If the "vendor software" allows you to execute unix commands from the user interface, did you try just:
? (i.e. why use $(...)?)
Having no idea where this "vendor software" might chose to write c.dat, you might want to fully qualify a path to c.dat.
In any case the command you quoted:
is not the one I wrote:
If you're still having problems, perhaps you could explain more about this "vendor sorfware" (i.e. is it UNIX-based, Windows-based, Web-based, based on some remote server, etc.)
Hi There,
I have a script which finds for log files and removes them if the file has changed in the last day.
The script runs fine without errors. The log file is still there. So, I decided to print the find command and run the command outside the script. Getting "Incomplete statement"
Can you... (6 Replies)
I'm redirecting the output of a command to a logfile, however, if the user is on a terminal I would also like the output to be displayed on the screen.
tar tvf some_tarfile >Logfile
if the user is on a term then have the output to the Logfile and also be displayed on the screen at the same... (2 Replies)
Hi there
I have a script that runs but it outputs everything onto the screen instead of a file.
I've tried using the > outputfile.txt however all it does is dump the output to the screen and creates an outputfile.txt but doesn't put anything in that file.
Any help would be appreciated
... (6 Replies)
We have an application here that does some table queries and then prints the result on screen. I do not have the code of this application (which i will just call "queryCommand"), but what it does is that you call it with some parameters and it prints some info about the query and then the... (5 Replies)
Hello i am trying to write a script that will redirect the output to a certain file. Here is the code so far:
#!/bin/bash
ps -e | sort | more > psfile
When I execute the script nothing happens since i assume the output was redirected to the file called psfile. When I try to look at the... (1 Reply)
Hi Gurues,
I need to modify an existing script that uses find to search a folder, and then move its contents to a folder. What I need to do is run gzip on each file after it's moved.
So, I ran this little test:
Put a ls.tar file on my $HOME, mkdir tmp, and then:
virtuo@tnpmprd01: find .... (3 Replies)
Hi all
I was wondering if there was a slicker way of doing this without the file -
awk '{print $2}' FS=":" "${FILE}" > "${TMPFILE}"
{
read M_GRP_ID || m_fail 1 "Error: Read failed 1 (${FUNCNAME})"
read M_GRP_WAIT || m_fail 1 "Error: Read failed 2 (${FUNCNAME})"
}... (6 Replies)
Hi all,
i have been trying to direct o/p of one command to file, but i don get any entries in file but ouptput get displayed on command prompt.
I have tried many options but still , it does not work.
please guide.
here is the command
-bash-3.00$ /usr/local/bin/sudo lpstat -p | grep... (2 Replies)
Example script:
find mydir -type f -exec echo {}>aaa \; -exec echo {}>bbb \;The two paths go the the bbb file, while there should be one of them on each file. How should I do it to get it working? (2 Replies)
Hello,
I am running a shell script on AIX 6.1. The script calls ksh to run. ksh is also the login shell for the account under which I am running this script, but for convenience I always change to the bash shell via "exec bash" after I "su" to the account.
The script redirects stdout and... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Clovis_Sangrail
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
dh-exec-install
DH-EXEC-INSTALL(1) dh-exec DH-EXEC-INSTALL(1)NAME
dh-exec-install - Install (and possibly rename) files.
SYNOPSIS
#! /usr/bin/dh-exec
debian/default.conf => /etc/my-package/start.conf
usr/bin/*
DESCRIPTION
Being a sub-command of dh-exec(1), this program must not be ran directly, but through dh-exec, which automatically runs all available
sub-commands if run bare; or explicitly with dh-exec --with=install.
It is meant to be used for dh_install(1) files, and those alone. If it finds that its input is not such a file, it will do nothing, but
echo back the contents.
The purpose of the program is to extend dh_install(1)'s functionality, by allowing to specify a destination filename.
This can be accomplished by a special syntax: the " => " mark between a source and a destination means that the source file should be
installed with the specified destination name.
For obvious reasons, the source must not be a wildcard, and the destination in this case must be a file, and not a directory.
All other non-comment lines are left alone.
RESTRICTIONS
Due to the way executable scripts are called from debhelper(1), there is no way to know what options were used for the original
dh_install(1). This means, that the --sourcedir option of dh_install(1) will not work correctly when dh-exec-install is in use.
IMPLEMENTATION
Internally, the renaming happens by creating a temporary directory under debian/tmp/, and copying (or moving, if the source was under
debian/tmp/ to begin with) the file there, with the new name.
This is done this way to allow dh_install(1) to do the real copying, and allow its options to continue working, even when renaming is
involved.
The temporary directory is put under debian/tmp so that it will be cleaned by dh_prep(1) when the clean target gets to run. Thus, no extra
code is needed anywhere to clean up the renamed files.
ENVIRONMENT
DH_EXEC_SCRIPTDIR
Indicates which directory the command-specific scripts should be sought for. If not specified, scripts will be searched for in
/usr/share/dh-exec/.
FILES
$DH_EXEC_SCRIPTDIR/dh-exec-install-*
The various scripts for the higher-level program.
SEE ALSO debhelper(1), dh-exec(1), dh_install(1)AUTHOR
dh-exec-install is copyright (C) 2011-2012 by Gergely Nagy <algernon@madhouse-project.org>.
2012-05-03 DH-EXEC-INSTALL(1)