Hi,
Is it possible to create a dynamic array in shell script. I am trying to get the list of logfiles that created that day and put it in a dynamic array. I am not sure about it. help me
New to scripting
Gundu (3 Replies)
My requirement is to create a KSH to generate the SQL select statement in oracle with all the columns and optional where condition if given the table name as input to the program
Have any of you worked with a similar requirement? Can you give me some inputs?
Regards,
Kousikan (2 Replies)
dear pro-coders,
is there any command out there that takes out the front spaces from a string?
sample strings:
4 members
5 members
3 members
but it has to be like so:
4 members
5 members
3 members (3 Replies)
Hi everyon,
I am trying to search for a pattern in a file and add "//" to the begining of the file.
lets say i want to comment out a line from my codes. the line that should be commented out contains the word "reset". i need to search for the word "reset" and comment out that specific line. is... (5 Replies)
Hi,
Can anybody help me how to add a word in front of a line in a file.Actually it is bit tricky to add a word. i will give a sample for this:
Input :
1110001 ABC DEF
1110001 EFG HIJ
1110001 KLM NOP
1110002 QRS RST
1110002 UVW XYZ
Output:
%HD% 1110001 ABC DEF
%DT% 1110001 EFG HIJ... (4 Replies)
Hello,
Did any one know how to use perl join line and add | in front
Input-->
timestamp=2009-11-10-04.55.20.829347;
a;
b;
c;
ddaa;
timestamp=2009-11-10-04.55.20.829347;
aa;
bb;
cc;
Output-->
... (2 Replies)
Hi
I've one file full of paths of certain files and I want to add some extra file words in front of all the paths. for eg:
i have a file name test.txt which show some details only..
024_hd/044/0344eng.txt
035_bv/222/editor.jpg
here I want to add /usr/people/indiana/ infront of all the... (4 Replies)
I'm trying to convert this line:
to
\ with sed.
This is what I have so far:
sed -e 's/\]*\)\]/\\\\\/'
but this still gives me .
Any suggestions? (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: lehaste
15 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUNOS
asadmin-multimode
asadmin-multimode(1AS)asadmin-multimode(1AS)NAME
asadmin-multimode, multimode - allows you to execute multiple commands while preserving environment settings and remaining in the asadmin
utility
SYNOPSIS
multimode [--file filename] [--printprompt=true] [--encoding encode] [--terse=false] [--echo=false]
Use multimode to process the asadmin commands. The command-line interface will prompt you for a command, execute that command, display the
results of the command, and then prompt you for the next command. Additionally, all the asadmin option names set in this mode are used for
all the subsequent commands. You can set your environment and run commands until you exit multimode by typing "exit" or "quit." You can
also provide commands by passing a previously prepared list of commands from a file or standard input (pipe). You can invoke multimode from
within a multimode session; once you exit the second multimode environment, you return to your original multimode environment.
This command is supported in local mode only.
--file reads the commands as defined in the file.
--printprompt allows the printing of asadmin prompt after each command is executed. Set this option to false when the commands
are piped or redirected from the standard input or file. By default the option is set to true.
--encoding specifies the locale for the file to be decoded.
--terse indicates that any output data must be very concise, typically avoiding human-friendly sentences and favoring well-
formatted data for consumption by a script. Default is false.
--echo setting to true will echo the command line statement on to the standard output. Default is false.
Example 1: Using multimode to execute multiple commands
example% asadmin multimode --file commands_file.txt
Where: example% is the system prompt. The multimode settings are executed from the commands_file.txt file.
EXIT STATUS
0 command executed successfully
1 error in executing the command
asadmin-export(1AS), asadmin-unset(1AS)J2EE 1.4 SDK March 2004 asadmin-multimode(1AS)