The most common Solaris exit codes you will see is 2 or 8, but have you ever had a different exit code and wondered what it means ?
Well you need not wonder no more...
Patch Exit Codes
----------------
0 No error
1 Usage error
2 Attempt to apply a patch that's already... (1 Reply)
I have a solaris server having oracle and oracle apps running !
When some one attempts to generate a code, they click a link on the web interface which runs an rsh script from a computer called Helpdesk onto my solaris server and what happens is the web interface show an error message saying... (4 Replies)
I am new to Sun.
I brought Sun Fire 280R to practice UNIX. What are the requirements for the monitor/CRT? Will it burn out old non-Sun CRTs? Does it need LCD monitor?
Thanks. (3 Replies)
Sorry, I meant to type "porting C codes from Solaris 10, x86 to cygwin in Windows"
I just installed cygwin 1.7 to my Windows PC.
I have a C program that compiles fine using gcc on Solaris 10, x86. This C program contains system calls like:
system ("ls -l > file.txt");
and
system... (3 Replies)
Hello people from Argentina i said you Hello.
I am doing some works from an auditory.
They want to disable login prompts on serial ports.
Somebody knows how to do that?
Thank your time. (1 Reply)
(I will not duplicate my post that I create in 'Programming' ( My post ), but the issue also (after C ) is related to Sun Solaris.)
I need to find the warning-codes to be used in the
#pragma warn..
C-code directives to suppress some compilation warnings.
More desciptive explanation you... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I perform clrs enable/disable resource-group to start/shutown sybase db.
If I do it through through scsetup , it asks for Do you require to change the state of resource "sybaseapp-rs" on individual nodes or zones that can master the resource (yes/no) ?.
I am bit confused of above... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: tuxian
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
warnings
warnings(3pm) Perl Programmers Reference Guide warnings(3pm)NAME
warnings - Perl pragma to control optional warnings
SYNOPSIS
use warnings;
no warnings;
use warnings "all";
no warnings "all";
use warnings::register;
if (warnings::enabled()) {
warnings::warn("some warning");
}
if (warnings::enabled("void")) {
warnings::warn("void", "some warning");
}
if (warnings::enabled($object)) {
warnings::warn($object, "some warning");
}
warnings::warnif("some warning");
warnings::warnif("void", "some warning");
warnings::warnif($object, "some warning");
DESCRIPTION
If no import list is supplied, all possible warnings are either enabled or disabled.
A number of functions are provided to assist module authors.
use warnings::register
Creates a new warnings category with the same name as the package where the call to the pragma is used.
warnings::enabled()
Use the warnings category with the same name as the current package.
Return TRUE if that warnings category is enabled in the calling module. Otherwise returns FALSE.
warnings::enabled($category)
Return TRUE if the warnings category, $category, is enabled in the calling module. Otherwise returns FALSE.
warnings::enabled($object)
Use the name of the class for the object reference, $object, as the warnings category.
Return TRUE if that warnings category is enabled in the first scope where the object is used. Otherwise returns FALSE.
warnings::warn($message)
Print $message to STDERR.
Use the warnings category with the same name as the current package.
If that warnings category has been set to "FATAL" in the calling module then die. Otherwise return.
warnings::warn($category, $message)
Print $message to STDERR.
If the warnings category, $category, has been set to "FATAL" in the calling module then die. Otherwise return.
warnings::warn($object, $message)
Print $message to STDERR.
Use the name of the class for the object reference, $object, as the warnings category.
If that warnings category has been set to "FATAL" in the scope where $object is first used then die. Otherwise return.
warnings::warnif($message)
Equivalent to:
if (warnings::enabled())
{ warnings::warn($message) }
warnings::warnif($category, $message)
Equivalent to:
if (warnings::enabled($category))
{ warnings::warn($category, $message) }
warnings::warnif($object, $message)
Equivalent to:
if (warnings::enabled($object))
{ warnings::warn($object, $message) }
See "Pragmatic Modules" in perlmodlib and perllexwarn.
perl v5.8.0 2002-06-01 warnings(3pm)