Hey
I have a weird "problem" here It's more out of curiosity, my script is working fine, but giving me a "pidt.sh: 7: Rather: not found" error...
But ... why?^^
I made the fatal mistake of rename the usr directory.
I cannot run any commands due to the fact that ld.so.1 is in usr/lib/--and it doesn't exist
How can I recover my system? (1 Reply)
hello all
im trying to use in sun Solaris the information received from the top command
now i several machines that dont have install the top program so when im running the script im geting error
saying after im running this code :
set MemoryInfo = `top | grep Memory`
if (... (2 Replies)
Hello everybody:
Im facing this weird problem on my SUN V890 running SOL9, from time to time I keep getting this error from the prompt when i press enter for blank:
OM: not found
sometimes if I entered a coomand it will give me: OM(command name):not found, but repeating the same command it... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
when i ran a shell script ,its showing "^M: not found" errore
i used the the code
dos2unix sunshine.sh sunshine1.sh
and then again i ran the scriptand then its still showing the errore
please help me in the matter.
thanks... (3 Replies)
I have the script like this
- When i try to running manually it's running as well, no error
but when i put on the cronjob it give output
Somebody can help me ? (6 Replies)
hi:
I had an existing script in production and I commented some lines and implemented the same. The scripts fails with a cc of 127 and I get the msg:
^M: not found
I checked the file format and it is a PC file format. Does this cause the script to fail with cc= 127.
Can somebody... (4 Replies)
i have downloaded <libncurses5-dev_5.7+20101128-1_i386.deb> and <ndk++-0.0.1alpha4.tar.bz2> which contains the header files curses.h and gtk/gtk.h ..
i have also included them using ..
#include "/home/ball/Desktop/Sudoku/project/libncurses5-dev_5.7+20101128-1_i386/usr/include/curses.h"
... (2 Replies)
I had a spot of trouble coming up with a title, hopefully you'll understand once you read my problem... :)
I have the output of an ldapsearch that looks like this:
dn: cn=sam,ou=company,o=com
uidNumber: 7174
gidNumber: 49563
homeDirectory: /home/sam
loginshell: /bin/bash
uid: sam... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: samgoober
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
command
command(1) General Commands Manual command(1)NAME
command - execute a simple command
SYNOPSIS
command_name [argument ...]
DESCRIPTION
enables the shell to treat the arguments as a simple command, suppressing the shell function lookup.
If command_name is not the name of the function, the effect of is the same as omitting command.
Operands
recognizes the following operands:
command_name The name of a HP-UX command or a shell built-in command.
argument One or more strings to be interpreted as arguments to command_name.
The command is necessary to allow functions that have the same name as a command to call the command (instead of a recursive call to the
function).
Nothing in the description of is intended to imply that the command line is parsed any differently than any other simple command. For
example,
is not parsed in any special way that causes or to be treated other than a pipe operator or semicolon or that prevents function lookup on b
or c.
EXTERNAL INFLUENCES
Environment Variables
determines the search path used during the command search.
RETURN VALUE
exits with one of the following values:
o If fails:
126 The utility specified by the command_name is found but not executable.
127 An error occurred in the utility or the utility specified by command_name is not found.
o If does not fail:
The exit status of is the same as that of the simple command specified by the arguments: command_name[argument ...]
EXAMPLES
Create a version of the command that always prints the name of the new working directory whenever it is used:
cd() {
command "$@" >/dev/null
pwd
}
Circumvent the redefined command above, and change directories without printing the name of the new working directory:
SEE ALSO getconf(1), sh-posix(1), confstr(3C).
STANDARDS CONFORMANCE command(1)