Hi all,
Does anyone know how to ammend the .cshrc file in $HOME for your session to display the path as part of the command line? So that I dont need to keep on typing pwd to see where I am?
thanks
Ocelot (3 Replies)
display HTML text in body using unix mailX ????Hello,
could any one tell me how to display text in html layout by sending a file using mailx command in unix.
i know to use mailx :
mailx -s "SUBJECT" user.name@domail.com < file_name.txt
instead of txt file i want to send html page and... (8 Replies)
Hello all
I have a question on displaying log
When i am redirecting the output to a log, it displays but in a format which i am not happy about. Can i give any explicit commands which says to display the above log at specific row and column
I want to do this for each line of the log
What is... (2 Replies)
Hi guys
So I have a very large log file where each event is logged along with the time that it occurred.
So for e.g. The contents of the file look like:
...
12:00:07 event 0 happened.
12:01:01 event 1 happened.
12:01:05 event 2 happened.
12:01:30 event 3 happened.
12:02:01 event 4... (10 Replies)
Hi,
We are using KSH.
I was able to write a script where a mail is sent to the concerned persons and this is working perfectly file. I need to give a different color to a part of the data in the mail which. The script written is as follows;
(echo "From: $REPLY"
echo "To: $DLIST"
echo... (6 Replies)
Hello Friends,
Hope you are doing well.
I am writing a shell script to find out the log file which are not updated in last 1 hours. I've almost completed the script but need your help in formatting its outputs.
Currently, the output of the script is like this(as a flat row):
... (3 Replies)
I need to extract the following lines from this text and put it in different files.
From xxxx@gmail.com Thu Jun 10 21:15:46 2010
Return-Path: <xxxxx@gmail.com>
X-Original-To: xxx@localhost
Delivered-To:xxxx@localhost
Received: from ubuntu (localhost )
by ubuntu (Postfix) with ESMTP... (11 Replies)
Hi Experts,
I just want to copy some selected strings from a a file into a new .txt file .
I am using below command to find the data now want to copy the search results into another .txt file please help me .
find /Path -exec grep -w "filename1|filename1|filename1|" '{}' \;... (2 Replies)
In the bash below I am asking the user for a panel and reading that into bed. Then asking the user for a file and reading that into file1.Is the grep in bold the correct way to apply the selected panel to the file? I am getting a syntax error. Thank you :)
... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
make_socksfc
MAKE_SOCKSFC(8) System Manager's Manual MAKE_SOCKSFC(8)NAME
make_socksfc - Generates frozen configuratyion file for SOCKS clients
SYNOPSIS
make_socksfc [infile [outfile] ]
DESCRIPTION
make_socksfc reads in a plain-text configuration file for the SOCKS clients and produces a frozen configuration file as the output.
Both arguments are optional. The default for infile is /etc/socks.conf; the default for outfile is /etc/socks.fc. You may specify infile
while omitting outfile, but you cannot specify outfile without also speficying infile.
The contents of the frozen configuration file is essentially the memory image of the parsed input file. Using the frozen configuration file
can reduce the start-up delay of the SOCKS client programs since they no longer have to parse the file contents.
When the SOCKS client starts, it always looks for the frozen configuration file /etc/socks.fc first . If that file is not found, it then
tries to use the plain-text configuration file /etc/socks.conf. If you use frozen configuration, you must remember to run make_socksfc
every time after you modify the plain-text file or the SOCKS clients will continue to use the frozen file of a previous configuration.
To find out the contents of a frozen configuration file, use dump_socksfc.
FILES
/etc/socks.fc, /etc/socks.conf
SEE ALSO dump_socksfc(8), socks.conf(5), socks.fc(5)AUTHOR
Ying-Da Lee, yingda@esd.sgi.com or yingda@best.com
May 6, 1996 MAKE_SOCKSFC(8)