I'm trying to delete everything between ( and ) in a line, ie: ( start xxxx, end xxx ). there is uppercase, lowercase and numbers in the parans. and are of varied length.
I tried this:
I'm not understanding the wildcard use in brackets
when writing a shell script (bourne) and using a unix command like 'ls' is there anything special you need to do to use a wildcard (like *)? (3 Replies)
ok, I'm trying to write a script file that lists files with specific elements in the name into a txt file, it looks like this
ls s*.dat > file_names.txt
can't figure out whats wrong with that line, any ideas?
thanks in advance (10 Replies)
Hello,
I've built a news site using SimplePie to pull in a set of feeds and display them on a page. The caching is working but the problem is that the first initial load is slow. After that, you can hit refresh and it loads very quickly. I'd like to eliminate that first slow load by creating a... (2 Replies)
Hi All
Please excuse another straightforward question. When creating a tar archive from a directory I am attempting to use wildcards to eliminate certain filetypes (otherwise the archive gets too large). So I am looking for something along these lines.
tar -cf archive.tar * <minus all *.rst... (5 Replies)
Im on an OS X 10.4 Mac server running bind 9.3, I just replaced the entire network with cisco hardware, all machines including servers now have private ip addresses that t he firewall resolves. I need to have a dns that works for both internal and external connections. any help would be great! (1 Reply)
Hi,
I am trying to buy a netbook with Ubuntu pre-installed. I have looked for hours and have not found anything. Calls to Dell, HP, Toshiba have confirmed them NOT selling Ubuntu preloaded laptops. This leads me to look for a netbook that can handle Ubuntu.
Getting to the point... I think I... (4 Replies)
I have a data file in the format of
1234 xxx
1234 xxx
1234 xxx
1234 xxxI want to be able to calculate the following -
COLUMN1+((LINENUMBER-1)/365)
The output needs to preserve the 2nd column -
1234 xxx
1234.00274 xxx
1234.00548 xxx
What is the best way to do this? I am somewhat... (9 Replies)
I have googled around a bit and could not find an answer to how this works:
echo $STRING | awk '$0=$NF' FS=
I know what each part is doing. The record is being set to equal the last field and the field separator is being set to null so that each character is considered a field. Why can FS= be... (4 Replies)
I am somewhat new to Perl. I have Googled Perl one liners and worked with the MIME::Lite library to send emails with attachments. But I have not done any real Perl scripting. I need to write a script to install code for our application using an Oracle database with DBI, and to track in the... (4 Replies)
Greetings, I've installed my Debian Server over 4 months ago, I didn't quite understand what the paritions were for, but the server provider made my partitions. Anyway I was putting most of my files in /gserver and it ran otu of space quickly when in the store page it says 2tb I barely used 18gb... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: debianguy4
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
make_sockdfr
MAKE_SOCKDFR(8) System Manager's Manual MAKE_SOCKDFR(8)NAME
make_sockdfr - Generates frozen route file for SOCKS server
SYNOPSIS
make_sockdfr [infile [outfile] ]
DESCRIPTION
make_sockdfr reads in a plain-text route file for the SOCKS server and produces a frozen route file as the output.
Both arguments are optional. The default for infile is /etc/sockd.route; the default for outfile is /etc/sockd.fr. You may specify infile
while omitting outfile, but you cannot specify outfile without also speficying infile.
The contents of the frozen route file is essentially the memory image of the parsed input file. Using the frozen route file can reduce the
start-up delay of the SOCKS server program since it no longer has to parse the file contents.
When the SOCKS server starts, it always looks for the frozen route file /etc/sockd.fr first. If that file is not found, it then tries to
use the plain-text route file /etc/sockd.route. If you use frozen route file, you must remember to run make_sockdfr every time after you
modify the plain-text file or the SOCKS server will continue to use the frozen version of a previous route file.
To find out the contents of a frozen route file, use dump_sockdfr.
FILES
/etc/sockd.fr, /etc/sockd.route
SEE ALSO dump_sockdfr(8), sockd.fr(5), sockd.route(5)AUTHOR
Ying-Da Lee, yingda@esd.sgi.com or yingda@best.com
May 6, 1996 MAKE_SOCKDFR(8)