It's working. But what makes the difference and how it works?
Thanks,
Quote:
Originally Posted by Corona688
The only difference is redirecting the message to the text file. Otherwise they act the same.
Actually, the message is not redirected; the message is simply not generated.
That informational message is written by nohup to stderr only when stdout is a terminal, forcing it to choose a new destination for stdout (and possibly stderr, if it to is a terminal).
Hi,
I am trying to create a script that will loop through my oratab file and pull out the instance name.
Here is script:
for instance in $(cat /etc/oratab|egrep ':N|:Y'|grep -v \*|grep -v \#|cut -f1 -d':')
do ... (3 Replies)
Im trying to connect to a particular IP address and I'm tying to use gethostbyaddr() and inet_addr() to do this. However, when I tried using inet_addr(), I always get a return value of 0 when I tried to connect to "172.21.16.238". Hope someone here could help me on this. I already tried using inet_... (1 Reply)
Is there a command where I can pipe my grep into it and it will output it with spaces rather than returns?
Example
I want to turn
prompt$ grep blah file
blah
blah
into this
prompt$ grep blah file | someCommand
blah blah (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I am trying to grep a .txt file for a word. When I hit enter, it returns back to $
The file is 4155402 in size and is named in this way:
*_eveningtimes_done_log.txt
I use this command, being in the same directory as the file:
grep -i "invalid" *_eveningtimes_done_log.txt
... (16 Replies)
how to Change the % prompt to - prompt in unix
:wall:
---------- Post updated at 07:40 AM ---------- Previous update was at 07:38 AM ----------
How To display the last modification time of any file in unix
---------- Post updated at 07:40 AM ---------- Previous update was at 07:40 AM... (2 Replies)
Shell : bash
OS : Oracle Linux 6.4
I want to save the ouput of a nohup command to file other than nohup.out . Below are my 3 attempts.
For both Attempt1 and Attempt2 , the redirection logs the output correctly to the output file. But I get the error "ignoring input and redirecting stderr to... (7 Replies)
Hi,
I need to return a value from the function. the value will be the output from cat command which uses random fucntion.
#!/bin/ksh
hello()
{
var1=$(`cat /dev/urandom| tr -dc 'a-zA-Z0-9-!%&()*+,-/:;<=>?_'|fold -w 10 | head -n 1`)
echo "value is" var1
return var1
}
hello
var=$?... (2 Replies)
I'm having a little trouble returning a value from a function or calling it, I'm not quite sure.
I'm calling the function here
function region_lookup_with_details {
results = $(set_region)
echo $results
}
This is the function I'm calling
function set_region {
... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: akechnie
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
shell-quote
SHELL-QUOTE(1p) User Contributed Perl Documentation SHELL-QUOTE(1p)NAME
shell-quote - quote arguments for safe use, unmodified in a shell command
SYNOPSIS
shell-quote [switch]... arg...
DESCRIPTION
shell-quote lets you pass arbitrary strings through the shell so that they won't be changed by the shell. This lets you process commands
or files with embedded white space or shell globbing characters safely. Here are a few examples.
EXAMPLES
ssh preserving args
When running a remote command with ssh, ssh doesn't preserve the separate arguments it receives. It just joins them with spaces and
passes them to "$SHELL -c". This doesn't work as intended:
ssh host touch 'hi there' # fails
It creates 2 files, hi and there. Instead, do this:
cmd=`shell-quote touch 'hi there'`
ssh host "$cmd"
This gives you just 1 file, hi there.
process find output
It's not ordinarily possible to process an arbitrary list of files output by find with a shell script. Anything you put in $IFS to
split up the output could legitimately be in a file's name. Here's how you can do it using shell-quote:
eval set -- `find -type f -print0 | xargs -0 shell-quote --`
debug shell scripts
shell-quote is better than echo for debugging shell scripts.
debug() {
[ -z "$debug" ] || shell-quote "debug:" "$@"
}
With echo you can't tell the difference between "debug 'foo bar'" and "debug foo bar", but with shell-quote you can.
save a command for later
shell-quote can be used to build up a shell command to run later. Say you want the user to be able to give you switches for a command
you're going to run. If you don't want the switches to be re-evaluated by the shell (which is usually a good idea, else there are
things the user can't pass through), you can do something like this:
user_switches=
while [ $# != 0 ]
do
case x$1 in
x--pass-through)
[ $# -gt 1 ] || die "need an argument for $1"
user_switches="$user_switches "`shell-quote -- "$2"`
shift;;
# process other switches
esac
shift
done
# later
eval "shell-quote some-command $user_switches my args"
OPTIONS --debug
Turn debugging on.
--help
Show the usage message and die.
--version
Show the version number and exit.
AVAILABILITY
The code is licensed under the GNU GPL. Check http://www.argon.org/~roderick/ or CPAN for updated versions.
AUTHOR
Roderick Schertler <roderick@argon.org>
perl v5.8.4 2005-05-03 SHELL-QUOTE(1p)