I have a question regarding the PATH environment on SunOS.
I am setting the PATH as -
export PATH=$PATH:/bin
and /bin has a softlink as
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 9 Oct 1 2004 /bin -> ./usr/bin
So, will this path will work for the bin having the softlink?
Thanks for... (1 Reply)
I have to move a lpar from one 671 to another (aix 5.2 ML 07)
when I run mksysb, It alway hangs with "archieving file list"
I've tried to exlude every directory, but still not working
the only thing that can be a problem, is a hardlink directory
normally it should not be possible to... (4 Replies)
I'm trying to relink a file someone tried to delete while a process (that we don't want to shutdown) also had a filehandle open to it.
Consequently, we've got an inode entry but no directory entry (aka 'file') for it.
I've tracked the inode number down via lsof, as well as the particular... (0 Replies)
At risk of twisting the rules to nearly the point of breaking (if you think this goes too far mods, I apologise and accept that this should be deleted), I'm hoping someone might be able to cast a little light on the following problem regarding hard links to files.
... (6 Replies)
Hi,
We have a directory /oracle/UD1/sapdata1,since sapdata1 had no space we created a directory under /oracle/UD1/orarch/sapdata1 and soft linked /oracle/UD1/sapdata1 to /oracle/UD1/orarch/sapdata1 . Is there any way I can see if the files are being actually written to... (4 Replies)
I am facing a peculiar problem on SUN machine.
There is a soft link pointing to a directory. And there is a shell script inside this soft link which is trying to get the directory name from where this script is being executed.
NAME="$(cd $(dirname $0); pwd)"
I want to fetch the... (1 Reply)
Hi
there is a file 'linkk' and i have created a softlink for it in another directory.
$ pwd
/home/guest/khare
$ ln -s linkk /home/guest/khare/AWK/done
now under AWk dir i can see that the softlink is created.
$ pwd
/home/guest/khare/AWK
$ ls -lrt *done
lrwxr-xr-x 1 khare... (2 Replies)
May somebody can give me a hint. I am still using my old squeeze and it works the way I want. But my recent post about changing the owners rights, e.g. 777 or 755 anyway, it could be 644 as well. While configuring a new pc, just by chance I discovered how to enter the BIOS. And here it comes. I... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: 1in10
11 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
standards
standards(5) File Formats Manual standards(5)NAME
standards - UNIX standards behavior on HP-UX
DESCRIPTION
HP-UX conforms to various UNIX standards. In some cases, these standards conflict. This manpage describes the methods that programmers
and users must follow to have an application conform and execute according to a particular UNIX standard.
UNIX Standard Conformant Programmer Environment
The following table lists feature test macros and environment variables that must be defined while compiling an application. Both a fea-
ture test macro and an environment variable must be defined while compiling the application so that the application conforms and executes
according to a particular UNIX standard. Otherwise, the behavior is undefined.
Standard Feature Test Macros to be Environment variable
defined during compilation to be set
UNIX 95 _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED=1 UNIX95 or
UNIX_STD=95 or
UNIX_STD=1995
UNIX 2003 _XOPEN_SOURCE=600 UNIX_STD=2003
The compiler uses the feature test macros to obtain the appropriate namespace from the header files. The compiler uses the environment
variable to link in an appropriate object file to the executable. Using the environment variable customizes libc to match UNIX standards
for various functions.
If an application has already been compiled for default HP-UX behavior or for one particular standard, and needs to change to a particular
UNIX standard behavior, recompile the application as specified in the above table.
For an HP-UX command to conform to a particular UNIX standard behavior, the application has to set the corresponding environment variable
as specified in the above table before executing that command.
UNIX Standard Conformant User Environment
To enable a particular UNIX standard conformant user environment, set the corresponding environment variable as defined in the above table.
EXAMPLES
The following examples shows an application example. To have the system be conformant to UNIX2003 behavior, set the environment variable
to and define the feature test macro before compilation.
The following example changes the command to have UNIX95 behavior by setting one of the environment variables to or to before executing
that command. There are three ways of setting the environment variable for UNIX95:
or
or
SEE ALSO cc(1), stdsyms(5).
standards(5)