12-26-2009
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello Everyone;
I have a script that is throwing the following message:
stty: : Invalid argument
The line that gives the message is the following,
sailormoon$ scp home/voice.xml newwave@silvermoon:/newwave/config/radius
stty: : Invalid argument
voice.xml | ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: tony3101
2 Replies
2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
does anyone know how to incorporate this in a script so users can actually make use of their backspace button that they've grown accustomed to?
stty erase ^H --- this isn't working the script. works on command line but i wanna invoke it whenever this program of mine is run so users can use... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Terrible
2 Replies
3. Solaris
I was compiling perl on a Solaris 10 server. The compile failed because the output of getconf is wrong (it indicates xarch is generic64 not v9. This is a known bug but I cannot find a fix. I wrote a script as suggested that changes it but when you run getconf again it goes back to generic64.
... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: csross
2 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
How can I use the rsh command in perl?
I need to rsh to a machine, change directory and run a C program there.
I have something like this:
$USER="username";
$MY_DIR="\t\home\"
$MY_SCRIPT="./get_statistics.out"
system "sudo rsh", $USER, "cd", $MY_DIR, "; sudo", $MYSCRIPT;
which obviously... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: looza
1 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello,
I'm trying to implement a script to call a third-party tool every so often and write the results to a file. If I run it interactively it works fine, but when it comes to run it out of a cronjob, I keep getting this error:
stty: tcgetattr: a specified file does not support the... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: fabiogilr
3 Replies
6. Programming
Hello everyone.
I'm stuck with an error message that neither I nor any of my computer science peeps can understand. The program I wrote is meant to be a simple decimal to binary converter, but with this message it's more complicated than I thought.
Here's the code:
#include <iostream>... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: qf_woodfox
2 Replies
7. Programming
Hello everyone.
I'm stuck with an error message that neither I nor any of my computer science peeps can understand. The program I wrote is meant to be a simple decimal to binary converter, but with this message it's more complicated than I thought.
Here's the code:
#include <iostream>... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: qf_woodfox
3 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi guys
In perl
how can i
rsh into the machine ($a) as the user who is currently login into that machine
then run this commnad
x11vnc -create
keeping that alive but back on the origrianl ($b) machine run vncviewer $a
i want to give it the machine to rsh/vncv into on the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: ab52
0 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
I'm trying to execute something like this:
exec perl -i -pe 's/\015/\012/g' '${file}'
in my expect script and I get:
error "invalid command name \"perl\".
however, if I run
perl -i -pe 's/\015/\012/g' "/Users/Shared/menu-items.txt"
directly in my terminal, it runs fine. I'm an... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: dpouliot
4 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
My employers would like me to selectively run one of several different (already-existing) Korn Shell menu-driven scripts out of the user's .profile file, depending on some yet-to-be-specified user critieria.
I've never done this kind of thing, but I have the existing scripts (among other... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Clovis_Sangrail
5 Replies
RSH(1) BSD General Commands Manual RSH(1)
NAME
rsh -- remote shell
SYNOPSIS
rsh [-46dn] [-l username] [-t timeout] host [command]
DESCRIPTION
The rsh utility executes command on host.
The rsh utility 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 terminates when the remote command does. The options are as follows:
-4 Use IPv4 addresses only.
-6 Use IPv6 addresses only.
-d Turn on socket debugging (using setsockopt(2)) on the TCP sockets used for communication with the remote host.
-l username
Allow the remote username to be specified. By default, the remote username is the same as the local username. Authorization is deter-
mined as in rlogin(1).
-n Redirect input from the special device /dev/null (see the BUGS section of this manual page).
-t timeout
Allow a timeout to be specified (in seconds). If no data is sent or received in this time, rsh will exit.
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), setsockopt(2), rcmd(3), ruserok(3), hosts(5), hosts.equiv(5), rlogind(8), rshd(8)
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 ee(1) 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.
BSD
October 16, 2002 BSD