Is there a generic smb.conf file that should work on all systems? Right now I am running Red Hat 7.3 and also have 3XP machines and 1 2000 pro. (1 Reply)
Although my sed skills are gradually developing, thanks in large part to this forum, I'm having a hard time dealing with pattern space and looping, which I suspect is what I'll need a better handle on to figure out my current issue, which is converting a multi line file like this:
... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
i was reading up on a umask question on this forum and have a question on this.
the umask value on my home PC running on cygwin is 022. when i create a dir it defaults to permission 755, when i create a file it defaults to 644. Now it starts at 777 for dirs and 666 for files and... (1 Reply)
Hi,
First post here. I have something that may prove to be difficult.
I have the following files:
Example1.0.0.tar.gz
Example2.tar
Example3.zip
Example4.0.0.0.0.0.bzip2
I need to remove the file extensions and store as a variable so they look like this:
Example1.0.0
Example2... (3 Replies)
hello; Got a problem running monitoring scripts using sudo ssh.. Mgmt decided to take away root sudoers access.. so most of the scripts ran as:
sudo ssh $BOX ...
Now I need to run them as:
echo $my_pw | sudo -S -l my_user_id $BOX ...
I tried this but not working..
Any wisdom/tricks... (3 Replies)
I want to start by saying I already resolved my issue but I want to understand why I am seeing what I am seeing.
I have a server with a RAID controller two 500GB drives and six 600GB drives. The two 500GB drives are mirrored and have the OS installed on them. The six 600GB they wanted set as... (4 Replies)
Ok, if youre reading this prepare yourself.(debian based os)
so im trying to do this routing with ip tables, i need to forward/SNAT traffic from 192.168.111.1 to 10.10.10.250, the 192.x.x.x ips are being shoved into a honeyd like program called inetsim so its offline, 10.10.10.125 is connected... (3 Replies)
OSX 10.12.3, default bash terminal.
Consider this code and note it is calling 'sh' inside the code...
#!/bin/sh
echo '1\n2\n2\n3\n5' > /tmp/text
hexdump -C /tmp/text
/bin/echo '1\n2\n3\n4\n5' > /tmp/text
hexdump -C /tmp/text
Now view the interactive mode below, note the underlying shell is... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: wisecracker
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
dircmp
dircmp(1) General Commands Manual dircmp(1)NAME
dircmp - Compares two directories
SYNOPSIS
dircmp [-d] [-s] directory1 directory2
The dircmp command reads directory1 and directory2, compares their contents, and writes the results to standard output.
STANDARDS
Interfaces documented on this reference page conform to industry standards as follows:
dircmp: XCU5.0
Refer to the standards(5) reference page for more information about industry standards and associated tags.
OPTIONS
Displays for each common file name the differing contents of the two files, if any. The display format is the same as that of the diff
command. Does not list the names of identical files.
OPERANDS
The path name of a directory to be compared.
DESCRIPTION
First, dircmp compares the file names in each directory. When the same file name appears in both, dircmp compares the contents of the two
files.
In the output, dircmp lists the files unique to each directory. It then lists the files with identical names but different contents. If
entered without a option, dircmp also lists files that have both identical names and identical contents.
NOTES
[Tru64 UNIX] In many cases, diff -r, rather than dircmp, is preferred. The dircmp command is marked LEGACY. The diff -r command should
be used instead.
EXAMPLES
To summarize the differences between the files in two directories, enter: dircmp proj.ver1 proj.ver2
This displays a summary of the differences between the directories proj.ver1 and proj.ver2. The summary lists separately the files
found only in one directory or the other, and those found in both. If the file is found in both directories, the file is listed.
If the files are identical, dircmp displays identical; otherwise, dircmp displays different. To show the details of the differences
between files, enter: dircmp -d -s proj.ver1 proj.ver2
The -s option suppresses information about identical files. The -d option displays a diff listing for each of the differing files
found in both directories.
SEE ALSO
Commands: cmp(1), diff(1)
Standards: standards(5)dircmp(1)