okay, im having some trouble. Go ahead, call me a retard, but i keep getting stuck. Suppose i want to open a Picture of Jesus(for the sake of simplicity) using unix. I type:
open Desktop/Pictures/Jesus.jpg
It opens, and its all well and good. But, suppose i want to open a picture called Joe... (4 Replies)
With not knowing absolute nothing about Unix can anyone let me in on how it is setup and how easy is it to learn?I'm using MML Commands and know that it is completely different but if I start learning commands in UNIX is that a good way to get started? (1 Reply)
What I am supposed to do is creat a menu with the following
Find a song
Find a album
Sort by artist
Delete a song
Add a new song
Quit
Now the file with the song information is database
Here is what I have so far
#!/bin/bash
#=================================================
#Script Name:... (1 Reply)
Hello,
I'm new to solaris and have an experience with linux. When we see network interface I can see qfe, hme, le0. What is that mean? Is it depend on the network card? (11 Replies)
can any body tell me this followings in details
when do we use this & in which senario we most use this
1.GSD raising
2.MOSFET checks
3.Audit remedation
4.KBS fixes
thanks in advance (0 Replies)
I'm wondering where a good place to start is for basic UNIX training. Due to a shift of responsibilities at work, I am now the admin for a product called AutoSys. I have close to zero knowledge in the subject area. :wall: (3 Replies)
I am new to unix so this is probably a pretty basic question.
I am trying to write several commands on one line that creates a directory called bf in the current directory, then copy all files within that directory and any subdirectories, that do not start with the letter c to the new bf folder.... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I'm new to this and very much interested to learn unix.
Can any one explain me the symbols y we use this is scripting(~ and $).
It would be great if some one explain with the eg.
Thanks
Naveen A (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Pranaveen
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
mcopy
MCOPY(1) General Commands Manual MCOPY(1)NAME
mcopy - copy MSDOS files to/from Unix
SYNOPSIS
mcopy [ -tnvm ] sourcefile targetfile
mcopy [ -tnvm ] sourcefile [ sourcefiles... ] targetdirectory
DESCRIPTION
Mcopy copies the specified file to the named file, or copies multiple files to the named directory. The source and target can be either
MSDOS or Unix files.
The use of a drive letter designation on the MSDOS files, 'a:' for example, determines the direction of the transfer. A missing drive des-
ignation implies a Unix file whose path starts in the current directory
Mcopy will allow the following command line options:
t Text file transfer. Mcopy will translate incoming carriage return/line feeds to line feeds.
n No warning. Mcopy will not warn the user when overwriting an existing file.
v Verbose mode.
m Preserve the file modification time.
If the target file already exists, and the -n option is not in effect, mcopy asks whether or not to overwrite the file.
MSDOS subdirectory names are supported with either the '/' or '' separator. The use of the '' separator or wildcards will require the
names to be enclosed in quotes to protect them from the shell.
The mcd command may be used to establish the device and the current working directory (relative to MSDOS), otherwise the default is A:/.
SEE ALSO mcd(1), mread(1), mwrite(1)BUGS
Unlike MSDOS, the destination directory may not be omitted.
The '+' operator (append) from MSDOS is not supported.
No other Mtools command requires the use of a drive letter designation on MSDOS files.
local MCOPY(1)