Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: stopping a script
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting stopping a script Post 302071199 by AtomJ22 on Thursday 13th of April 2006 08:41:56 AM
Old 04-13-2006
coooool. that link helped out. sorry i don't really use forums that much. i'll do some searching more before i post........thanks for helping.
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

I can't resume a process after stopping it!

Hello, I have a process running, for example a "top". I send it a signal to stop it kill -s SIGSTOP 3423 It works, but when I want to resume it by kill -s SIGCONT 3423 It does not work. Help me please..... I have Fedora Core 4. Thank you (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Nene
0 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

stopping a processor

hi, Can any plz tell what is the command for stopping a processor? suppose a system is accessing 10 processors and we want to stop the 3rd & 6th processor then whats the command in Unix? thank u (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nm_virtual
2 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Stopping a command during the cycle

Hi, Two things really: 1) can you input a code to pause a program until a key is pressed? 2) can you stop a command during a cycle? (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: chapmana
7 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Stopping a command in between

Hi Is it possible to stop a command executing after certain time? I have this command say prstat which keeps on giving the values etc of the processes after every 1 sec(refreshes the screen) What I want is just stop the execution after first screen Since I have written this command in shell... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: superprg
3 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Stopping A process

Hi I want to stop a process using a shell script. how do i do that? ie, to simulate ps -ef|grep Process name get the process id and kill -9 process id plz help... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: gopsman
4 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Stopping a shell script

This is simple for an experianced scripter but that is not what I am :) if ; then echo -==Test Passed $3 $4==- >> $1$2 nohup $6$7 & >> $1$2 else echo -==$8==- >> $1$9 echo -==$8==- >> $1$2 fi In the else step I also want to stop the script from moving on. ... (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: jadionne
15 Replies

7. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers

stopping running process

hi all, I am using red hat AS 4 linux enterprise,i need to run my application such that while its running no other process shuld run all the remaining process should be suspended ,i need to use whole of the process only for that application to run ,can anyone suggest me how to do this. ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: srilakshmi
3 Replies

8. Red Hat

stopping you have mail.....

Hi, on server Red Hat Enterprise Linux AS release 3, I am getting the mail "you have mail" can any body suggest how to stop this? mail are getting generated in below path. /var/spool/postfix/maildrop, due to which heavy file are getting generated. though sendmail service is stopped. ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: manoj.solaris
0 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Stopping cron job

Hi, I have scheduled one job in crontab. I want to stop the job automatically after some time of its execution without killing it. Could i archive the above? (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: mehulleo
8 Replies
URI::Find::Delimited(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				 URI::Find::Delimited(3pm)

NAME
URI::Find::Delimited - Find URIs which may be wrapped in enclosing delimiters. DESCRIPTION
Works like URI::Find, but is prepared for URIs in your text to be wrapped in a pair of delimiters and optionally have a title. This will be useful for processing text that already has some minimal markup in it, like bulletin board posts or wiki text. SYNOPSIS
my $finder = URI::Find::Delimited->new; my $text = "This is a [http://the.earth.li/ titled link]."; $finder->find($text); print $text; METHODS
new my $finder = URI::Find::Delimited->new( callback => &callback, delimiter_re => [ '[', ']' ], ignore_quoted => 1 # defaults to 0 ); All arguments are optional; defaults are provided (see below). Creates a new URI::Find::Delimited object. This object works similarly to a URI::Find object, but as well as just looking for URIs it is also aware of the concept of a wrapped, titled URI. These look something like [http://foo.com/ the foo website] where: * "[" is the opening delimiter * "]" is the closing delimiter * "http://foo.com/" is the URI * "the foo website" is the title * the URI and title are separated by spaces and/or tabs The URI::Find::Delimited object will extract each of these parts separately and pass them to your callback. callback "callback" is a function which is called on each URI found. It is passed five arguments: the opening delimiter (if found), the closing delimiter (if found), the URI, the title (if found), and any whitespace found between the URI and title. The return value of the callback will replace the original URI in the text. If you do not supply your own callback, the object will create a default one which will put your URIs in 'a href' tags using the URI for the target and the title for the link text. If no title is provided for a URI then the URI itself will be used as the title. If the delimiters aren't balanced (eg if the opening one is present but no closing one is found) then the URI is treated as not being wrapped. Note: the default callback will not remove the delimiters from the text. It should be simple enough to write your own callback to remove them, based on the one in the source, if that's what you want. In fact there's an example in this distribution, in "t/delimited.t". delimiter_re The "delimiter_re" parameter is optional. If you do supply it then it should be a ref to an array containing two regexes. It defaults to using single square brackets as the delimiters. Don't use capturing groupings "( )" in your delimiters or things will break. Use non-capturing "(?: )" instead. ignore_quoted If the "ignore_quoted" parameter is supplied and set to a true value, then any URIs immediately preceded with a double-quote char- acter will not be matched, ie your callback will not be executed for them and they'll be treated just as normal text. This is kinda lame but it's in here because I need to be able to ignore things like <img src="http://foo.com/bar.gif"> A better implementation may happen at some point. SEE ALSO
URI::Find. AUTHOR
Kake Pugh (kake@earth.li). COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2003 Kake Pugh. All Rights Reserved. This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. CREDITS
Tim Bagot helped me stop faffing over the name, by pointing out that RFC 2396 Appendix E uses "delimited". Dave Hinton helped me fix the regex to make it work for delimited URIs with no title. Nick Cleaton helped me make "ignore_quoted" work. Some of the code was taken from URI::Find. perl v5.8.8 2008-03-01 URI::Find::Delimited(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:27 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy