Hi,
I need a way to detect the up and down arrow key inputs for my program. I do not want to wait for the return key to be entered(so that rules out getch() and family). Also I need to process several of these inputs in parallel, by servicing each request with a thread.
Is that possible?
... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I am triying to make sure that there exists only one file with the pattern abc* in path /path/. This directory is having many huge files. If there is only one file then I have to take its complete name only to use furter in my script.
I am planning to do like this:
if ; then... (2 Replies)
Dear All,
The sqlplus 'Accept' command is not waiting for user input when I include the command within a shell script.
Note: The 'Accept' command is working fine if I execute it in a SQLPLUS Prompt.
Please fins the below sample script which i tried.
SCRIPT:
--------
#!... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to send email with attacment and body using "mailx"
(cat body.txt; uuencode attach.txt) | mailx -s "Attachment" abc@xyz.com
When i type this command, the shell is still waiting for me to enter something in standard input and press control D before it sends a mail and... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I have a script that contains the command "whois 1.2.3.4"
Sometimes this command takes far too long to produce any output and as a result the rest of the script is not executed.
Can anyone suggest a method so that if no output is produced after say 2 seconds the script skips that... (2 Replies)
Dear All,
read command not waiting for my input, please suggest.
code:
while read line
do
echo "$line " | grep -i .par$
if ; then
cd ../par
echo " Do you want to proceed"
read
else
cd ../sql
read
fi
done <inp.txt
Its not asking me any input? (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am writing a little script to update a parameters on JMQ. however the JMQ requires a "y" confirmation to be input as part of the cmd I am running. However I want run this script to offline with no input from a user.
it works if a I create a file with with just y in it and pass that in... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have to create a script (ksh or perl) that starts certain number of parallel jobs (another scripts), each of them runs as a foreground process in a separate session. Plus I start monitoring job that has to determine if any of those scripts is expecting input from operator, and switch to... (4 Replies)
Hi,
i am working on one automation , for that i have writing one shell program that take user input in "while read line" block. but read command is taking value that is readed by While block.
while read line; do
command 1;
command 2
echo -n "Do you want to continute > "
read rsp... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ranvijaidba
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
rsh
RSH(1) BSD General Commands Manual RSH(1)NAME
rsh -- remote shell
SYNOPSIS
rsh [-Kdnx] [-k realm] [-l username] host [command]
DESCRIPTION
Rsh executes command on host.
Rsh copies its standard input to the remote command, the standard output of the remote command to its standard output, and the standard error
of the remote command to its standard error. Interrupt, quit and terminate signals are propagated to the remote command; rsh normally termi-
nates when the remote command does. The options are as follows:
-K The -K option turns off all Kerberos authentication.
-d The -d option turns on socket debugging (using setsockopt(2)) on the TCP sockets used for communication with the remote host.
-k The -k option causes rsh to obtain tickets for the remote host in realm instead of the remote host's realm as determined by
krb_realmofhost(3).
-l By default, the remote username is the same as the local username. The -l option allows the remote name to be specified. Kerberos
authentication is used, and authorization is determined as in rlogin(1).
-n The -n option redirects input from the special device /dev/null (see the BUGS section of this manual page).
-x The -x option turns on DES encryption for all data exchange. This may introduce a significant delay in response time.
If no command is specified, you will be logged in on the remote host using rlogin(1).
Shell metacharacters which are not quoted are interpreted on local machine, while quoted metacharacters are interpreted on the remote
machine. For example, the command
rsh otherhost cat remotefile >> localfile
appends the remote file remotefile to the local file localfile, while
rsh otherhost cat remotefile ">>" other_remotefile
appends remotefile to other_remotefile.
FILES
/etc/hosts
SEE ALSO rlogin(1), kerberos(3), krb_sendauth(3), krb_realmofhost(3)HISTORY
The rsh command appeared in 4.2BSD.
BUGS
If you are using csh(1) and put a rsh in the background without redirecting its input away from the terminal, it will block even if no reads
are posted by the remote command. If no input is desired you should redirect the input of rsh to /dev/null using the -n option.
You cannot run an interactive command (like rogue(6) or vi(1)) using rsh; use rlogin(1) instead.
Stop signals stop the local rsh process only; this is arguably wrong, but currently hard to fix for reasons too complicated to explain here.
Linux NetKit (0.17) August 15, 1999 Linux NetKit (0.17)