You should by now have a space after "[" and a space before "]".
The logic in this bit needs attention if you want to swap the filenames:
Quote:
set tmp = $file1
mv "$file2" "$file1"
mv "$tmp" "$file2"
BTW. I can't make "set tmp = $file1" do anything useful.
Some may argue that the filename swap can be done in three steps (not four). However this can introduce unexpected changes to file permissions.
Footnote: Notice the curly braces. You will rarely find cause to not use them!
Footnote 2: Providing both files are on the same filesystem a "mv" command just changes the name of the inode. It is very quick and the contents of the files do not move. If the files are on different filesystems they do actually move!
Last edited by methyl; 09-28-2009 at 11:47 AM..
Reason: Footnote
# sub: find block (in cols), return line-numbers (begin-end) or 0 if notfound
sub findb{
my ($exp1,$col1,$exp2,$col2)= @_; # $exp = expression to find, $col - column to search in
my $cnt=0;
my ($val1,$val2);
my ($beg,$end);
for($cnt=1;$cnt<=65536;$cnt++){
$val1 =... (3 Replies)
Hi Gurus:
I am trying to understand the following line of code.I did enough of googling to understand but no luck.Please help me understand the follow chunk of code:
X=$0
MOD=${X%/*}/env.ksh
X is the current script from which I am trying to execute.
Say if X=test.ksh
$MOD is echoing :... (3 Replies)
Hi
I have a questions related 2 commands : 'du' and 'ls'.
Why is the difference between output of 'du' and 'ls' cmd's ?
Command 'du' :
------------------
jakubn@server1 /home/jakubn $ du -s *
4 engine.ksh
1331 scripts
'du -s *' ---> shows block count size on disk (512 Bytes... (5 Replies)
Hi all
I stuck with a problem. I want to understand the execution of the below code. Can any one please help me
`sqlplus username/passwd@DB << EOF
set serveroutput on
declare
begin
sql_query;
end;
/
commit
/
quit
EOF`
My ques is why do we use EOF and how does it help. (4 Replies)
Hi,
Please help me to understand the bold segments in the below regex.
Both are of same type whose meaning I am looking for.
find . \( -iregex './\{6,10\}./src' \) -type d -maxdepth 2
Output:
./20111210.0/src
In continuation to above:
sed -e 's|./\(*.\{1,3\}\).*|\1|g'
Output: ... (4 Replies)
Hi Guys,
I am new to scripting , I am trying to rebuild a script based on an old script. Can someone help me figure out what the script is doing? This is only a part of the script.
I am looking to interpret these two points in the scripts:-
1)
test=`echo $?`
while
I do not... (3 Replies)
Hi, I saw the following explanation about alias in bash from gnu website, but I didn't get the meaning:
Bash always reads at least one complete line of input before executing any of the commands on that line.
Aliases are expanded when a command is read, not when it is executed. Therefore, an... (3 Replies)
I tried to use lseek system call to determine the number of bytes in a file. To do so, I used open system call with O_APPEND flag to open a file. As lseek returns the current offset so I called lseek for opened file with offset as zero and whence as SEEK_CUR. So I guess it must return the number of... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I found this in a script and I would like to know how this works
Code is here:
# var1=PART1_PART2
# var2=${var1##*_}
# echo $var2
PART2
I'm wondering how ##* makes the Shell to understand to pick up the last value from the given. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sathyaonnuix
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
xzcmp
XZDIFF(1) XZ Utils XZDIFF(1)NAME
xzcmp, xzdiff, lzcmp, lzdiff - compare compressed files
SYNOPSIS
xzcmp [cmp_options] file1 [file2]
xzdiff [diff_options] file1 [file2]
lzcmp [cmp_options] file1 [file2]
lzdiff [diff_options] file1 [file2]
DESCRIPTION
xzcmp and xdiff invoke cmp(1) or diff(1) on files compressed with xz(1), lzma(1), gzip(1), or bzip2(1). All options specified are passed
directly to cmp or diff. If only one file is specified, then the files compared are file1 (which must have a suffix of a supported com-
pression format) and file1 from which the compression format suffix has been stripped. If two files are specified, then they are uncom-
pressed if necessary and fed to cmp(1) or diff(1). The exit status from cmp or diff is preserved.
The names lzcmp and lzdiff are provided for backward compatibility with LZMA Utils.
SEE ALSO cmp(1), diff(1), xz(1), gzip(1), bzip2(1), zdiff(1)BUGS
Messages from the cmp(1) or diff(1) programs refer to temporary filenames instead of those specified.
Tukaani 2009-07-05 XZDIFF(1)