Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers unusual problem with cp command Post 302690015 by Devesh5683 on Wednesday 22nd of August 2012 11:06:22 AM
Old 08-22-2012
Vbe I will code tags from next time, thanks for reminding.

Below is OS details:
Linux pb3n1 2.6.18-194.el5 #1 SMP Tue Mar 16 21:52:39 EDT 2010 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux

Disk usage is around 75% to 85%

The directory where the script is copying the file is further read by another script which ftp the file from that directory . I have added chmod 666 before cp command but I am not sure how to tackle => sometimes file with zero size is getting copy to the destination directory while mv command output file have non-zero size.
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

somewhat unusual top output problem

i'm a relative newbie to unix (i'm on OSX) and i have a specific problem i'm tripped up on: i'm piping the output of top (in log format) into an awk command which formats the information (and eventually will send it out continuously via udp/osc to another app). my problem is with what comes up... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ohhmyhead
4 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

unusual function refrences

I'm wrting a program which needs to get the following information of a sever by calling some lib fuctions or system calls, so can anybody help to tell me those function names or where I can find the description of them ? CPU usage Memory usage Load procs per min Swap usage Page I/O Net I/O... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: xbjxbj
1 Replies

3. Programming

unusual function refrences

I'm wrting a program which needs to get the following information of a sever by calling some lib fuctions or system calls, so can anybody help to tell me those function names or where I can find the description of them ? CPU usage Memory usage Load procs per min Swap usage Page I/O ... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: xbjxbj
11 Replies

4. Solaris

pleaseee help with unusual crontab problem

Helllo folks... I tryed to edit crontab and I have this problem when I do crontab -l it shows my crontab correctly and if I do crontab -e I get this. baafh-99.03# baafh-99.03# crontab -e 1063 ? ? ? ? ? and that is all ...:( I have to type "q" and hit enter and I am back... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: amon
4 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

very unusual question about while

is there anyway to make while run a command faster than per second? timed=60 while do command sleep 1 done i need something that can run a script for me more than one time in one second. can someone help me out here? (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Terrible
3 Replies

6. Programming

C Calender Help - Unusual error

I'm making a program that you input the month and year, and it creates a calender for that month of that year. This is my largest project yet, and I broke it up into several source files. cal.c #include "cal.h" #include <stdio.h> main() { int month, year; scanf("%d %d", &month,... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Octal
3 Replies

7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Unusual NFS mount problem on only ONE client: Red Hat WS Rel 3

This is an unusual situation where I have an NFS server currently serving out MULTIPLE clients over several variants of Linux and UNIX successfully (world permissions) except for a SINGLE client. Even the other Linux (SuSE) clients in the same room are mounting successfully with defaults without... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: neelpert1
6 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Unusual Problem

what is wrong with the below script: --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- #!/bin/bash echo "Setting JrePath..." grep -w "export JrePath" /etc/profile Export_Status=$? if echo "JrePath declared" elif echo "JrePath not declared" echo... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: proactiveaditya
4 Replies

9. HP-UX

Unusual Behavior?

Our comp-operator has come across a peculiar ‘feature'. We have this directory where we save all the reports that were generated for a particular department for only one calendar year. Currently there are 45,869 files. When the operator tried to backup that drive it started to print a flie-listing... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: vslewis
3 Replies
ARCH(1) 						    BSD General Commands Manual 						   ARCH(1)

