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Full Discussion: N00b In Need!
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers N00b In Need! Post 302136870 by davesimm on Thursday 20th of September 2007 06:29:41 AM
Old 09-20-2007
N00b In Need!

Howdy all, just joined the forums after finding them on a good ole' google search. very impressed from what i've seen so far! I'm pretty new to the world of Unix/Linux, have just had a change of job role and been thrown in at the deep end! I'm now working on an Oracle 9i database using HPUX boxes with Redhat applications tiers..... And am having great difficulty getting my head around some scripting! Smilie

As part of patch installs from our in house developers i regularly have to clear a cache directory on our applications tiers boxes, i would really appreciate a script to make this easier, and i could really do with a little guidance on how to acheive it! Smilie

We have 7 apps boxes (named genapp01/02/03/04/08/09) and each has the cache directory in one of 2 places, either...

/u01/data/app/PROD/comn/_pages
or
/u01/data/app/PROD/comn/html/_pages

each box has the same user/password running the oracle environment, so all the files are owned by the same user. Same goes for the root user, should i run the script as the root user, or as the environment owner? Smilie

Should my script seperatly ssh to each box and rm -rf * inside the _pages folder? Or can i use an SCP command or similar?

Any help greatly appreciated! Smilie

Cheers

Dave
 

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MKMANIFEST(1)						      General Commands Manual						     MKMANIFEST(1)

NAME
mkmanifest - create a shell script to restore Unix filenames SYNOPSIS
mkmanifest [ files ] DESCRIPTION
Mkmanifest creates a shell script that will aid in the restoration of Unix filenames that got clobbered by the MSDOS filename restrictions. MSDOS filenames are restricted to 8 character names, 3 character extensions, upper case only, no device names, and no illegal characters. The mkmanifest program is compatible with the methods used in pcomm, arc, and mtools to change perfectly good Unix filenames to fit the MSDOS restrictions. EXAMPLE
I want to copy the following Unix files to a MSDOS diskette (using the mcopy command). very_long_name 2.many.dots illegal: good.c prn.dev Capital Mcopy will convert the names to: very_lon 2xmany.dot illegalx good.c xprn.dev capital The command: mkmanifest very_long_name 2.many.dots illegal: good.c prn.dev Capital > manifest would produce the following: mv very_lon very_long_name mv 2xmany.dot 2.many.dots mv illegalx illegal: mv xprn.dev prn.dev mv capital Capital Notice that "good.c" did not require any conversion, so it did not appear in the output. Suppose I've copied these files from the diskette to another Unix system, and I now want the files back to their original names. If the file "manifest" (the output captured above) was sent along with those files, it could be used to convert the filenames. SEE ALSO
arc(1), pcomm(1), mtools(1) local MKMANIFEST(1)
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