Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: need urgent help
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting need urgent help Post 302168338 by vino on Monday 18th of February 2008 04:22:56 AM
Old 02-18-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by namishtiwari
Hi vino,

i have changed the script a bit and now for
mt_clean -a mtBackup

it is showing me the desired output..

but for the delete option ie mtDelete,i need not to give any location,it will by defualt delete the files from the default location.

When i ran this

mt_clean -a mtDelete

it is showing me the same output as for the above ie--
Code:
webmut2@france>mt_clean -a mtDelete
Either option l or L should be given to mt_clean
Usage: mt_clean [-a mtDelete/mtBackup] [-l/-L Backuplocation] [-t now/cron/hh:mm]
mt_clean is terminated

your suggestions are required.
So what did you change ?
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Need Help Urgent

Hi. My E250 server (Solaris 8) running oracle database gets hangup in between. I checked the logs in /var/adm/messages but could not find anything related to this. can anyone help me out? bala (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: balaji_prk
3 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

URGENT,URGENT- Need help tape drive installation

Hi, I am trying to attach tape drive to sun V890 running Solaris 9 on it. I have installed HBA(qlogic) in slot 1 of 0-8 slots and booted the system. I do not see HBAin prtdiag output. The tape drive is not attached to HBA. The tape drive I am going to attach is Sony AIT3. 1.How can I make... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sriny
3 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

need help urgent...........

Hi friends.. I am using the below command to search few files from many folders which is under one folder.. i mean let say the path is A/B/C...and inside C...i have 1-10 folder... the below command is working fine.... for i in 1 3 5 7; do find /A/B/C/${i} -name "*.txt" -o -name "*.csv"... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sapan123
3 Replies

4. Red Hat

urgent

abb 117.96.113.21 cgg 101.2.104.42 cgg 110.227.247.236 desk 203.20.35.28 png 1.39.242.241 png 1.39.242.241 rzx 101.2.104.42 rzx 115.246.160.36 abb 49.138.242.187 how to find the count of this file wtrto ip thnx in advance (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: himanshu1.singh
4 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Urgent!!

Hi I have a file containing DE 3'UTR in Homo sapiens alpha-1-B glycoprotein (A1BG), mRNA. SQ Sequence 216 BP; 37 A; 58 C; 69 G; 52 T; 0 other; DE 3'UTR in Homo sapiens alpha-1-B glycoprotein (A1BG), mRNA. SQ Sequence 1844 BP; 358 A; 483 C; 434 G; 569 T; 0 other; DE 3'UTR in Homo... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jyotirmoy21
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need Urgent help

Hi friends, I need urgent help here: Issue: I need to create shell script that will find the files & throw an error through job (autosys) when file not found. Daily we use to receive 3 files from a system. Obstacles: 1) All 3 files names are same. 2) Timestamp is same. 3)... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: tush
1 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need urgent help

Hi geeks, I'm trying to write a below script, but it throws an error, please check and correct me. #!/bin/bash #The below script will extract the string error1 error2 and error3 and also it will count and list the occurrence count1='grep -i "error1" test.txt | wc -l' count2='grep -i "error2"... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: naren nandale
4 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Urgent !!

Hello All, I want to use scp for copying multiple files ( files locations are stored in an array ) from remote server from different locations without prompting password every time . I will supply password once and it should be able to copy every file mentioned in an array. eg :- array have ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: manpav
1 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

URGENT Reading a file and assessing the syntax shell script URGENT

I am trying to write a shell script which takes an input file as an arguement in the terminal e.g. bash shellscriptname.sh input.txt. I would like for the file to be read line by line each time checking if the .txt file contains certain words or letters(validating the syntax). If the line being... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Gurdza32
1 Replies
PKG_DELETE(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 					     PKG_DELETE(1)

