Hi there,
im having issue with comparing two variables, in a bash script.
im trying to do the following:
- get a word from user 1
- split the word into array
- get a character from user2
trying to compare the character entered by user 2 with every single character in the array... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I am trying to compare two arrays in perl using the following code.
foreach $item (@arrayA){
push(@arrayC, $item) unless grep(/$item/, @arrayB); ... (1 Reply)
PHP question...
I have an SQL query that's pulled back user IDs as a set of columns. Rather than IDs, I want to use their names.
So I have an array of columns $col with values 1,7,3,12 etc and I've got an array $person with values "Fred", "Bert", "Tom" etc
So what I want to do is display the... (3 Replies)
Hi there, i have been trying different methods and i wonder if somebody could explain to me how i would perform a comparison on two arrays for example
my @array1 = ("gary" ,"peter", "paul");
my @array2 = ("gary" ,"peter", "joe");
I have two arrays above, and i want to something like this... (5 Replies)
if i declare both but don't input any variables what values will the int array and file pointer array have on default, and if i want to reset any of the elements of both arrays to default, should i just set it to 0 or NULL or what? (1 Reply)
Problem
Part 1.
Gather data from linux server and output to a file named data_DDMMYY
Output file must contain the file name and size
Part 2.
Compare todays data_DDMMYY to yesterdays data_DDMMYY and output results to a file named difference_DDMMYY
Output file must show the difference in... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
I have a file test1.txt with the below contents
abc
def
ghj
xyz
I tried printing these values using arrays.
Script tried :
===========
set -A array1 `cat test1.txt`
count=${#array1
}
i=0
while
do
echo "element of array $array1"
done (1 Reply)
I'm trying to compare 2 array and print the difference at a 3rd file. However how am i going to compare this 2 arrays by ignoring certain patterns:
For example:
1st array contains:
ctahci
cptcsa0
ctsata:25:seed
cptcsa1:50:seed
ctsata_1:25:seed
2nd array contains:
cptcsa0
ctsata... (0 Replies)
I have never used arrays before but I have a script like this:
var1=$(for i in $(cat /tmp/jobs.021013);do $LIST -job $i -all |
perl -ne 'print /.*(\bInfo.bptm\(pid=\d{3,5}).*/' | tr -d "(Info=regpid" | tr -d ')'; $LIST -job $i -all |
cut -f7 -d','| sed -e "s/^\(*\)\(*\)\(*\)\(.*\)/\1... (2 Replies)
Hi, I'm trying to use awk arrays to compare values across two files based on multiple columns. I've attempted to load file 2 into an array and compare with values in file 1, but success has been absent. If anyone has any suggestions (and I'm not even sure if my script so far is on the right lines)... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: hubleo
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
libtalloc_stealing
libtalloc_stealing(3) talloc libtalloc_stealing(3)NAME
libtalloc_stealing - Chapter 2: Stealing a context
Stealing a context
Talloc has the ability to change the parent of a talloc context to another one. This operation is commonly referred to as stealing and it
is one of the most important actions performed with talloc contexts.
Stealing a context is necessary if we want the pointer to outlive the context it is created on. This has many possible use cases, for
instance stealing a result of a database search to an in-memory cache context, changing the parent of a field of a generic structure to a
more specific one or vice-versa. The most common scenario, at least in Samba, is to steal output data from a function-specific context to
the output context given as an argument of that function.
struct foo {
char *a1;
char *a2;
char *a3;
};
struct bar {
char *wurst;
struct foo *foo;
};
struct foo *foo = talloc_zero(ctx, struct foo);
foo->a1 = talloc_strdup(foo, "a1");
foo->a2 = talloc_strdup(foo, "a2");
foo->a3 = talloc_strdup(foo, "a3");
struct bar *bar = talloc_zero(NULL, struct bar);
/* change parent of foo from ctx to bar */
bar->foo = talloc_steal(bar, foo);
/* or do the same but assign foo = NULL */
bar->foo = talloc_move(bar, &foo);
The talloc_move() function is similar to the talloc_steal() function but additionally sets the source pointer to NULL.
In general, the source pointer itself is not changed (it only replaces the parent in the meta data). But the common usage is that the
result is assigned to another variable, thus further accessing the pointer from the original variable should be avoided unless it is
necessary. In this case talloc_move() is the preferred way of stealing a context. Additionally sets the source pointer to NULL,
thus.protects the pointer from being accidentally freed and accessed using the old variable after its parent has been changed.
Version 2.0 Tue Jun 17 2014 libtalloc_stealing(3)