Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Script removes itself
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Script removes itself Post 302088035 by blowtorch on Friday 8th of September 2006 05:49:24 AM
Old 09-08-2006
Try to keep scripts out of the paths where you purge files. If you must keep it there, then why not have the script run 'touch' to update the timestamps on itself before it enters the while loop?
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

GAWK removes FS | on output

I have the simple gawk script below. When the script runs in the output of all the ITM lines the FS is replaced with a space, the Non ITM lines retain the | field separator. The ITM lines have many fields and I can't insert "|" between each field because some of the fields are blank. Is... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: paulr211
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

eval removes backslash

Hi, ============= In one of my config files, I have below command eval echo RECORDDELIMITER '\n' The above command results in removing backslash and outputs: RECORDDELIMITER n ============= Any workaround to retain the backslash after eval. Appreciated for your... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: axes
10 Replies

3. Ubuntu

Aptitude removes all packages

Hi Team, Please find below error. I got this after i done something in aptitude. Actually i was trying to update all packages, but unfortunately I removed all packages. Now my server is down. When i boot it gives me me errors of missing .so files. Is there any way to repair my server... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: paragnehete
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Script which removes files from the first directory if there is a file in the second directory

Script must removes files from the first directory if there is a file with same name in the second directory Script passed to the two directories, it lies with them in one directory: sh script_name dir1 dir2 This is my version, but it does not work :wall: set - $2/* for i do set -... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: SLAMUL
6 Replies

5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

perl/sed -i removes link

hello, is it a behavior of or that "-i" removes unix link . example : i create a file "src_file" and link it to "link_file" and then i start "perl -i" the link is removed. does another option exists to change content of a file without temporary files ? UNIX-Version: HP-UX and... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: bora99
2 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Sed: removes \ from text which causes issues

Hi all, Hoping someone hoping someone might be able to help. i've got the following sed command which i'm using in a bash script that i'm trying to use to insert a new line into an already existing file so i don't have to manually enter it when setting stuff up. the existing script test2/3 are... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: springs2
3 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Newline to space code removes 0 from the first line

I am having a peculiar problem. First I run the code below to append 0 at the start of each line in some hundreds of files that I have in a directory. These files have each word in a newline. for f in *.dat; do echo "0" > tmpfile cat $f >> tmpfile mv tmpfile $f done Then I run this... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: shoaibjameel123
7 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Why awk removes delimiters?

Code : echo "1,2,3,4"|awk -F "," 'NR==n{$3=a}1' n=1 a=45 Output : 1 2 45 4 Expected : 1,2,45,4 (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Rajesh_us
4 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk removes delimiter unexpectedly

datafile: blah,blah,blah,blah,blah,blah,blah,blah,blah=0_nblah=0-- ,blah,blah,blah im using the following command to turn the "_n" and "-- " to just a space " " only in the $9th field. meaning, it has to make the changes only in the 9th column/field of the datafile. awk -F, '{... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: SkySmart
1 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

sed or awk removes attachment in email

Hi We have a requirement to send email using shell script.email should have html body and pdf attachment. We used uuencode for attaching files and sendmail option to acheive and it is working fine. However custoemr wants to make body of email slightly dynamic. E.g dear customer in html file... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Harish7586
3 Replies
INVOKE-RC.D(8)							 Debian GNU/Linux						    INVOKE-RC.D(8)

