06-06-2013
Yes, it is good now. Thanks
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I have written the following code ...to include the Subject, Message Body and Attachment with sendmail.
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2. Solaris
Hello All,
I have a DOS file which I run a DOS 2 UNIX utility on. When run from Solaris, I can view the file perfectly. But, when run from linux, I see a bunch of junk(^@) at the beginning of every line in the file. Does anyone know the cause of this?
COMMAND TO CONVERT:
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3. Solaris
Dear all,
I have installed Solaris10 in a x86 machine.When the ls -l output is taken,at the Month's place some junk characters appear.Rest everything is fine. Cna somebody help..?
thanks
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Hi,
Is there anyway to find the junk characters in a file.Consider the file has data as given below:
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5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have a file with data as given below
$cat file1
123|abc|345
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hi guys,
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Urgently ur help is needed.
Actually my req is i have an input file, that input file may have junk characters (^M, ^Z) etc...
eg:
cat file
name abc^Z addres
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I have script which send a mail with top output. The script look like
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Hi All,
I have a issue that we are getting Junk characters from source and i am not able to load that records to Database.
Line breakers
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Japanese Characters
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LEARN ABOUT BSD
mkmanifest
MKMANIFEST(1) General Commands Manual MKMANIFEST(1)
NAME
mkmanifest - create a shell script to restore Unix filenames
SYNOPSIS
mkmanifest [ files ]
DESCRIPTION
Mkmanifest creates a shell script that will aid in the restoration of Unix filenames that got clobbered by the MSDOS filename restrictions.
MSDOS filenames are restricted to 8 character names, 3 character extensions, upper case only, no device names, and no illegal characters.
The mkmanifest program is compatible with the methods used in pcomm, arc, and mtools to change perfectly good Unix filenames to fit the
MSDOS restrictions.
EXAMPLE
I want to copy the following Unix files to a MSDOS diskette (using the mcopy command).
very_long_name
2.many.dots
illegal:
good.c
prn.dev
Capital
Mcopy will convert the names to:
very_lon
2xmany.dot
illegalx
good.c
xprn.dev
capital
The command:
mkmanifest very_long_name 2.many.dots illegal: good.c prn.dev Capital > manifest
would produce the following:
mv very_lon very_long_name
mv 2xmany.dot 2.many.dots
mv illegalx illegal:
mv xprn.dev prn.dev
mv capital Capital
Notice that "good.c" did not require any conversion, so it did not appear in the output.
Suppose I've copied these files from the diskette to another Unix system, and I now want the files back to their original names. If the
file "manifest" (the output captured above) was sent along with those files, it could be used to convert the filenames.
SEE ALSO
arc(1), pcomm(1), mtools(1)
local MKMANIFEST(1)