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Full Discussion: UNIX automation
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting UNIX automation Post 302493361 by methyl on Wednesday 2nd of February 2011 01:05:54 PM
Old 02-02-2011
The corrections I proposed in post #33 were the correct syntax for redirecting the error channel.
Unfortunately the alternative suggestion in post #35 has been applied to the script and the redirection of the error channel is incorrect and is affecting the way the script behaves.
It's all about where the "2>/dev/null" is on the line. It needs to immediately follow the command (in this case "ls").

Quote:
if [ $((ls $i.* | wc -l) 2>/dev/null) -gt 1 ]
filename=$((ls $i.*) 2>/dev/null)
filename2=$((ls *Fe.ok | tail -1) 2>/dev/null)
Also there are too many brackets. We should be evaluating $(command) not the arithmetic syntax $((command)) .
Code:
if [ $(ls $i.* 2>/dev/null| wc -l) -gt 1 ]
filename=$(ls $i.* 2>/dev/null)
filename2=$(ls *Fe.ok 2>/dev/null| tail -1)

 

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null(n) 																   null(n)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
null - Create and manipulate null channels SYNOPSIS
package require Tcl package require memchan null _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
The command described here is only available in a not-yet released version of the package. Use the CVS to get the sources. null creates a null channel which absorbs everything written into it. Reading from it is not possible, or rather will always return zero bytes. These channels are essentially Tcl-specific variants of the null device for unixoid operating systems (/dev/null). Transfer- ing the generated channel between interpreters is possible but does not make much sense. OPTIONS
Memory channels created by null provide one additional option to set or query. -delay ?milliseconds? A null channel is always writable and readable. This means that all fileevent-handlers will fire continuously. To avoid starvation of other event sources the events raised by this channel type have a configurable delay. This option is set in milliseconds and defaults to 5. A null channel is always writable and never readable. This means that a writable fileevent-handler will fire continuously and a readable fileevent-handler never at all. The exception to the latter is only the destruction of the channel which will cause the delivery of an eof event to a readable handler. SEE ALSO
fifo, fifo2, memchan, random, zero KEYWORDS
channel, i/o, in-memory channel, null COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1996-2003 Andreas Kupries <andreas_kupries@users.sourceforge.net> Memory channels 2.2 null(n)
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