ICANN, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, is inviting proposals for new sponsored top level domains.
This may be wishful thinking, but isn't that a chance to push for a .mac top level domain (TLD)?
I for one would VASTLY like the idea of having a domain of something.mac --... (0 Replies)
Hello
I have compilation directory structure the top level Makefile is the one that contains all the sub directories
I want to set in this Makefile env variable say : setenv OPTIMIZATION_LEVEL "1"
and when all the sub directories done compiling it will set this variable to different lavel... (0 Replies)
I'm using bash on cygwin/windows.
I'm trying to use find and exclude the directory /cygdrive/c/System\ Volume\ Information. When I try to use the command below I get the error "rm: cannot remove `/cygdrive/c/System Volume Information': Is a directory.
Can someone tell me what I am doing... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to use either awk or sed to drop the first two folders in a path. So if I had path /folder1/folder2/folder3/folder4.... I need to drop folder1&2, so the new path would be /folder3/folder4...
If folder1 and folder2 were the same all the time, this would be easy. But... (4 Replies)
Hey guys...
I'm learning some shell scripting on OS X using the tcsh shell.
For some reason... my while loop isn't executing right (or more likely I am doing something wrong.)
Something as simple as this doesn't work:
#!/bin/tcsh
set g = 0
while ($g <10)
echo "this" $g
@ g =... (2 Replies)
Hello All,
I am trying to write a script to:-
1. Traverse entire file system, look for directories which has .git directory in it
2. Rename the immediate parent directory to <orignal_name.git>
3. Traverse new file structure and look for all directories with <original_name>.git
4. cd to... (2 Replies)
Hi folks,
I have an query that is let say i have to search in an xml file an tag that is <abcdef> now this xml file is at /opt/usr/local so one fastest way to achieve this is go to this location by cd /opt/usr/local and then do grep like this... grep -i abcdef but for this I must know the... (4 Replies)
Hello.
Source file are in : /a/b/c/d/e/f/g/some_file
Destination is : /d/e where sub-directories "f" and "g" may missing or not.
After copying I want /a/b/c/d/e/f/g/file1 in /d/e/f/g/file1
On source /a is top-level directory
On destination /d is top-level directory
I would like... (2 Replies)
Hi Members,
I'm new to unix. Could you help me in solving my issue.
My requirement is I need to pull Top 15 users in every mount. I could able to get the mount level information but I couldn't able to pull the top users in every mount. I see in every mount I could see a lot of nested... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: UBEE
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
dirname
DIRNAME(3) BSD Library Functions Manual DIRNAME(3)NAME
dirname -- extract the directory part of a pathname
SYNOPSIS
#include <libgen.h>
char *
dirname(char *path);
DESCRIPTION
The dirname() function is the converse of basename(3); it returns a pointer to the parent directory of the pathname pointed to by path. Any
trailing '/' characters are not counted as part of the directory name. If path is a null pointer, the empty string, or contains no '/' char-
acters, dirname() returns a pointer to the string ".", signifying the current directory.
IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
The dirname() function returns a pointer to internal storage space allocated on the first call that will be overwritten by subsequent calls.
Other vendor implementations of dirname() may modify the contents of the string passed to dirname(); if portability is desired, this should
be taken into account when writing code which calls this function.
LEGACY SYNOPSIS
#include <libgen.h>
char *
dirname(const char *path);
In legacy mode, path will not be changed.
RETURN VALUES
On successful completion, dirname() returns a pointer to the parent directory of path.
If dirname() fails, a null pointer is returned and the global variable errno is set to indicate the error.
ERRORS
The following error codes may be set in errno:
[ENAMETOOLONG] The path component to be returned was larger than MAXPATHLEN.
SEE ALSO basename(1), dirname(1), basename(3), compat(5)STANDARDS
The dirname() function conforms to X/Open Portability Guide Issue 4, Version 2 (``XPG4.2'').
HISTORY
The dirname() function first appeared in OpenBSD 2.2 and FreeBSD 4.2.
AUTHORS
Todd C. Miller
BSD October 12, 2006 BSD