NAME
pkg_delete -- a utility for deleting previously installed software package distributions SYNOPSIS
pkg_delete [-ADFfkNnORrVv] [-K pkg_dbdir] [-P destdir] [-p prefix] pkg-name ... DESCRIPTION
The pkg_delete command is used to delete packages that have been previously installed with the pkg_add(1) command. The given packages are sorted, so that the dependencies needed by a package are deleted after the package. Before any action is executed, pkg_delete checks for packages that are marked as preserved or have depending packages left. If the -k flag is given, preserved packages are skipped and not removed. Unless the -f flag is given, pkg_delete stops on the first error. WARNING
Since the pkg_delete command may execute scripts or programs provided by a package file, your system may be susceptible to ``Trojan horses'' or other subtle attacks from miscreants who create dangerous package files. You are advised to verify the competence and identity of those who provide installable package files. For extra protection, examine all the package control files in the package record directory <PKG_DBDIR>/<pkg-name>/). Pay particular attention to any +INSTALL or +DEINSTALL files, and inspect the +CONTENTS file for @cwd, @mode (check for setuid), @dirrm, @exec, and @unexec directives, and/or use the pkg_info(1) command to examine the installed package control files. OPTIONS
The following command line options are supported: pkg-name ... The named packages are deinstalled, wildcards can be used, see pkg_info(1). If no version is given, the one currently installed will be removed. If the -F flag is given, one or more (absolute) filenames may be specified and the package database will be consulted for the package to which the given file belongs. These packages are then deinstalled. -A Recursively remove all automatically installed packages that were needed by the given packages and are no longer required. Does not remove manually installed packages; see also the -R flag. -D If a deinstallation script exists for a given package, do not execute it. -F Any pkg-name given will be interpreted as pathname which is subsequently transformed in a (real) package name via the package data- base. That way, packages can be deleted by giving a filename instead of the package-name. -f Force removal of the package, even if a dependency is recorded or the deinstall script fails. This might break the package database; see pkg_admin(1) on how to repair it. -ff Force removal of the package, even if the package is marked as a preserved package. Note that this is a dangerous operation. See also the -k option. -K pkg_dbdir Override the value of the PKG_DBDIR configuration option with the value pkg_dbdir. -k Silently skip all packages that are marked as preserved. -N Remove the package's registration and its entries from the package database, but leave the files installed. Don't run any deinstall scripts or @unexec lines either. -n Don't actually deinstall a package, just report the steps that would be taken. -O Only delete the package's entries from the package database; do not touch the package or its files itself. -P destdir Prefix all file and directory names with destdir. For packages without install scripts this has the same behavior as using chroot(8). -p prefix Set prefix as the directory in which to delete files from any installed packages which do not explicitly set theirs. For most pack- ages, the prefix will be set automatically to the installed location by pkg_add(1). -R Recursively remove all packages that were needed by the given packages and are no longer required. This option overrides the -A flag. -r Recursively remove all packages that require one of the packages given. -V Print version number and exit. -v Turn on verbose output. TECHNICAL DETAILS
pkg_delete does pretty much what it says. It examines installed package records in <PKG_DBDIR>/<pkg-name>, deletes the package contents, and finally removes the package records. If a package is required by other installed packages, pkg_delete will list those dependent packages and refuse to delete the package (unless the -f option is given). If a package has been marked as a preserved package, it will not be able to be deleted (unless more than one occurrence of the -f option is given). If a filename is given instead of a package name, the package of which the given file belongs to can be deleted if the -F flag is given. The filename needs to be absolute, see the output produced by the pkg_info(1) -aF command. If a deinstall script exists for the package, it is executed before and after any files are removed. It is this script's responsibility to clean up any additional messy details around the package's installation, since all pkg_delete knows how to do is delete the files created in the original distribution. The deinstall script is called as: deinstall <pkg-name> VIEW-DEINSTALL before removing the package from a view, and as: deinstall <pkg-name> DEINSTALL before deleting all files and as: deinstall <pkg-name> POST-DEINSTALL after deleting them. Passing the keywords VIEW-DEINSTALL, DEINSTALL, and POST-DEINSTALL lets you potentially write only one program/script that handles all aspects of installation and deletion. All scripts are called with the environment variable PKG_PREFIX set to the installation prefix (see the -p option above). This allows a package author to write a script that reliably performs some action on the directory where the package is installed, even if the user might have changed it by specifying the -p option when running pkg_delete or pkg_add(1). The scripts are also called with the PKG_METADATA_DIR environment variable set to the location of the +* meta-data files, and with the PKG_REFCOUNT_DBDIR environment variable set to the location of the package reference counts database directory. If the -P flag was given to pkg_delete, PKG_DESTDIR will be set to destdir. ENVIRONMENT
See pkg_install.conf(5) for options, that can also be specified using the environment. SEE ALSO
pkg_add(1), pkg_admin(1), pkg_create(1), pkg_info(1), pkg_install.conf(5) pkgsrc(7) AUTHORS
Jordan Hubbard most of the work John Kohl refined it for NetBSD Hubert Feyrer NetBSD wildcard dependency processing, pkgdb, recursive "down" delete, etc. Joerg Sonnenberger Rewrote most of the code to compute correct order of deinstallation and to improve error handling. BSD
January 20, 2010 BSD
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:42 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy