If anyone can give me some ideas on this it would be great. What I'm trying to do is to have emails be sent to my unix account. Once they are emailed to the unix account, I want to use the text in the subject field to invoke a shell script, so basically I need to find a way that I can... (4 Replies)
I want to email where subject contains value of variable $ORACLE_SID.
When script is emailing, it is not taking value of $ORACLE_SID.
example -
I have variable ORACLE_SID=prd
I am sending email with below script.
tail -1 $LOG | mailx -s 'Export Completed for ${ORACLE_SID}'... (2 Replies)
I am profoundly new to *nix, but had a project dropped in my lap that has sparked an interest, leading me here.
I was tasked with daily sending one of our customers a listing of all the spam our filter blocked that was heading for them.
Between Google and I;
I discovered the Server is running... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I need help in running a script that would pull info from an email subject line and run a script (foo.sh). I'm pretty sure after a bit of googling that this is possible in several ways. but none was pretty clear on how to accomplish it. The part that I really need help with is getting the... (5 Replies)
Hi,
Can anyone kindly provide some information about how to populate the subject field of the email while using the sendmail utility ? Itried the following command line argument :
echo -e "Body of the email" | /usr/lib/sendmail -f from@from.com -t to@to.com -s " Subject of the email"
... (4 Replies)
Help with script that will check log, then find a match is found, add that as the subject line.
1. The script will always run as a deamon.. and scan the event.log file
2. when a new 101 line is added to the event.log file, have the script check position 5,6 and 7 which is the job name, which... (2 Replies)
I have tried below email method and i am getting every thing in single line . i have put echo to provide space, but it is not helping
my code
(
echo "From: $FROM"
echo "To: $MAILTO"
echo "CC: $CC"
echo "Subject: $SUBJECT"
echo "MIME-Version: 1.0"
echo 'Content-Type: multipart/mixed;... (6 Replies)
hi ,
i have written below piece of code to meet the requirement but i am stuck in the logic here.
the requirement are:
1) to send the sql out put to email body with proper formatting.
2) if count_matching = Yes then mail should triggered with the subject line ... (10 Replies)
Hi
Newbie here with first post. I've got a shell script (ksh) whereby I run a SQL*Plus script and output the results to a file. I then check the output file in an if statement that looks like this:
if ]; then
export GAPNUM=`awk '{print $4}' $OUTFILE`
if ] then
mailx -s... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: ltzwoman
10 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
unifdef
UNIFDEF(1) General Commands Manual UNIFDEF(1)NAME
unifdef - remove ifdef'ed lines
SYNOPSIS
unifdef [ -t -l -c -Dsym -Usym -idsym -iusym ] ... [ file ]
DESCRIPTION
Unifdef is useful for removing ifdef'ed lines from a file while otherwise leaving the file alone. Unifdef is like a stripped-down C pre-
processor: it is smart enough to deal with the nested ifdefs, comments, single and double quotes of C syntax so that it can do its job, but
it doesn't do any including or interpretation of macros. Neither does it strip out comments, though it recognizes and ignores them. You
specify which symbols you want defined -Dsym or undefined -Usym and the lines inside those ifdefs will be copied to the output or removed
as appropriate. The ifdef, ifndef, else, and endif lines associated with sym will also be removed. Ifdefs involving symbols you don't
specify are untouched and copied out along with their associated ifdef, else, and endif lines. If an ifdef X occurs nested inside another
ifdef X, then the inside ifdef is treated as if it were an unrecognized symbol. If the same symbol appears in more than one argument, only
the first occurrence is significant.
The -l option causes unifdef to replace removed lines with blank lines instead of deleting them.
If you use ifdefs to delimit non-C lines, such as comments or code which is under construction, then you must tell unifdef which symbols
are used for that purpose so that it won't try to parse for quotes and comments in those ifdef'ed lines. You specify that you want the
lines inside certain ifdefs to be ignored but copied out with -idsym and -iusym similar to -Dsym and -Usym above.
If you want to use unifdef for plain text (not C code), use the -t option. This makes unifdef refrain from attempting to recognize com-
ments and single and double quotes.
Unifdef copies its output to stdout and will take its input from stdin if no file argument is given. If the -c argument is specified, then
the operation of unifdef is complemented, i.e. the lines that would have been removed or blanked are retained and vice versa.
SEE ALSO diff(1)DIAGNOSTICS
Premature EOF, inappropriate else or endif.
Exit status is 0 if output is exact copy of input, 1 if not, 2 if trouble.
BUGS
Does not know how to deal with cpp consructs such as
#if defined(X) || defined(Y)
AUTHOR
Dave Yost
4.3 Berkeley Distribution April 29, 1985 UNIFDEF(1)