In solaris, i m trying to find the files having a particulat extension and then from the list i want to exclude those files which is present in a file.
How can I use the 'ps' command to view current sessions but only for a given process/user, with the -u parm?
In older versions of Unix, this used to work, but not in Sun Solaris.
Thanks (4 Replies)
:confused: In the following, when I enter a valid, existing directory,why am I getting Not Found when the Dir DOES exist?
read auser
echo "You entered $auser"
wait 2
cd /home
if
then
echo "Dir Exists"
sleep 2
else
echo "/home/$auser Not Found"
sleep... (2 Replies)
There r 2 servers. Lets call them S1 and S2..
S1 is OSF1 and S2 is SunOS..
One directory of S2 is mounted on S1. say abc/xyz
There is one application which continuously put xml files in that directory (on S2).
If we give command “ls -lrt” on S2 it gives proper output.. (i.e. gives list... (1 Reply)
Hi ,
I have already posted a post regarding this, but i didn't get my problem solve, so some body help me as it was urgent for me, my mail option is not working, when i send a mail, it is strucking in /var/spool/mqueue folder. and i am getting struck there itself, i see below two files are... (1 Reply)
Hi Gurus,
I mount a filesystem with -o noatime option to avoid getting the recording of time into the inode, however as on when i am doing any chnage in any file create in this file system the timestamp of the file is changing, whcih i can see with ls -l :(.
What can be the reason ?
i... (4 Replies)
Running HP 11.31 on a HP3600. But when I log in as a user the who command works but if I use an option like "who -m" I get nothing. Any thoughts on what is causing this problem. (11 Replies)
Hi There,
---------
file1
-------
~c asd@ac.com
--------------
Now i am using below command
cat file1|mailx -s " testing" -r " My Name" abc@tech.com (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to find out patterns in file 1 using patterns stored in file 2. Following is the code
FILE1=inputfilename
FILE2=blacklist
blacklist
1203
97715555
20afEOF
egrep -f $FILE2 $FILE1
but the above code is not working either using egrep or grep. Just for your... (10 Replies)
Hi All,
I am using the following script to run some sql on database but i am not getting the result. When i tried the same by removing "-s" option it is working fine but getting other things as well with my input as shown below. Can anyone please suggest why "-s" option is not working in AIX and... (2 Replies)
Can you please figure out what is the issue here
$ find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -size 0 -print
find: bad option -maxdepth
please find the OS details
$ uname -a
HP-UX g5u1216 B.11.31 U ia64 2614088426 unlimited-user license
Use code tags, thanks. (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: TomG
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT LINUX
dh_fixperms
DH_FIXPERMS(1) Debhelper DH_FIXPERMS(1)NAME
dh_fixperms - fix permissions of files in package build directories
SYNOPSIS
dh_fixperms [debhelperoptions] [-Xitem]
DESCRIPTION
dh_fixperms is a debhelper program that is responsible for setting the permissions of files and directories in package build directories to
a sane state -- a state that complies with Debian policy.
dh_fixperms makes all files in usr/share/doc in the package build directory (excluding files in the examples/ directory) be mode 644. It
also changes the permissions of all man pages to mode 644. It makes all files be owned by root, and it removes group and other write
permission from all files. It removes execute permissions from any libraries, headers, Perl modules, or desktop files that have it set. It
makes all files in the standard bin and sbin directories, usr/games/ and etc/init.d executable (since v4). Finally, it removes the setuid
and setgid bits from all files in the package.
OPTIONS -Xitem, --exclude item
Exclude files that contain item anywhere in their filename from having their permissions changed. You may use this option multiple
times to build up a list of things to exclude.
SEE ALSO debhelper(7)
This program is a part of debhelper.
AUTHOR
Joey Hess <joeyh@debian.org>
8.9.0ubuntu2.1 2012-06-12 DH_FIXPERMS(1)