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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Bash: capturing *Anything* which showed on screen Post 302490892 by citaylor on Wednesday 26th of January 2011 04:08:44 AM
Old 01-26-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by siavash
@Crona:
Now I got what you mean and thanks for this valuable information.
So, I need some programming but between "expect" and "C Programming" I will choose the second one Smilie
There is a version of Expect for Perl too if you are more familar with that...

Quote:
Originally Posted by siavash
P.S: I'm going to build a simple remote system manager which will acts as a remote desktop but in text-mode. The difference is: Administrator from a single screen can connects, monitor and interact with N (>100) machines simultaneously.
Have you investigated the command "screen" at all ? Might give you some ideas...

Good luck
This User Gave Thanks to citaylor For This Post:
 

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SCREEN-IR(1)							   Axel Beckert 						      SCREEN-IR(1)

NAME
screen-ir -- Interactively Reattach to GNU Screen sessions SYNOPSIS
screen-ir [additional screen options ...] DESCRIPTION
screen-ir uses iSelect(1) to interactively reattach to running screen sessions. Use the screen option -d or -D if you want to reattach to attached screen sessions. Use the screen option -x if you want to attach to screen sessions without detaching them. FILES
screen-ir sources ~/.screen-irrc if it exists. It recognizes two variables: The contents of SCREEN_OPTIONS is given to screen(1) as command-line options. Default is -r. Use e.g. -rd if you always want to reattach to already attached screen sessions. The contents of ISELECT_OPTIONS is given to iselect(1) as command-line options. Default is empty. Use e.g. -f if you always want to see the interactive selection, even if there's only one screen session running, i.e. you have no choice. AUTHOR
Axel Beckert <abe@debian.org> SEE ALSO
screen(1), iselect(1) EN
2011-09-04 SCREEN-IR(1)
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