NAME
arch -- print architecture type or run selected architecture of a universal binary SYNOPSIS
arch arch [-32] [-64] [[-arch_name | -arch arch_name]...] [-c] [-d envname]... [-e envname=value]... [-h] prog [args ...] DESCRIPTION
The arch command with no arguments, displays the machine's architecture type. The other use of the arch command it to run a selected architecture of a universal binary. A universal binary contains code that can run on different architectures. By default, the operating system will select the architecture that most closely matches the processor type. This means that an intel architecture is selected on intel processors and a powerpc architecture is selected on powerpc processors. A 64-bit architecture is preferred over a 32-bit architecture on a 64-bit processor, while only 32-bit architectures can run on a 32-bit processor. When the most natural architecture is unavailable, the operating system will try to pick another architecture. On 64-bit processors, a 32-bit architecture is tried. If this is also unavailable, the operating system on an intel processor will try running a 32-bit powerpc architecture. Otherwise, no architecture is run, and an error results. The arch command can be used to alter the operating system's normal selection order. The most common use is to select the 32-bit architec- ture on a 64-bit processor, even if a 64-bit architecture is available. The arch_name argument must be one of the currently supported architectures: i386 32-bit intel x86_64 64-bit intel Either prefix the architecture with a hyphen, or (for compatibility with other commands), use -arch followed by the architecture. If more than one architecture is specified, the operating system will try each one in order, skipping an architecture that is not supported on the current processor, or is unavailable in the universal binary. The other options are: -32 Add the native 32-bit architecture to the list of architectures. -64 Add the native 64-bit architecture to the list of architectures. -c Clears the environment that will be passed to the command to be run. -d envname Deletes the named environment variable from the environment that will be passed to the command to be run. -e envname=value Assigns the given value to the named environment variable in the environment that will be passed to the command to be run. Any existing environment variable with the same name will be replaced. -h Prints a usage message and exits. The prog argument is the command to run, followed by any arguments to pass to the command. It can be a full or partial path, while a lone name will be looked up in the user's command search path. If no architectures are specified on the command line, the arch command takes the basename of the prog argument and searches for the first property list file with that basename and the .plist suffix, in the archSettings sub-directory in each of the standard domains, in the fol- lowing order: ~/Library/archSettings User settings /Library/archSettings Local settings /Network/Library/archSettings Network settings /System/Library/archSettings System settings This property list contains the architecture order preferences, as well as the full path to the real executable. For examples of the prop- erty list format, look at the files in /System/Library/archSettings. Example On an intel processor: % perl -MConfig -e 'printf "%s ", $Config{byteorder}' 1234 shows the intel little endian byte order. Making links to the arch command When a link is made to arch command with a different name, that name is used to find the corresponding property list file. Thus, other com- mands can be wrapped so that they have custom architecture selection order. Because of some internal logic in the code, hard links to the arch command may not work quite right. It is best to avoid using hard links, and only use symbolic links to the arch command. Environment The environment variable ARCHPREFERENCE can be used to provide architecture order preferences. It is checked before looking for the corre- sponding property list file. The value of the environment variable ARCHPREFERENCE is composed of one or more specifiers, separated by semicolons. A specifier is made up of one, two or three fields, separated by colons. Architectures specified in order, are separated by commas and make up the last (mandatory) field. The first field, if specified, is a name of a program, which selects this specifier if that name matches the program name in ques- tion. If the name field is empty or there is no name field, the specifier matches any program name. Thus, ordering of specifiers is impor- tant, and the one with no name should be last. When the arch command is called directly, the prog name provides the path information to the executable (possibly via the command search path). When a name is specified in a ARCHPREFERENCE specifier, the path information can alternately be specified as a second field following the name. When the arch command is called indirectly via a link, this path information must be specified. If not specified as a second field in a specifier, the executable path will be looked up in the corresponding property list file. Example ARCHPREFERENCE Values i386,x86_64 A specifier that matches any name. foo:i386,x86_64 A specifier that matches the program named foo (the full executable path is in the foo.plist file). foo:/op/bin/boo:i386,x86_64 A specifier with all fields specified. baz:i386;x86_64 A specifier for baz and a second specifier that would match any other name. BUGS
Running the arch command on an interpreter script may not work if the interpreter is a link to the arch command, especially if a 64-bit architecture is specified (since the arch command is 2-way universal, 32-bit only). SEE ALSO
machine(1) Mac OS X July 8, 2010 Mac OS X
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:08 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy