I set my path environment variable in c shell, using the
syntax below
setenv PATH "${PATH}:/usr/local:/usr/local/bin"
and placed this in $HOME/.login
$HOME/.cshrc
and /etc/.login
/etc/.cshrc
but when I issued echo $PATH or set command
the output does not reflect changes made to... (5 Replies)
hi all
i have joined new to the group.
i have set an variable in my bashrc file.
.bashrc
PROGHOME=/home/braf/braf/prog
export PROGHOME
but while using it in my shell script its path is not taken and i had to explicitly give the export command to set the path.
in my script... (8 Replies)
Hi,
I want to set the path for my application so I am setting the path as below --
PATH=${PATH}:.:/envs/mldev/tools:/envs/mldev/common/tools:${HOME}:/bin/p4v:/usr/j2se:/usr/j2se/bin:/usr/j2se/lib
or
PATH="\
/usr/bin:\
/usr/sbin:\
/usr/dt/bin:\
... (7 Replies)
Hello sir,
I am using a fedora 9 system.
I wanted to update the path to include the $HOME into the path.
So what we do is :
This will update the path.
I want to do the same thing by writing it in a shell prgram.
I wrote the above code in an "a.sh" file and executed it using "bash a.sh".BUt... (1 Reply)
Hi,
Can anyone help me on how to set PATH using shell scripting..
Please find the shell script code here....
#!/bin/bash
PATH = $PATH:/opt/app/oracle/product/10.2.0/bin
export PATH
echo $PATH
exit
When i execute this script i get the following error
./backup.sh: line 2: PATH:... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I've read forums far and wide trying to learn how to append to my PATH in Solaris 9 and every time I think I am close I discover my system is not configured the same. Its so frustrating because this all stems from a new server I am trying to setup identical to the production machine. (Of... (5 Replies)
hi friends,
I m trying to write a script which compares to dates.
for this i am converting dates into no using synatx
as below
v2=`date | awk '{print $2,$3,$4}'`
v3=`date +%s -d "$v2"`
this syntax is working in bash shell ,but fails in ksh shell.
please suggest on this. (12 Replies)
Hello All,
Hope you can understand my problem from the below code.
$ cat ~/.profile
PS1=`whoami`@`hostname`':$PWD
$ '
export PATH="$PATH:.:/logarchive/utility/util:/usr/sbin:"
$ echo $PATH
/usr/kerberos/bin:/usr/local/bin:/bin:/usr/bin:.:/usr/sbin:
$ echo $SHELL
/usr/bin/ksh
... (6 Replies)
Greetings Experts,
I need to pass a parameter to ksh and the value is windows path eg: sh abc.txt C:\Users\chill3chee\Desktop
No matter I try with \ delimiter, still could not get this exact value assigned to the shell variable which was checked with echo. Tried with using... (2 Replies)
My variable contains the following string
I wish to replace \n with "space" so the expected output is:
I understand that the /n is not a new linein this case.
I'm on AIX using ksh shell. Below is all that I tried.
echo $str | sed -e "s#\n# #g";
echo $str | sed -e "s#\n#' '#g";... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohtashims
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT LINUX
filecap
FILECAP:(8) System Administration Utilities FILECAP:(8)NAME
filecap - a program to see capabilities
SYNOPSIS
filecap [ -a | -d | /dir | /dir/file [cap1 cap2 ...] ]
DESCRIPTION
filecap is a program that prints out a report of programs with file based capabilities. If a file is not in the report or there is no
report at all, no capabilities were found. For expedience, the default is to check only the directories in the PATH environmental variable.
If the -a command line option is given, then all directories will be checked. If a directory is passed, it will recursively check that
directory. If a path to a file is given, it will only check that file. If the path to the file includes capabilities, then they are written
to the file.
OPTIONS -a This tells the program to show all capabilities starting from the / directory. Normally the PATH environmental variable is used to
show you capabilities on files you are likely to execute.
-d This dumps all capabilities for reference.
EXAMPLES
To check file capabilities in $PATH:
filecap
To check file capabilities of whole system:
filecap -a
To check file capabilities recursively in a directory:
filecap /usr
To check file capabilities of a specific program:
filecap /bin/passwd
To list all possible capabilities:
filecap -d
To set a file capability on a specific program:
filecap /bin/ping net_raw net_admin
SEE ALSO pscap(8), netcap(8), capabilities(7).
AUTHOR
Steve Grubb
Red Hat March 2009 FILECAP:(8)