Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Turning Echo off
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Turning Echo off Post 302097417 by Jeroenix on Friday 24th of November 2006 08:14:24 AM
Old 11-24-2006
You could direct the output from that particular command to /dev/null by adding >/dev/null (or 2>/dev/null, or both) after the zip command in the script. That should shut it up Smilie
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Turning off MMDF permanently

This is definitely a post from a "UNIX Newbie" - we have a SCO Unix machine that houses our customer database. I have been getting reports that the system starts lagging intermittently, and have managed to determine that the cause of the slowdown is a process called MMDF. I can manually kill... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: QmanV2
4 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

turning off certain http requests

On a sparc solaris 8 host running sunone webserver 6 I would like to limit the http requests that can be used when port 80 is accessed. We currently have http/1.0 enabled. For example I would like to remove the http request DELETE. Regards, BLP (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: blp001
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Turning off the CDE

I am running Solaris 9 and wanted the CDE stopped when my users login. Can this be done by adding something to the .profile? Basically when they login they should be at the command line and have to start the CDE themselves. Thanks (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: meyersp
11 Replies

4. Gentoo

Turning on/off the network interface

Hi all, I'm trying to write a script that will turn off the network interface eth0 on a linux Gentoo machine and then turn it back on, any help? Thanks, Neked (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: neked
1 Replies

5. AIX

turning auditing on AIX 4.3

Hi, What's the best way to turn on the auditing in AIX 4.3? I'm in an environment where root password are shared with many users. Can sudoers member be audited properly? Thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: itik
1 Replies

6. Solaris

Turning in.ftpd on and off

For two straight days someone was running in.ftpd in my server (apparently looking to break in) and when I would do "top" almost every line would read "in.ftpd". I had a unix sysadmin friend of mine shut it down and then start it back up in a day and a half and all seems OK for now. Here's what I... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: thomi39
1 Replies

7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

turning CIO on and how to monitor

Hi Guys, I have a database server where we run AIX 5.3 on a power5 box and we just turned on CIO (concurrent I/O) for the database filesystems. Now my assumption is that enabling CIO the database basically will bypass the filesystem cache releasing some extra memory that can be allocated... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: hariza
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Turning files into an array

I have several files like this file A Good Bad Fair Strawberry 1 4 5 Banana 23 12 4 Plantain 0 0 1 Orange 0 0 0 file B Strawberry 1 1 3 Banana 2 ... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: littleb
10 Replies

9. SCO

Need help turning off bootpd

OSR 5.0.7 patched with MP 5 The syslog is flooded with messages: May 9 13:42:12 asiwc bootpd: IP address not found: 192.168.230.215 May 9 13:42:13 asiwc bootpd: IP address not found: 192.168.230.142 May 9 13:42:50 asiwc bootpd: IP address not found: 192.168.230.202 The system... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: migurus
4 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Turning given date to epoch

i can probably script this in bash, but, i was wondering, does anyone know of a simple way to translate a given time to epoch? date -d@"29/Oct/2013:17:53:11" the user would specify the date: 29/Oct/2013:17:53:11 and the script will simply interpret that to epoch: 1348838383 (this is just... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: SkySmart
4 Replies
FUNZIP(1L)																FUNZIP(1L)

NAME
funzip - filter for extracting from a ZIP archive in a pipe SYNOPSIS
funzip [-password] [input[.zip|.gz]] ARGUMENTS
[-password] Optional password to be used if ZIP archive is encrypted. Decryption may not be supported at some sites. See DESCRIPTION for more details. [input[.zip|.gz]] Optional input archive file specification. See DESCRIPTION for details. DESCRIPTION
funzip without a file argument acts as a filter; that is, it assumes that a ZIP archive (or a gzip'd(1) file) is being piped into standard input, and it extracts the first member from the archive to stdout. When stdin comes from a tty device, funzip assumes that this cannot be a stream of (binary) compressed data and shows a short help text, instead. If there is a file argument, then input is read from the speci- fied file instead of from stdin. A password for encrypted zip files can be specified on the command line (preceding the file name, if any) by prefixing the password with a dash. Note that this constitutes a security risk on many systems; currently running processes are often visible via simple commands (e.g., ps(1) under Unix), and command-line histories can be read. If the first entry of the zip file is encrypted and no password is specified on the command line, then the user is prompted for a password and the password is not echoed on the console. Given the limitation on single-member extraction, funzip is most useful in conjunction with a secondary archiver program such as tar(1). The following section includes an example illustrating this usage in the case of disk backups to tape. EXAMPLES
To use funzip to extract the first member file of the archive test.zip and to pipe it into more(1): funzip test.zip | more To use funzip to test the first member file of test.zip (any errors will be reported on standard error): funzip test.zip > /dev/null To use zip and funzip in place of compress(1) and zcat(1) (or gzip(1L) and gzcat(1L)) for tape backups: tar cf - . | zip -7 | dd of=/dev/nrst0 obs=8k dd if=/dev/nrst0 ibs=8k | funzip | tar xf - (where, for example, nrst0 is a SCSI tape drive). BUGS
When piping an encrypted file into more and allowing funzip to prompt for password, the terminal may sometimes be reset to a non-echo mode. This is apparently due to a race condition between the two programs; funzip changes the terminal mode to non-echo before more reads its state, and more then ``restores'' the terminal to this mode before exiting. To recover, run funzip on the same file but redirect to /dev/null rather than piping into more; after prompting again for the password, funzip will reset the terminal properly. There is presently no way to extract any member but the first from a ZIP archive. This would be useful in the case where a ZIP archive is included within another archive. In the case where the first member is a directory, funzip simply creates the directory and exits. The functionality of funzip should be incorporated into unzip itself (future release). SEE ALSO
gzip(1L), unzip(1L), unzipsfx(1L), zip(1L), zipcloak(1L), zipinfo(1L), zipnote(1L), zipsplit(1L) URL
The Info-ZIP home page is currently at http://www.info-zip.org/pub/infozip/ or ftp://ftp.info-zip.org/pub/infozip/ . AUTHOR
Mark Adler (Info-ZIP) Info-ZIP 20 April 2009 (v3.95) FUNZIP(1L)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:39 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy