hi,
i wat to get the output of a grep command in a file. but when i am trying out the same grep command in the unix prompt its working fine.. i am getting the output properly.. but when i am writing the same command inside my shell script , its just creating a new output file with no contents... (11 Replies)
Hi folks,
Please advise which command/command line shall I run;
1) to display the command and its output on console
2) simultaneous to save the command and its output on a file
I tried tee command as follows;
$ ps aux | grep mysql | tee /path/to/output.txt
It displayed the... (7 Replies)
How to redirect the output to multiple files without putting on console
I tried tee but it writes to STDOUT , which I do not want.
Test.sh
------------------
#!/bin/ksh
echo "Hello " tee -a file1 file2
----------------------------
$>./Test.sh
$>
Expected output:
-------------------... (2 Replies)
Is there a utility built into Solaris that will allow me to see console messages from a tty?
I've done a search and see that this is possible through software like ILOM, but I'm looking for a method to do this with built in utilities.
For example, on AIX, I can use swcons `tty` (6 Replies)
Hi Everyone,
Can anyone please tell me, how can I redirect the grep command output to same file. I am trying with below command but my original file contains no data after executing the command.
$grep pattern file1 > file1
Kind Regards,
Eswar (5 Replies)
When i use the command to check the preview of the filesets to be installed using CLI
# When using this commad 'm able to see all Preview view of the filesets to be installed
installp -apgX -d "." all
# When I redirected the same output to a file 'm able to see only half the details... (1 Reply)
I have set up a bash script to run a long list of things that I need to time. I would like to redirect the output of time to a file. I have set it up like,
echo "Runtimes for servlet 4, 100K structures" > test_times.txt
echo "" >> test_times.txt
echo "runs where N=10" >> test_times.txt
echo... (7 Replies)
(/home/user1)-> more script.sh
#!/bin/ksh
( echo open devicename
sleep 3;
echo user;
sleep 2;
echo password;
sleep 2;
echo "/info/dump"; ---------> This needs to redirect to a file .Can be number of pages
sleep 2;
echo "exit" ) | telnet
Please use code tags next time for... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I'd like to redirect the STDOUT output from my script to a file and simultaneously display it at a console.
I've tried this command:
myscript.sh | tail -f
However, it doesn't end after the script finishes running
I've also tried this:
myscript.sh | tee ~/results.txt
But it writes... (3 Replies)
I'm trying to find out what happened to the rogue game that apt-get told me it installed, so I thought I would find the file. I went to the root and entered:
find -name "rog*.*"
I get a large number of lines saying my access is denied in various directories. I figure I'll practice my Unix... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: arghvark
14 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
cvs-debuild
CVS-DEBUILD(1) General Commands Manual CVS-DEBUILD(1)NAME
cvs-debuild - build a Debian package using cvs-buildpackage and debuild
SYNOPSIS
cvs-debuild [debuild options] [cvs-buildpackage options] [--lintian-opts lintian options]
DESCRIPTION
cvs-debuild is a wrapper around cvs-buildpackage to run it with debuild as the package-building program. (This cannot simply be accom-
plished using the -C option of cvs-buildpackage, as it does not know how to handle all of the special debuild options.)
The program simply stashes the debuild and lintian options, and passes them to debuild when it is called by cvs-buildpackage. All of the
standard debuild options may be used (as listed below), but note that the root command specified by any --rootcmd or -r command-line option
will be passed as an option to cvs-buildpackage. The first non-debuild option detected will signal the start of the cvs-buildpackage
options.
The selection of the root command is slightly subtle: if there are any command-line options, these will be used. If not, then if cvs-
buildpackage is set up to use a default root command, that will be used. Finally, if neither of these are the case, then debuild will use
its procedures to determine an appropriate command, as described in its documentation.
See the manpages for debuild(1) and cvs-buildpackage for more information about the behaviour of each.
OPTIONS
The following are the debuild options recognised by cvs-debuild. All cvs-buildpackage and lintian options are simply passed to the appro-
priate program. For explanations of the meanings of these variables, see debuild(1).
--no-conf, --noconf
--rootcmd=gain-root-command, -rgain-root-command
--preserve-env
--preserve-envvar=var, -evar
--set-envvar=var=value, -evar=value
--lintian, --no-lintian
--ignore-dirname, --check-dirname
These should not be needed, but it is provided nevertheless.
SEE ALSO cvs-buildpackage(1), debuild(1), dpkg-buildpackage(1) and lintian(1).
AUTHOR
This program was written by Julian Gilbey <jdg@debian.org>.
DEBIAN Debian Utilities CVS-DEBUILD(1)