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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Help it works but its to SLOW Post 302180780 by Garlandxj on Tuesday 1st of April 2008 06:14:52 AM
Old 04-01-2008
Thank you for the reply. Hopefully with practice I won't have to ask such basic questions.

The thought I have in my head is a count

I have been playing with different ones i have found online and I can't get them to work. I am sure it is me that is the problem.

The only purpose of the first script file is to cat the file device.txt and store the variable $device then export that to the second script file i call as a back ground process.

What I am hoping for but cannot get the syntax correct is

as the first script launches background processes it starts a count of how many it has started. Once it reaches 100 it either waits for all background processes to finish (preferable) then continues on. OR

it sleeps for 120 seconds before firing off the next hundred.


As for the cat the output redirect is inside the script that is called

named devicev2

ip=`(host $device | awk ' /has/ {print $4}')`

if [ "$ip" ]
then
dns="$ip"


answer=`(ping -c 1 -q -w 2 -n $device 2>/dev/null | grep received | awk '{print $4}')`
if
[ $answer = 0 ];
then answer="NO"
else answer="YES"
fi


if
[ $answer = "YES" ];
then

routername=`(snmpget -t 2 -r 0 -Oqv -Os -v 2c -c (Read only community string) $device 2>/dev/null SNMPv2-MIB::sysName.0)`
if [ "$routername" = "" ];
then snmpread="NO"
routername="N/A"
else snmpread="YES"
fi
snmpwrite=`(snmpget -t 2 -r 0 -Oqv -Os -v 2c -c (Read Write community string) $device 2>/dev/null SNMPv2-MIB::sysName.0)`
if [ "$snmpwrite" = "" ];
then snmpwrite="NO"
else snmpwrite="YES"
fi

if [ "$snmpwrite" = "YES" ];
then
devicenumber=`(snmpwalk -v 2c -OQs -c (Read Write community string) $device 1.3.6.1.2.1.4.20.1.2 | grep $ip | awk ' /=/ {print $3}')`
interface=`(snmpwalk -v 2c -OQs -c (Read Write community string) $device 1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.2 | grep -w ifDescr.$devicenumber | awk '/=/ {print $3}')`
else
interface="N/A"
fi

echo "$device,$routername,$dns,$answer,$snmpread,$snmpwrite,$interface" >> device.log
echo "$device,$routername,$dns,$answer,$snmpread,$snmpwrite,$interface"

else
snmpread="NO"
snmpwrite="NO"
interface="N/A"
routername="N/A"
echo "$device,$routername,$dns,$answer,$snmpread,$snmpwrite,$interface" >> device.log
echo "$device,$routername,$dns,$answer,$snmpread,$snmpwrite,$interface"

fi

else
dns="Not in DNS"
answer="NO"
snmpread="NO"
snmpwrite="NO"
interface="N/A"
routername="N/A"
echo "$device,$routername,$dns,$answer,$snmpread,$snmpwrite,$interface" >> device.log
echo "$device,$routername,$dns,$answer,$snmpread,$snmpwrite,$interface"

fi

exit
 

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usb-devices(1)							Linux USB Utilities						    usb-devices(1)

NAME
usb-devices - print USB device details SYNOPSIS
usb-devices DESCRIPTION
usb-devices is a (bash) shell script that can be used to display details of USB buses in the system and the devices connected to them. The output of the script is similar to the usb/devices file available either under /proc/bus (if usbfs is mounted), or under /sys/ker- nel/debug (if debugfs is mounted there). The script is primairily intended to be used if the file is not available. In contrast to the usb/devices file, this script only lists active interfaces (those marked with a "*" in the usb/devices file) and their endpoints. Be advised that there can be differences in the way information is sorted, as well as in the format of the output. RETURN VALUE
If sysfs is not mounted, a non-zero exit code is returned. FILES
/sys/bus/usb/devices/usb* The part of the sysfs tree the script walks through to assemble the printed information. /proc/bus/usb/devices Location where the usb/devices file can normally be found for Linux kernels before 2.6.31, if usbfs is mounted. /sys/kernel/debug/usb/devices Location where the usb/devices file can normally be found for Linux kernel 2.6.31 and later, if debugfs is mounted. SEE ALSO
lsusb(8), usbview(8). AUTHORS
Greg Kroah-Hartman <greg@kroah.com> Randy Dunlap <rdunlap@xenotime.net> Frans Pop <elendil@planet.nl> usbutils-001 23 June 2009 usb-devices(1)
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