the below script is to get & check the correct values for minutes (0-59) that is inputed by user :
Code:
printf "$FBOLD\nPlease enter the minutes (0-59): $FREG"
read MIN
case "$MIN" in
[0-9]|[0-5][0-9]) break 2;;
*)
echo ""
echo "Invalid minutes, please try again.";;
esac
How to give the same range for day of month (1-31) and for month (1-12) and hour (0-23) ???
Also, after getting user input, how to get it displayed as below :
Cronjob scheduled on "month day_of_month day_of_week hour minute "
With Regards
Moderator's Comments:
Please use CODE-Tags when posting code or terminal output. Thank you.
Hi ,
I am relatively new to unix...
Can u pls help me out to find out if the first day of the month is a working day ie from (Monday to Friday)...using Date and If clause in Korn shell..
This is very urgent.
Thanks for ur help... (7 Replies)
All
Can you help me to validate a variable only for string and digit. That is
variable should either fully alphabets or digits.
Please send me result to my mail id also: REMOVED
Thanx in advance
Regards
Deepak Xavier (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have not used Unix in a very long time and I am very rusty. I would appreciate any help I can get from the more experienced and experts in Shell script.
I am reading one file at a time from a folder. The file is a flat file with no delimeters or carriage return. Col1 through col6 is... (5 Replies)
Hello All,
I am trying to come up with a shell script to count a specific word in a logfile on each day of this month, last month and the month before. I need to produce this report and email it to customer.
Any ideas would be appreciated! (5 Replies)
i need to verify whether the ip adress given as input to the shell script is pingable or not... that is whether the ip is alive and responding..
ping $ip_adress
the above wont work in script because the execution is continuous... so the shell script keeps will dwell in this pinging process...... (8 Replies)
Hello,
I'm trying to move the log files from the parent directory to respective monthly folder and I would be running this script on a weekly basis through cron.
I'm new to this scripting and here is what i could come up and it runs without really doing anything. I even tried placing echo... (2 Replies)
I see lot of request posted in internet to find out the day of nth week in a Month.
example:
what is the date of 3rd Sunday in October
What is the date of 2nd Friday in June 2012
what is the date of 4th Saturday in January 2011..etc..
The below shell script is used to find out the... (1 Reply)
Hi Unix Experts,
Happy Morning to all !! :)
I am new to UNIX Shell Scripting and at my begineer level. To get acquainted to scripting, I am trying to create a script.
The details/requirements of my script was to create a script with month changing logic in it so that on every 6th Working... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
Requirement :-
I have shell script in kern shell ,have to run alternate week per month
example-today's date is 27 Mar 2013 and my script will run today then for the next time when it will run it should check 1st what was the last run date(27 Mar 2013) if it is matched 15days from... (2 Replies)
could you please assist the below query.
i had written the below piece of code to copy the files from one directory to another. For current month files had been copied ,unfortunately the previous month files not copied.
Please find the below directory structure:-
ls -lrt
total 1824... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: venkat918
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
atsadc
ATSADC(1) local ATSADC(1)NAME
atsadc, atsa1, atsaftp, atsahttp -- counter-collection
SYNOPSIS
atsadc [ t n ] [ ofile ]
atsa1 [ t n ]
atsaftp
atsahttp
DESCRIPTION
System activity-data can be gathered on special request of a user [see atsar(1) ] or automatically, on a routine basis, as described here.
Usually the kernel maintains statistical counters that are incremented as various system actions occur. These include counters for CPU uti-
lization, disk utilization, memory utilization and various network statistics.
The program atsadc and the shell-script atsa1 are used to collect, save, and process these counters.
The program atsadc (the data collector) samples system data n times with an interval of t seconds between samples, and writes in binary
format to ofile or (default) to standard output. The sampling interval t should be greater than 1 second. If t and n are omitted, a special
reset-record is written. This facility is used when booting to a multi-user state, to mark the time at which the counters restart from
zero. For example, the reset-mark can be added to the daily data by the command:
/usr/local/bin/atsadc /var/log/atsar/atsa`date +%d`
Note that this entry is written to the /etc/rc.d/init.d/atsar file.
The shell-script atsa1 is used to collect and store data in the binary file /var/log/atsar/atsadd where dd is the current day of the month.
The arguments t and n cause records to be written n times at an interval of t seconds, or once if omitted. Furthermore this script takes
care that log-files older than a week are removed once a day.
A file containing following entries should be added to the /etc/cron.d directory to produce records every 20 minutes during working hours
and hourly otherwise:
0 * * * 0-6 root /usr/local/bin/atsa1
20,40 8-17 * * 1-5 root /usr/local/bin/atsa1
See crontab(1) for details.
The shell-script atsaftp counts the new transfers registered in the FTP-logfile(s) since the previous time this script was activated; the
new counters are stored in the /var/log/atsar/ftpstat file in ASCII-format. The names of the FTP-logfiles to be watched are specified in
the /etc/atsar.conf configuration-file.
The shell-script atsahttp counts the new transfers registered in the HTTP-logfile(s) since the previous time this script was activated; the
new counters are stored in the /var/log/atsar/httpstat file in ASCII-format. The names of the HTTP-logfiles to be watched are specified in
the /etc/atsar.conf configuration-file.
Both scripts must be activated just before the program atsadc is started, which also collects these counters.
FILES
/var/log/atsar/atsadd
Daily data file, where dd are digits representing the day of the month.
SEE ALSO atsar(1), crontab(1)AUTHOR
Gerlof Langeveld, AT Computing (gerlof@ATComputing.nl)
AT Computing July 2004 ATSADC(1)