Hi everyone:
I'm trying to make a CRON job that will execute Fridays at 7am. I have the following:
* 7 * * 5
I've been studying up on CRON and I know to have this in a file and then "crontab filename.txt" to add it to the CRON job list.
The CRON part I believe I understand, but I would... (6 Replies)
I am trying to install a piece of software using the provided install script, but when I run it, I get the following message: ./tem.sh: /export/home/data/SoftwareSource/TcEng2005SR1/install/jre/bin/java: cannot execute
I navigated to that directory and tried to execute java and it returns the... (8 Replies)
Hello evreyone,
this is my first post, and to say i'm new to this is an understatement.
I know very little about perl scripts and hope some one can help me.
i'm looking to get a script that a cron job can execute.
what the script needs to to is
1) connect to a mysql database
2) go to a... (2 Replies)
AIM- Install Oracle 11g on Solaris using VMWare
Steps
1.Logged on as root
2.Created subfolders à /usr/local/bin & /usr/local/bin/gcc
3.Downloaded gcc & libiconv & unzipped them on my harddrive & burnt them on CD
4.Copied files from CD to /usr/local/bin/gcc
5.Terminal (root) à pkgadd -d... (8 Replies)
I want to capture actual error message in case the commands I use in my shell script fails.
For eg:
ls -l abc.txt 2>>errorlog.txt
In this case I understand the error message is written to the errorlog.txt and I assume its bacause the return code from the command ls -l abc might return 2 if... (3 Replies)
Hello everyone,
I want to schedule a job to run immediatly after a successful nightly reboot (at level 2). I have been looking at inittab file and vxvm-startup in /sbin/init.d and other files in init.d but I am still puzzled as where to actually start. I looked at the crontab to see how this... (2 Replies)
Since a few weeks I am playing with debian and now I have 2 questions.
The first one:
I want to create weekly a file to all user directories.
I know that you have a cronjob to schedule it weekly. In this cronjob I have written the following line:
df >> /home/%users/diskspace.txt
I've... (1 Reply)
Hello,
When I'm trying to send bsub job using script that executes fine in command line, I get nothing.
I do this for testing purposes, and the script scr_test is just one line:
pwd > outfile
So when I'm executing it in command line:
$ ./scr_test
it works fine producing the outfile with... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Sergey Aliev
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
hotswaprc
HOTSWAPRC(5) File Formats Manual HOTSWAPRC(5)NAME
hotswaprc - configuration file for hotswap
DESCRIPTION
/etc/hotswaprc is the global configuration file for the hotswap utility.
It allows system administrators to specify arbitrary shell scripts to be run after a device is inserted, as well as before and after it is
removed. Scripts are selected according to the model name retrieved from the device. This is particularly helpful for automatic configura-
tion of CD-RW drives, which require SCSI emulation and bypass normal access via the IDE subsystem.
hotswaprc is implemented as an Extensible Mark-up Language (XML) application. XML documents are structured using elements of the form
<tag-name> content <tag-name>. A Document Type Definition (DTD) describes the possible content of each element.
Please refer to the XML specification for more information. The hotswap distribution also contains an example file, doc/hotswaprc.example,
which includes the DTD for the configuration file format.
ELEMENTS
<hotswap>
This is the root element of the document. Each valid hotswaprc must contain exactly one <hotswap> element. The <hotswap> element may
contain an arbitrary number of <device> elements.
<device>
The configuration file contains one <device> element for every device for which scripts are defined. The <device> element is com-
posed of the following elements in this order: <name>, <post-insert>, <pre-remove>, <post-remove>. All but <name> are optional.
<name> The content of this element is the model identification string of the IDE device the current <device> element refers to.
<post-insert>
Contains the shell script that is to be executed after the device has been inserted and registered with the kernel.
<pre-remove>
Contains the shell script that is to be run before hotswap attempts to unregister the device.
<post-remove>
Contains the shell script that is to be run after the device had been unregistered.
REPORT BUGS
Report bugs to t.stadelmann1@physics.ox.ac.uk.
AUTHOR
Written by Tim Stadelmann.
SEE ALSO hotswap(1), xhotswap(1).
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2002-2003 Tim Stadelmann.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL), Version 2 or
any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.
26th November 2002 HOTSWAPRC(5)