (the default). (This
colour is best thought of as the bold version of the background colour; so it only appears when text is displayed in the background
colour.)
-cfg colour
Specify the foreground colour to use for text covered by the cursor.
-cbg colour
Specify the background colour to use for text covered by the cursor. In other words, this is the main colour of the cursor.
-title title
Specify the initial title of the terminal window. (This can be changed under control of the server.)
-sb- or +sb
Tells putty not to display a scroll bar.
-sb Tells putty to display a scroll bar: this is the opposite of -sb-. This is the default option: you will probably only need to spec-
ify it explicitly if you have changed the default using the ScrollBar resource.
-log filename
This option makes putty log all the terminal output to a file as well as displaying it in the terminal.
-cs charset
This option specifies the character set in which putty should assume the session is operating. This character set will be used to
interpret all the data received from the session, and all input you type or paste into putty will be converted into this character
set before being sent to the session.
Any character set name which is valid in a MIME header (and supported by putty) should be valid here (examples are `ISO-8859-1',
`windows-1252' or `UTF-8'). Also, any character encoding which is valid in an X logical font description should be valid (`ibm-
cp437', for example).
putty's default behaviour is to use the same character encoding as its primary font. If you supply a Unicode (iso10646-1) font, it
will default to the UTF-8 character set.
Character set names are case-insensitive.
-nethack
Tells putty to enable NetHack keypad mode, in which the numeric keypad generates the NetHack hjklyubn direction keys. This enables
you to play NetHack with the numeric keypad without having to use the NetHack number_pad option (which requires you to press `n'
before any repeat count). So you can move with the numeric keypad, and enter repeat counts with the normal number keys.
-help, --help
Display a message summarizing the available options.
-pgpfp Display the fingerprints of the PuTTY PGP Master Keys, to aid in verifying new files released by the PuTTY team.
-load session
Load a saved session by name. This allows you to run a saved session straight from the command line without having to go through the
configuration box first.
-ssh, -telnet, -rlogin, -raw, -serial
Select the protocol putty will use to make the connection.
-l username
Specify the username to use when logging in to the server.
-L [srcaddr:]srcport:desthost:destport
Set up a local port forwarding: listen on srcport (or srcaddr:srcport if specified), and forward any connections over the SSH con-
nection to the destination address desthost:destport. Only works in SSH.
-R [srcaddr:]srcport:desthost:destport
Set up a remote port forwarding: ask the SSH server to listen on srcport (or srcaddr:srcport if specified), and to forward any con-
nections back over the SSH connection where the client will pass them on to the destination address desthost:destport. Only works in
SSH.
-D [srcaddr:]srcport
Set up dynamic port forwarding. The client listens on srcport (or srcaddr:srcport if specified), and implements a SOCKS server. So
you can point SOCKS-aware applications at this port and they will automatically use the SSH connection to tunnel all their connec-
tions. Only works in SSH.
-P port
Specify the port to connect to the server on.
-A, -a Enable (-A) or disable (-a) SSH agent forwarding. Currently this only works with OpenSSH and SSH-1.
-X, -x Enable (-X) or disable (-x) X11 forwarding.
-T, -t Enable (-t) or disable (-T) the allocation of a pseudo-terminal at the server end.
-C Enable zlib-style compression on the connection.
-1, -2 Select SSH protocol version 1 or 2.
-i keyfile
Specify a private key file to use for authentication. For SSH-2 keys, this key file must be in PuTTY's format, not OpenSSH's or any-
one else's.
-sercfg configuration-string
Specify the configuration parameters for the serial port, in -serial mode. configuration-string should be a comma-separated list of
configuration parameters as follows:
o Any single digit from 5 to 9 sets the number of data bits.
o `1', `1.5' or `2' sets the number of stop bits.
o Any other numeric string is interpreted as a baud rate.
o A single lower-case letter specifies the parity: `n' for none, `o' for odd, `e' for even, `m' for mark and `s' for space.
o A single upper-case letter specifies the flow control: `N' for none, `X' for XON/XOFF, `R' for RTS/CTS and `D' for DSR/DTR.
SAVED SESSIONS
Saved sessions are stored in a .putty/sessions subdirectory in your home directory.
MORE INFORMATION
For more information on PuTTY, it's probably best to go and look at the manual on the web page:
http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/
BUGS
This man page isn't terribly complete.
PuTTY tool suite 2004-03-24 putty(1)