NAME
invoke-rc.d - install and remove System-V style init script links SYNOPSIS
update-rc.d [-f] name remove update-rc.d name defaults update-rc.d name defaults-disabled update-rc.d name disable|enable [ S|2|3|4|5 ] DESCRIPTION
update-rc.d updates the System V style init script links /etc/rcrunlevel.d/NNname whose target is the script /etc/init.d/name. These links are run by init when it changes runlevels; they are generally used to start and stop system services such as daemons. runlevel is one of the runlevels supported by init, namely, 0123456789S, and NN is the two-digit sequence number that determines where in the sequence init will run the scripts. This manpage documents only the usage and behaviour of update-rc.d. For a discussion of the System V style init script arrangements please see init(8) and the Debian Policy Manual. INSTALLING INIT SCRIPT LINKS
update-rc.d requires dependency and runlevel information to be provided in the init.d script LSB comment header of all init.d scripts. See the insserv(8) manual page for details about the LSB header format. When run with the defaults option, update-rc.d makes links named /etc/rcrunlevel.d/[SK]NNname that point to the script /etc/init.d/name, using runlevel and dependency information from the init.d script LSB comment header. When run with the defaults-disabled option, update-rc.d makes links named /etc/rcrunlevel.d/KNNname that point to the script /etc/init.d/name, using dependency information from the init.d script LSB comment header. This means that the init.d script will be dis- abled (see below). If any files named /etc/rcrunlevel.d/[SK]??name already exist then update-rc.d does nothing. The program was written this way so that it will never change an existing configuration, which may have been customized by the system administrator. The program will only install links if none are present, i.e., if it appears that the service has never been installed before. Older versions of update-rc.d also supported start and stop options. These options are no longer supported, and are now equivalent to the defaults option. A common system administration error is to delete the links with the thought that this will "disable" the service, i.e., that this will prevent the service from being started. However, if all links have been deleted then the next time the package is upgraded, the package's postinst script will run update-rc.d again and this will reinstall links at their factory default locations. The correct way to disable services is to configure the service as stopped in all runlevels in which it is started by default. In the System V init system this means renaming the service's symbolic links from S to K. The script /etc/init.d/name must exist before update-rc.d is run to create the links. REMOVING SCRIPTS
When invoked with the remove option, update-rc.d removes any links in the /etc/rcrunlevel.d directories to the script /etc/init.d/name. The script must have been deleted already. If the script is still present then update-rc.d aborts with an error message. update-rc.d is usually called from a package's post-removal script when that script is given the purge argument. Any files in the /etc/rcrunlevel.d directories that are not symbolic links to the script /etc/init.d/name will be left untouched. DISABLING INIT SCRIPT START LINKS
When run with the disable [ S|2|3|4|5 ] options, update-rc.d modifies existing runlevel links for the script /etc/init.d/name by renaming start links to stop links with a sequence number equal to the difference of 100 minus the original sequence number. When run with the enable [ S|2|3|4|5 ] options, update-rc.d modifies existing runlevel links for the script /etc/init.d/name by renaming stop links to start links with a sequence number equal to the positive difference of current sequence number minus 100, thus returning to the original sequence number that the script had been installed with before disabling it. Both of these options only operate on start runlevel links of S, 2, 3, 4 or 5. If no start runlevel is specified after the disable or enable keywords, the script will attempt to modify links in all start runlevels. OPTIONS
-f Force removal of symlinks even if /etc/init.d/name still exists. EXAMPLES
Insert links using the defaults: update-rc.d foobar defaults The equivalent dependency header would have start and stop dependencies on $remote_fs and $syslog, and start in runlevels 2-5 and stop in runlevels 0, 1 and 6. Remove all links for a script (assuming foobar has been deleted already): update-rc.d foobar remove Example of disabling a service: update-rc.d foobar disable Example of a command for installing a system initialization-and-shutdown script: update-rc.d foobar defaults Example of a command for disabling a system initialization-and-shutdown script: update-rc.d foobar disable BUGS
See http://bugs.debian.org/sysv-rc. FILES
/etc/init.d/ The directory containing the actual init scripts. /etc/rc?.d/ The directories containing the links used by init and managed by update-rc.d . /etc/init.d/skeleton Model for use by writers of init.d scripts. SEE ALSO
Debian Policy Manual, /etc/init.d/skeleton, insserv(8), sysv-rc-conf(8), bum(8), init(8) AUTHOR
Ian Jackson, Miquel van Smoorenburg Licence: GNU Public Licence v2 or Later (GPLv2+) COPYRIGHT
2001 Hernique Holschuh 14 November 2005 INVOKE-RC.D(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:17 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy