05-02-2011
9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Solaris
Hi all,
First time poster here. Great forum.
Im trying to spawn new shells and pass commands to the new shells in a solaris 8 environment utilizing dtterm and its option -e.
I can successfully spawn a window utilizing the following code:
/usr/dt/bin/dtterm -display <ip.address> &
... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Rocketman8541
4 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
Im trying to figure out what the command would be to launch terminal windows from the command line in Open Step 4.2 . (looking for something similiar like /usr/bin/xterm or /usr/bin/dtterm etc)
echo $TERM = vt100
echo $SHELL = /bin/csh
Im combing over alot of OpenStep 4.2 and... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Rocketman8541
3 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi there,
I have a shell script which I need to run it from two different places on the same server, are there any specific rules I need to apply? What is the best practice to achieve this task.
Regards (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: JimJim
5 Replies
4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
We have a program (reader) that reads audio files in a real-time continuous stream from a sender program. If the reader gets weird we want the sender to be able to send one command that will stop the current reader and start a new one that will be able to continue reading in the files. The sender... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: laforge
9 Replies
5. Filesystems, Disks and Memory
First time so excuse my ignorance please.
I may not be accurately describing the issue.
I have inherited a small lab mostly SUN V120s.
We lost power and are trying to recover.
Nope no backups...
The primary issue I have is 1 box is an Oracle Server.
It has 2 36Gb harddrives.
I am able to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: murphsr
3 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I need to spawn mutilpe threads , each invoking a different set of shell scripts, in parallel.
What would be the best way to do that.
Any sample script would greatly help. I am a novice at Unix so any help is much appreciated.
Thanks (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: neeto
5 Replies
7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi - I need help. My user crontab is spawning multiple at processes (and multiple mencoder program starts, that exit, then restart, repeatedly), locking up my system.
For example I have this entry in my crontab:
$ sudo crontab -u victoria -e
* * * * * ~/recordings/pvr1
* * * * *... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: gstuart
10 Replies
8. AIX
Good night everyone, I've been trying to make AD authentication work with RBAC and I think I messed my test LPAR up.
I've manually modified the /etc/security/user.roles file, adding a role to one of my AD users (who is not defined locally) and then runned setkst. It worked fine, but now I found... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Janpol
3 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi there,
I would like to understand the purpose of spawning a TTY shell?
Does it mean that it will help to open up a new Windows on the current interactive shell such that when the session gets lost the other won't
Any explanation will be helpful. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: alvinoo
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
script
SCRIPT(1) BSD General Commands Manual SCRIPT(1)
NAME
script -- make typescript of terminal session
SYNOPSIS
script [-adfpqr] [-c command] [file]
DESCRIPTION
script makes a typescript of everything printed on your terminal. It is useful for students who need a hardcopy record of an interactive
session as proof of an assignment, as the typescript file can be printed out later with lpr(1).
If the argument file is given, script saves all dialogue in file. If no file name is given, the typescript is saved in the file typescript.
Option:
-a Append the output to file or typescript, retaining the prior contents.
-c command
Run the named command instead of the shell. Useful for capturing the output of a program that behaves differently when associated
with a tty.
-d When playing back a session with the -p flag, don't sleep between records when playing back a timestamped session.
-f Flush output after each write. This is useful for watching the script output in real time.
-p Play back a session recorded with the -r flag in real time.
-q Be quiet, and don't output started and ended lines.
-r Record a session with input, output, and timestamping.
The script ends when the forked shell exits (a control-D to exit the Bourne shell (sh(1)), and exit, logout or control-d (if ignoreeof is not
set) for the C-shell, csh(1)).
Certain interactive commands, such as vi(1), create garbage in the typescript file. script works best with commands that do not manipulate
the screen, the results are meant to emulate a hardcopy terminal.
ENVIRONMENT
The following environment variable is used by script:
SHELL If the variable SHELL exists, the shell forked by script will be that shell. If SHELL is not set, the Bourne shell is assumed. (Most
shells set this variable automatically).
SEE ALSO
csh(1) (for the history mechanism).
HISTORY
The script command appeared in 3.0BSD.
BUGS
script places everything in the log file, including linefeeds and backspaces. This is not what the naive user expects.
BSD
October 17, 2009 BSD