I am seeing a strange behavior of the 'find' command on AIX. As you can see,
the find command sometimes finds the file and sometimes does not based on how
many characters I specified between the wildcards.
I know all of these issues
can be resolved by using double quotes like "*est*". But I am posting this to
see if any of you can explain why it is able to find the file when I
specified *estf* but could not when I used *est*.
Hi, it seems I've got an hw error on more than one device.
I use an AIX 5.2.
this is the problem desc.
Description
DISK OPERATION ERROR
Probable Causes
DASD DEVICE
Failure Causes
DISK DRIVE
DISK DRIVE ELECTRONICS
I wish to read the SYSLOG file, where is it ?
tk (1 Reply)
Hello everyone,
I was trying to install db2 on Ubuntu, but got messed up with manual installation and Synaptic. At the moment, I find myself with a filesystem where DB2 is NOT installed ( I removed it with a sudo rm :o ) and with Synaptic still flagging db2exc as installed. The problem is that... (1 Reply)
I have this in my .profile:
stty erase `tput kbs`
which sets erase to ^H for a vt and ^? for an xterm.
This has been fine up until now on all systems whether I login using a vt terminal emulator or an xterm.
On this new system though, if I log in directly using an xterm, backspace doesn't... (1 Reply)
:mad:
Dear All,
Here I am sending the error msg that come to to the terminal when I attempt to start my
linux redhat 2.4.18-3 system.
cheking file system
/boot clean
/home : clean
/usr :containing file system with errors,check forced
error reading block 35924(attempt to... (3 Replies)
May God never give you the bane of working on Solaris.
Now, I am trying to run this simple shell script:
#!/bin/sh
input="a
b
c"
data="123"
while read eachline
do
data="$data$eachline"
done << EOF
$(echo "$input")
EOF... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have a passwd file with 3 users belonging to the the root group (gid=0), but the group file does not list these users as members of the root group?
Shoud I be worried and apart from manually changing it, how can it be remediated?
thx
Norgaard (1 Reply)
here in one of the server the lvol4 is having 20G and used space is 181M
but it showing 98% used kindly advice any one can i run fsck -y after unmounted that lvol4
/dev/mapper/vg01-lvol4
20G 19G 418M 98% /var/opt/fedex
aymara.emea $ du -sh /var/opt/fedex/... (3 Replies)
We have a Sun Server running Solaris 10 and Veritas Cluster Server. The RAID Volumes in the Server (/ , swap, opt, var, usr) are managed by VxVm and UFS is grown on all these volumes.
Lately the system has been crashing due to an inconsistency in the opt filesystem. Upon reboot we did a fsck on... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I am running a parallel processing on aggregating a file. I am splitting the process into 7 separate parallel process and processing the same input file and the process will do the same for each 7 run. The issue I am having is for some reason the 1st parallel processes complete first... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: arunkumar_mca
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
shar
SHAR(1) BSD General Commands Manual SHAR(1)NAME
shar -- create a shell archive of files
SYNOPSIS
shar file ...
DESCRIPTION
The shar command writes a sh(1) shell script to the standard output which will recreate the file hierarchy specified by the command line op-
erands. Directories will be recreated and must be specified before the files they contain (the find(1) utility does this correctly).
The shar command is normally used for distributing files by ftp(1) or mail(1).
EXAMPLES
To create a shell archive of the program ls(1) and mail it to Rick:
cd ls
shar `find . -print` | mail -s "ls source" rick
To recreate the program directory:
mkdir ls
cd ls
...
<delete header lines and examine mailed archive>
...
sh archive
SEE ALSO compress(1), mail(1), tar(1), uuencode(1)HISTORY
The shar command appeared in 4.4BSD.
BUGS
The shar command makes no provisions for special types of files or files containing magic characters. The shar command cannot handle files
without a newline ('
') as the last character.
It is easy to insert trojan horses into shar files. It is strongly recommended that all shell archive files be examined before running them
through sh(1). Archives produced using this implementation of shar may be easily examined with the command:
egrep -v '^[X#]' shar.file
BSD June 6, 1993 BSD