Hi,
i have a problem with turning a job into backgrund.
When i enter this at the shell:
spice -b darlington.cir -r output.raw > screenout.tmp &
and then let me show the currently running jobs, i get the following output:
+ Suspended (tty output) spice -b darlington.cir -r output.raw >... (4 Replies)
Hi there,
I'm quite new to UNIX for programming. I have a script that does this:
Shows on screen real-time results taken from phone calls and logs them in a file.
However, when I start my script, I want my script to start logging in the file in the background, so I can continue working on... (1 Reply)
i need to execute 5 jobs at a time in background and need to get the exit status of all the jobs i wrote small script below , i'm not sure this is right way to do it.any ideas please help.
$cat run_job.ksh
#!/usr/bin/ksh
####################################
typeset -u SCHEMA_NAME=$1
... (1 Reply)
Reposting, as it got lost during the database backup. :(
Via a shell script a spawn 3 background jobs namely a, b & c.
These will take different times to complete.
I want to print a different message on completion of each.
How can i find out when each one has completed independently.
... (19 Replies)
Admins,
We have a strange problem on our solaris zones. We have four zones on a Global server (Sun-Fire-V890; Solaris 10 Update 6) and the SSH sessions to all four zones are terminated at a specific time (11:10 PM) every night. The SSH session to the global server is not terminated.
Also, any... (1 Reply)
Hello,
I am trying to find a way to send several sequential commands via SSH to a remote box in a single command.
Thoughts so far:
1) Can I put them into a function and call the function within the ssh command?
e.g.
ssh <targetserver> $(functionx)
No - then it calls the function in... (4 Replies)
I have a question.
I will be running a background process using nohup and & command at end. I want to send output to a file say myprocess.out.
So will this command work?
nohup myprocess.ksh > myprocess.out &
Thanks in advance guys !!!
:) (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: vx04
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
nice
NICE(1) General Commands Manual NICE(1)NAME
nice, nohup - run a command at low priority (sh only)
SYNOPSIS
nice [ -number ] command [ arguments ]
nohup command [ arguments ]
DESCRIPTION
Nice executes command with low scheduling priority. If the number argument is present, the priority is incremented (higher numbers mean
lower priorities) by that amount up to a limit of 20. The default number is 10.
The super-user may run commands with priority higher than normal by using a negative priority, e.g. `--10'.
Nohup executes command immune to hangup and terminate signals from the controlling terminal. The priority is incremented by 5. Nohup
should be invoked from the shell with `&' in order to prevent it from responding to interrupts by or stealing the input from the next per-
son who logs in on the same terminal.
FILES
nohup.out standard output and standard error file under nohup
SEE ALSO csh(1), setpriority(2), renice(8)DIAGNOSTICS
Nice returns the exit status of the subject command.
BUGS
Nice and nohup are particular to sh(1). If you use csh(1), then commands executed with ``&'' are automatically immune to hangup signals
while in the background. There is a builtin command nohup which provides immunity from terminate, but it does not redirect output to
nohup.out.
Nice is built into csh(1) with a slightly different syntax than described here. The form ``nice +10'' nices to positive nice, and ``nice
-10'' can be used by the super-user to give a process more of the processor.
4th Berkeley Distribution May 8, 1986 NICE(1)