Hi,
whenever I am giving a 'ls' command system is going into infinite loop displaying the current home directory.
There is no separate shell script/file with ls name anywhere in the system.
I am using Solaris 10.
Any help / guidance in solving this problem is highly appreciated.
... (3 Replies)
Hi guys, I'm having a problem getting my infinite loop to loop. It simply reads in the users choice form the menu, executes the corresponding case statement and quits instead of looping back to the main menu again. I have a feeling it might be something with my if then statements within the case... (2 Replies)
Production C code compiled without the dash-g option is running, and seems to be in an infinite loop. Is there a way to tell? Is there a diagnostic tool that will report what objects or what lines of code or even what functions are being executed?
Or is my best option to kill it with a dump?
... (5 Replies)
hi all,
this is how my scrip looks like
#!/bin/sh
bindir='/opt/apps/script/bin'
datadir='/opt/apps/script/data'
dir='/opt/apps/script'
while : ; do
ls -1rt /opt/apps/script/data/check.txt*|tail -1 > /dev/null 2>&1
if ;then
chmod +rwx $bindir/dummy2.sh
... (8 Replies)
I wanted to copy (not forward but copy) all incoming email to another address of mine. It worked, but now I encountered an infinite loop problem: When the second address doesn't like the content and bounces the message back, the bounce message will be sent back and forth.
So, what I have in... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I need to run an infinite loop.
requirement below:
function1 --> creates a file file1
function2 ---> need to call if the file creates
i am running these both function via a script --> script.sh
i need to run the function1 first and if the file file1 creates then need to run the... (3 Replies)
Hi, I was debating if I should put this in the dummies or scripts section, I apologize in advance if I chose poorly.
Fairly new to Unix and BASH scripting but I thought I made it fairly well given my limited understanding. However, the output indicates that it's looping and I'm ending up with a... (5 Replies)
Im unable to stop the below infinite loop (bash script). Can someone tell me why this isnt responding to signals eg: ctrl+c (SIGINT) or ctrl+z
c=0
test_loop() {
c=$(($c+1))
echo "count value is : $c "
sleep 1
test_loop
}
Im using: SunOS 5.10
PS: If run this as... (13 Replies)
I have a script script.shwhich is scheduled to run at 11 AM everyday.
# script.sh Code:
./scb_script.sh &
unfortunately scb_script.sh is running today in infinite loop as respective files are not available.
My question, when script.sh starts running tomorrow, will the old process be... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: JSKOBS
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
test::expect
Test::Expect(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Test::Expect(3pm)NAME
Test::Expect - Automated driving and testing of terminal-based programs
SYNOPSIS
# in a t/*.t file:
use Test::Expect;
use Test::More tests => 13;
expect_run(
command => "perl testme.pl",
prompt => 'testme: ',
quit => 'quit',
);
expect("ping", "pong", "expect");
expect_send("ping", "expect_send");
expect_is("* Hi there, to testme", "expect_is");
expect_like(qr/Hi there, to testme/, "expect_like");
DESCRIPTION
Test::Expect is a module for automated driving and testing of terminal-based programs. It is handy for testing interactive programs which
have a prompt, and is based on the same concepts as the Tcl Expect tool. As in Expect::Simple, the Expect object is made available for
tweaking.
Test::Expect is intended for use in a test script.
SUBROUTINES
expect_run
The expect_run subroutine sets up Test::Expect. You must pass in the interactive program to run, what the prompt of the program is, and
which command quits the program:
expect_run(
command => "perl testme.pl",
prompt => 'testme: ',
quit => 'quit',
);
expect
The expect subroutine is the catch all subroutine. You pass in the command, the expected output of the subroutine and an optional comment.
expect("ping", "pong", "expect");
expect_send
The expect_send subroutine sends a command to the program. You pass in the command and an optional comment.
expect_send("ping", "expect_send");
expect_is
The expect_is subroutine tests the output of the program like Test::More's is. It has an optional comment:
expect_is("* Hi there, to testme", "expect_is");
expect_like
The expect_like subroutine tests the output of the program like Test::More's like. It has an optional comment:
expect_like(qr/Hi there, to testme/, "expect_like");
expect_handle
This returns the Expect object.
expect_quit
Closes the Expect handle.
SEE ALSO
Expect, Expect::Simple.
AUTHOR
Leon Brocard, "<acme@astray.com>"
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2005, Leon Brocard
This module is free software; you can redistribute it or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.12.3 2011-06-12 Test::Expect(3pm)