Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Calling a function
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Calling a function Post 302088494 by reborg on Tuesday 12th of September 2006 07:58:31 PM
Old 09-12-2006
"it doesn't work" is not very helpful to anyone who tries to help.

What exactly happens?
In what way does it not work?
What error messages if any do you get?
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Programming

c++ calling main() function

i just finished a project for a c++ class that i wrote at home on my computer, compiled with gcc. when i brought the code into school it would not compile, it would complain that cannot call main() function. at school we use ancient borland c++ from 1995. anyway my program has 20 different... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: norsk hedensk
3 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Calling other file function

Hi, I am pretty new to unix. Lets say i have a program(run_program) that will call another file function(functiona, in same directory): hence, inside that run_program. i will just call "functiona xx xx" to refer and use that function. this run ok until i run this program from another folder.... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: maldini
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Return a value from called function to the calling function

I have two scripts. script1.sh looks -------------------------------- #!/bin/bash display() { echo "Welcome to Unix" } display ----------------------------- Script2.sh #!/bin/bash sh script1.sh //simply calling script1.sh ------------------------------ (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mvictorvijayan
1 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Calling a function through a variable

Hey folks, I'm pretty new to unix programming. I was trying to get something to work but it's not doing what I expected. #!/bin/ksh . ./functions.sh STRING=function_1 FUNCTION="$STRING" RETURN=eval $FUNCTION echo "value of $FUNCTION function is: $RETURN" All i'm... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Irrational
5 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Calling Function in KSH

I have a script with 2 functions 1) show_menu 2) create Ths show_menu function works fine....... Sort of.... When I select option 2 of the menu the code does a few commands and then calls another function called create. It's at this point that I get "create: not found"..... However,... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: hxman
2 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

SHELL SCRIPT Function Calling Another Function Please Help...

This is my function which is creating three variables based on counter & writing these variable to database by calling another function writeRecord but only one record is getting wrote in DB.... Please advise ASAP...:confused: function InsertFtg { FTGSTR="" echo "Saurabh is GREAT $#" let... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: omkar.sonawane
2 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Getting a error while calling a function

Hi Friends, While calling a function in below scipt func_serv_logs () { find . -type f \( \( -name 'WLS*' -o -name 'access*' \) -a ! -name '*.gz' -a ! -newer ${REFERENCE} \) -print | while read FILENAME do echo "hi" done } func_serv_logs I am getting error... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jcpratap
4 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Calling two function

Hi, I need to run start_load function for two tables. Step 1: if HMAX_TBL_ID and GMAX_TBLI_D are same for tab_name1 then echo message "all table ids are processed" Step 2: go back and call start_load for tab_name2 and check if table id are same for table 2 too. Please let me know how to... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: sandy162
5 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Function is calling only once

In my prog if i enter the input for the 1st time it is executing correctly, but for the second time entire script is not executing it just exiting my code is #!/bin/sh checkpo() { echo "Checking the entered PO to create output text file "; IFS=$'\n' set -f var=0 for i in $(cat... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Padmanabhan
3 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help to Modify File Name in each function before calling another function.

I have a script which does gunzip, zip and untar. Input to the script is file name and file directory (where file is located) I am reading the input parameters as follows: FILENAME=$1 FILEDIR=$2 I have created 3 functions that are as follows: 1) gunzip file 2) unzip file... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: pinnacle
2 Replies
callback(8)						      mgetty+callback manual						       callback(8)

NAME
callback - call a user back, presenting a login prompt SYNOPSIS
callback [-x<debuglevel>] [-V] [-l<modemlines>] [-m<initstring>] [-s<speed>] [-d] [-S] [phone-number] DESCRIPTION
Call the given phone number (if none is given on the command line, ask user for one), and if a CONNECT is established, hand over control to mgetty(8) to present user with a login name prompt. callback is used for various purposes: * security: make sure your users are who they pretend to be by calling a well-known phone number. * cost savings: make your company call you back. callback can be called directly from the command line (but you must be "root" to do this, otherwise callback can't signal mgetty), or from mgetty's "login.config". See the login.config file shipped with mgetty for an example. OPTIONS
-x <debug level> Use the given level of verbosity for logging - 0 means no logging, 5 is really noisy. -V Print version number and quit. -d Do not go into the background. This is helpful for debugging. -l <modem lines> Use the given modem lines. Multiple lines can be separated by ":", as with sendfax(8). Example: callback -l tty1a:tty2a -m <init sequence> Set the modem initialization sequence (as usual: expect send expect ...). This can do nearly everything, as long as it leaves the modem command responses on (that is, no ATQ1 here!) and switches the modem to data mode (AT+FCLASS=0) if it is used in data/fax mode. -s <speed> This is the bit rate that should be used for the machine-modem connection. Usually you'll set this via the "speed <nnnn>" option in "callback.config". -S Use the line where callback is started from for dialing out. Callback can make use of multiple modem lines, and with this options, you can force it to use just one modem, the one where a call comes in. CONFIG FILE
callback will read all its configuration at run-time from a file, usually called /etc/mgetty/callback.config. See the documentation in the mgetty.info manual for details. DIAGNOSTICS
In most cases, callback can't print any error messages to the console, because it must detach itself immediately from the terminal, in case someone wants to be called back on the modem line he called in. So, nothing to print messages to... Because of this, all callback errors are logged to a protocol file (the extent of the data written is controlled by the "-x" option), espe- cially including the reason why a call was not made, or what exactly failed. Just two messages are printed on stdout, and those are self-explaining, a call from a non-root user, and an invalid option. INTERNALS
How does it work? This is a bit tricky, because of the way init(8) handles the utmp(5) file. You can't just have any program ask the user for a login name, and then start a "login shell", it won't work (this is for the same reason mgetty(8) has to be started from /etc/inittab). So, mgetty has to do the "asking for login name". But I do not want to have all that dialout code in mgetty, bloating it even more. The way it works is this: callback dials out on a modem device. It will only take a modem device that has a mgetty watching over it (!). When the connection is established (CONNECT), callback will send a signal SIGUSR1 to mgetty, which, in turn, will send the same signal back to signal "I got your signal". callback then exits, and mgetty takes over the existing connection, prompts the user for a login name, and forks off /bin/login. Conclusion: this will not work with mgetty versions before February 04, 1996 (no support for this signalling), and if it doesn't work for you, please send me BOTH the mgetty and the callback log file, otherwise it's very hard to find the bugs. BUGS
callback is "alpha" code, not very stable right now. callback is fairly dumb concerning retries. callback must be run as root. Most of the documentation consists of "reading the source". SEE ALSO
mgetty(8), ct(1) AUTHOR
callback is Copyright (C) 1993-1996 by Gert Doering, <gert@greenie.muc.de>. greenie 27 Oct 93 callback(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:47 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy