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Full Discussion: named pipes
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting named pipes Post 10815 by truma1 on Wednesday 21st of November 2001 11:36:28 AM
Old 11-21-2001
We have a senario where we often need to restore users objects and most of the time they are the last objects in the dump -- buy buy whole day to restore just 1 300k table so by using this method we can skip to the exact spot on the tape and perform a restore.
 

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pfsinmulti(1)						      General Commands Manual						     pfsinmulti(1)

NAME
pfsinmulti - read several streams of frames and write pfs streams to named pipes SYNOPSIS
pfsinmulti pfsinmulti <file> [--frames f:s:t] [--skip-frames] [<file>...] -- command @1 @2 [@3 ...] DESCRIPTION
Use this command to read several animation sequences and write them to pfsstreams. This command is useful with those pfs programs, which take several pfs streams as arguments. For example, the following command can be used to combine two animations so that there are stitched together: pfsinmulti anim_a-%04d.hdr anim_b-%04d.hdr -- pfscat @1 @2 arguments @1 and @2 are replaced with named pipes for anim_a-%04d.hdr and anim_b-%04d.hdr frames respectively. command argument is obliga- tory and it must be preceded with '--'. There should be as many @1, @2, .., @n arguments as there are animation sequences given as input. Arguments --frames, --skip-frames and other options are handled the same way as in pfsin program. Also pfsinmulti recognizes the same file formats as pfsin. Technically, pfsinmulti creates a named pipe for each pfsstream, replaces @n arguments with the names of those pipes and deletes the pipes when command finishes. EXAMPLES
pfsinmulti image1.hdr image2.hdr -- cat @1 @2 | pfsview Does the same as 'pfsv image1.hdr image2.hdr' but in much more sophisticated way. SEE ALSO
pfsin(1) BUGS
This command currently does not handle multiple frames given with a %d pattern in case of LDR formats: JPEG, PNG, PNM. Please report bugs and comments to Rafal Mantiuk <mantiuk@mpi-sb.mpg.de>. pfsinmulti(1)
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