Hi,
Can anyone please let me know the meaning of this line,i am not able to understand the egrep part(egrep '^{1,2}).This will search for this combination in beginning but what does the values in {}signifies here.
/bin/echo $WhenToRun | egrep '^{1,2}:$' >/dev/null (1 Reply)
#! /usr/bin/ksh
old=$1
new=$2
for file in *.$old ; do
mv $file ${file%$old}$new
done
exit 0
This script i got from the forum. script changes the extension of the files say example
a.txt to a.doc
b.txt to b.doc
c.txt to c.doc
d.txt to d.doc
this scipt works fine but i am not... (2 Replies)
Hi Guys,
I am absolutely a newbie to Solaris 8.0. Following is a piece of code in a script (/bin/sh). Can anybody help me in deciphering this ? Please see my questions after the script code -
_____________________________________________________
/bin/rm -f mycron
crontab -l | grep -v... (5 Replies)
Hi
I have wrote the small script, where $SRC=$HOME
the input file is simple text file having directories in my $SRC on pre line
desktop
download
myfiles
games
#!/bin/bash
FILENAME=$1
ERROR_LOG="$SRC/err.$$.log"
while read line
do
echo "########## strat Gmake $line... (6 Replies)
If I don't explain my issue well enough, I apologize ahead of time, extreme newbie here to scripting.
I'm currently learning scripting from books and have moved on to the text Wicked Cool Shell Scripts by Dave Taylor, but there are still basic concepts that I'm having trouble understanding.
... (10 Replies)
i am beginner in shell scripting.
not able to understand what below line will do.
PS1=${HOST:=Žuname -nŽ}"$ " ; export PS1 HOST
below is the script
#!/bin/hash
PS1=${HOST:=Žuname -nŽ}"$ " ; export PS1 HOST ;
echo $PS1
and i getting the below output
Žuname -nŽ$ (25 Replies)
Hi all,
I'm not clear of this regexp command:
regexp {(\S+)\/+$} $String match GetString
From my observation and testing,
if $String is abc/def/gh
$GetString will be abc/def
I don't understand how the /gh in $String got eliminated.
Please help. Thanks (2 Replies)
Hi
i was going through the script debugging technique. below example was given in the book.
1 #!/bin/sh
2
3 Failed() {
4 if ; then
5 echo "Failed. Exiting." ; exit 1 ;
6 fi
7 echo "Done."
8 }
9
10 echo "Deleting old backups,... (11 Replies)
I have this code
#!/bin/bash
LZ () {
RETVAL="\n$(date +%Y-%m-%d_%H-%M-%S) --- "
return RETVAL
}
echo -e $LZ"Test"
sleep 3
echo -e $LZ"Test"
which I want to use to make logentrys on my NAS. I expect of this code that there would be output like
2017-03-07_11-00-00 --- Test (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: matrois
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT PHP
eval
EVAL(3) 1 EVAL(3)eval - Evaluate a string as PHP codeSYNOPSIS
mixed eval (string $code)
DESCRIPTION
Evaluates the given $code as PHP.
Caution
The eval(3) language construct is very dangerous because it allows execution of arbitrary PHP code. Its use thus is discouraged.
If you have carefully verified that there is no other option than to use this construct, pay special attention not to pass any user
provided data into it without properly validating it beforehand.
PARAMETERS
o $code
- Valid PHP code to be evaluated. The code mustn't be wrapped in opening and closing PHP tags, i.e. 'echo "Hi!";' must be passed
instead of '<? echo "Hi!"; >'. It is still possible to leave and reenter PHP mode though using the appropriate PHP tags, e.g.
'echo "In PHP mode!"; ?>In HTML mode!<? echo "Back in PHP mode!";'. Apart from that the passed code must be valid PHP. This
includes that all statements must be properly terminated using a semicolon. 'echo "Hi!"' for example will cause a parse error,
whereas 'echo "Hi!";' will work. A return statement will immediately terminate the evaluation of the code. The code will be exe-
cuted in the scope of the code calling eval(3). Thus any variables defined or changed in the eval(3) call will remain visible
after it terminates.
RETURN VALUES eval(3) returns NULL unless return is called in the evaluated code, in which case the value passed to return is returned. If there is a
parse error in the evaluated code, eval(3) returns FALSE and execution of the following code continues normally. It is not possible to
catch a parse error in eval(3) using set_error_handler(3).
EXAMPLES
Example #1
eval(3) example - simple text merge
<?php
$string = 'cup';
$name = 'coffee';
$str = 'This is a $string with my $name in it.';
echo $str. "
";
eval("$str = "$str";");
echo $str. "
";
?>
The above example will output:
This is a $string with my $name in it.
This is a cup with my coffee in it.
NOTES
Note
Because this is a language construct and not a function, it cannot be called using variable functions.
Tip
As with anything that outputs its result directly to the browser, the output-control functions can be used to capture the output of
this function, and save it in a string (for example).
Note
In case of a fatal error in the evaluated code, the whole script exits.
SEE ALSO call_user_func(3).
PHP Documentation Group EVAL(3)