hi,
in a korn shell script, has anyone ever seen an 'exit' being treated as a 'break 2'? I have a script which has 3 nested loops. Within the inner most loop, i'm trying to exit the script on a fault condition. instead of exiting, it's acting as a 'break 2' and then continuing on with the... (4 Replies)
i am writing a client and server program
client program
main()
{
int sockfd,n;
char str;
struct sockaddr_in sock;
if ((sockfd=socket(AF_INET,SOCK_STREAM,0))<0)
{
perror("SOCKET ERROR");
}
bzero(&sock,sizeof(sock));
sock.sin_family=AF_INET; (1 Reply)
Hi,
I did a df|awk| command and it returns a percentage "94%",
how could I only get the integer part
"94" out of it, so I can compare it to another number,
I knwo that I have to pipe it to sth, but "grep " did not work, it still give me number WITH the percentage, does someone know what... (3 Replies)
I want each integer to be a value/element in the array, however the string is being treated as one. How can I stream these into distinct values?
PSF6INDEX=`(snmpwalk -v 2c -c 'H0meru!es' ${SWITCH} .1.3.6.1.2.1.2.2.1.2 | grep 'GigabitEthernet' | sed 's/IF-MIB::ifDescr\.//g' | awk '{print $1}' |... (1 Reply)
Folks
Appreciate your help in understanding issue in relation to below.
I need to pul uvalue from a file (tmpfile) and compare it with a number to make decision.
Using #!/bin/sh
contents of tmpfile :
Slot uvalue : 0.16
How I am pulling it:
unifval=`awk '/uvalue/ {print $4}' tmpfile` ... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
is there an easy way to convert integer to string in bash?
I have numbers like 1, 2, ..., 112, ...
and I would like to get
001 002 003 004 ...
Thank you,
Sarah (4 Replies)
Hello and Good day, I am currently studying C and I just finished learning about variables mainly those of integer type.
I am wondering if the list below are all there is to integer variables and there are still more that i have to learn.
Here are the list:
Char
Short
int
long
long long... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: split_func0
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
io::async::signal
IO::Async::Signal(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation IO::Async::Signal(3pm)NAME
"IO::Async::Signal" - event callback on receipt of a POSIX signal
SYNOPSIS
use IO::Async::Signal;
use IO::Async::Loop;
my $loop = IO::Async::Loop->new;
my $signal = IO::Async::Signal->new(
name => "HUP",
on_receipt => sub {
print "I caught SIGHUP
";
},
);
$loop->add( $signal );
$loop->run;
DESCRIPTION
This subclass of IO::Async::Notifier invokes its callback when a particular POSIX signal is received.
Multiple objects can be added to a "Loop" that all watch for the same signal. The callback functions will all be invoked, in no particular
order.
EVENTS
The following events are invoked, either using subclass methods or CODE references in parameters:
on_receipt
Invoked when the signal is received.
PARAMETERS
The following named parameters may be passed to "new" or "configure":
name => STRING
The name of the signal to watch. This should be a bare name like "TERM". Can only be given at construction time.
on_receipt => CODE
CODE reference for the "on_receipt" event.
Once constructed, the "Signal" will need to be added to the "Loop" before it will work.
AUTHOR
Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>
perl v5.14.2 2012-10-24 IO::Async::Signal(3pm)