Does anyone out there know of ANY specific books pertaining to SGI's flavor of Unix - IRIX?
I have been in contact with SGI directly and they have not supplied me with any usable reference material or manuals.
I realize man pages are a good source for info, but I need to go a little deeper... (6 Replies)
Using bash, I'm trying to read a .properties file (name=value pairs), assigning an indirect variable reference for each line in the file.
The trick is that a property's value string may contain the name of a property that occurred earlier in the file, and I want the name of the 1st property to... (5 Replies)
I'm looking at http://www.opengroup.org/pubs/online/7908799/xsh/pthread.h.html trying to understand mutexs and semaphores. Windows makes a distinction between the two. Is a mutex and semaphore different in unix land?
Is there a tutorial on threading in unix somewhere?
I'm also looking at... (4 Replies)
hi there
I have the following script in which i have created a PrintHash() function.
I want to pass to this function the reference to a hash (in the final code i will be passing different hashes to this print function hence the need for a function). I am getting an error
Type of arg 1 to... (1 Reply)
This log file is wacky.
the syntax puts this in the Installation line:
Installation PATCH75682.91 of PATCH75681 complete
Installation PATCH76537.91 of PATCH76537 complete
Installation PATCH92217.91 of PATCH92217 complete
So I'm looking for a sed 's///' to remove the first PATCHxxxx... (6 Replies)
Hi All
I have a doubt and want to be cleared I am using
@array = (10, 20);
$rarray = \@array;
#print "$rarray\n";
#print "@$rarray\n";
$rr= \$array;
#print $$rr;
$rr++;
print $$rr;
As you can see the $rr contains the reference to the first element of the array , now as the... (5 Replies)
Hi all,
I am new and I am very interested in Awk programming language and would like to know what references or books that really worked for you that was clear, concise with simple examples.
much appreciated in advance. (1 Reply)
I have the following entries and want to perform a sort.
Each entry is separated by a newline, however each line should not be considired seperate. Maybe an awk program or similar, or a small script.
Anderson, E.R., Duvall, T.L., Jr., and Jefferies, S.M., 1990. Modelling
of Solar... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: kristinu
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
rake
RAKE(1) Ruby Programmers Reference Guide RAKE(1)NAME
rake -- Ruby Make
SYNOPSIS
rake [--f Rakefile] [--version] [-CGNPgnqstv] [-D [PATTERN]] [-E CODE] [-I LIBDIR] [-R RAKELIBDIR] [-T [PATTERN]] [-e CODE] [-p CODE]
[-r MODULE] [--rules] [variable=value] target ...
DESCRIPTION
Rake is a simple ruby(1) build program with capabilities similar to the regular make(1) command.
Rake has the following features:
o Rakefiles (Rake's version of Makefiles) are completely defined in standard Ruby syntax. No XML files to edit. No quirky Makefile syntax
to worry about (is that a tab or a space?).
o Users can specify tasks with prerequisites.
o Rake supports rule patterns to synthesize implicit tasks.
o Flexible FileLists that act like arrays but know about manipulating file names and paths.
o A library of prepackaged tasks to make building rakefiles easier.
OPTIONS --version Display the program version.
-C
--classic-namespace
Put Task and FileTask in the top level namespace
-D [PATTERN]
--describe [PATTERN]
Describe the tasks (matching optional PATTERN), then exit.
-E CODE
--execute-continue CODE
Execute some Ruby code, then continue with normal task processing.
-G
--no-system
--nosystem Use standard project Rakefile search paths, ignore system wide rakefiles.
-I LIBDIR
--libdir LIBDIR Include LIBDIR in the search path for required modules.
-N
--no-search
--nosearch Do not search parent directories for the Rakefile.
-P
--prereqs Display the tasks and dependencies, then exit.
-R RAKELIBDIR
--rakelib RAKELIBDIR
--rakelibdir RAKELIBDIR
Auto-import any .rake files in RAKELIBDIR. (default is rakelib )
-T [PATTERN]
--tasks [PATTERN] Display the tasks (matching optional PATTERN) with descriptions, then exit.
-e CODE
--execute CODE Execute some Ruby code and exit.
-f FILE
--rakefile FILE Use FILE as the rakefile.
-h
--help Prints a summary of options.
-g
--system Using system wide (global) rakefiles (usually ~/.rake/*.rake ).
-n
--dry-run Do a dry run without executing actions.
-p CODE
--execute-print CODE
Execute some Ruby code, print the result, then exit.
-q
--quiet Do not log messages to standard output.
-r MODULE
--require MODULE Require MODULE before executing rakefile.
-s
--silent Like --quiet, but also suppresses the 'in directory' announcement.
-t
--trace Turn on invoke/execute tracing, enable full backtrace.
-v
--verbose Log message to standard output (default).
--rules Trace the rules resolution.
SEE ALSO ruby(1)make(1)
http://rake.rubyforge.org/
REPORTING BUGS
Bugs, features requests and other issues can be logged at <http://onestepback.org/redmine/projects/show/rake>.
You will need an account to before you can post issues. Register at <http://onestepback.org/redmine/account/register>. Or you can send an
email to the author.
AUTHOR
Rake is written by Jim Weirich <jim@weirichhouse.org>
UNIX November 7, 2012 UNIX