Have a script called rapidclone_test.sh which calls Oracle rapidclone using su -c as an oracle osuser. However, if I control+c out to the calling shell anything entered is not displayed on the terminal. Any command executes successfully though.
Why is the standard input not being directed to the screen?
Running the script ->
control+c ->
return a few times and then ls -al ->
rapidclone_test.sh looks like this ->
I have an application which has a lot of cout & cerr statements.
This application also opens a log file (for eg a.log).
When this application is run from the inittab file as follows
/bin/sh -c " . /etc/timezone; exec /test"
all the cout & cerr statements are printed in the log file... (1 Reply)
When I run a third parties program from the command line (this program basically list's a whole load of stuff) and write the output to a file it splits the output, i.e. in the middle of the file appears the exit command.
If I don't redirect the output and write it to tty then the output is... (3 Replies)
Hello,
Is is possible to redirect stdout to a file as well as to the console/screen or display in ksh.
any thoughts suggestions/input is appreciated. Thanks. (2 Replies)
Hello I'm curious about how to get a bash script to rewrite a line of standard output. For example, many programs track their progress by writing percentages on the screen:
Precent Done: 60%
That line gets updated periodically to reflect the status.. My question, is how do we do this, as... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
How do I provide the output of a command to another command which is waiting for an input from the user ?
Ex : I need to login to a device via telnet. In the script, initially I use the "read" command to get the IP Address, Username and Password of the device from the user. Now,... (1 Reply)
Hey, I'm completely new at this and I was wondering if there is a way that I would be able to redirect the log files in a directories standard output and standard error into and excel spreadsheet in anyway?
Please remember don't use too advanced of terminology as I just started using shell... (6 Replies)
Hi guys,
i have a script named purgeErrors.ksh, when i execute this script i need to redirect the output to a log file in the same directory, how can i do that ??
-- Aditya (5 Replies)
Alright so i got this script genpipe:
echo "$*" |sh genscript file
vi file << 'HERE'
:%s/^/echo /g
:%s/ $//g
:%s/ /&\| xargs \.\/plus /g
:wq
HERE
cat file
Which generates output like echo 1 | xargs ./plus 2 | xargs ./plus 3 and so on
Now i got the next script multiplus, who should... (3 Replies)
I ran the following command.
cat abc.c > abc.c
I got message the following message from command cat:
cat: abc.c : input file is same as the output file
How the command came to know of the destination file name as the command is sending output to standard file. (3 Replies)
I have a file that looks that this:
820 890 530
1650 1600 1800
1850 1900 2270
1640 2300 1670
2080 2200 2350
1150 1630 2210
I would like to output the mean and standard deviation of each row so that my final output would look like this
820 890 530 746.667 155.849
1650 1600 1800... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: kayak
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
ocf_heartbeat_oracle
OCF_HEARTBEAT_ORACLE(7) OCF resource agents OCF_HEARTBEAT_ORACLE(7)NAME
ocf_heartbeat_oracle - Manages an Oracle Database instance
SYNOPSIS
oracle [start | stop | status | monitor | validate-all | methods | meta-data]
DESCRIPTION
Resource script for oracle. Manages an Oracle Database instance as an HA resource.
SUPPORTED PARAMETERS
sid
The Oracle SID (aka ORACLE_SID). (required, string, no default)
home
The Oracle home directory (aka ORACLE_HOME). If not specified, then the SID along with its home should be listed in /etc/oratab.
(optional, string, no default)
user
The Oracle owner (aka ORACLE_OWNER). If not specified, then it is set to the owner of file $ORACLE_HOME/dbs/*${ORACLE_SID}.ora. If this
does not work for you, just set it explicitely. (optional, string, no default)
ipcrm
Sometimes IPC objects (shared memory segments and semaphores) belonging to an Oracle instance might be left behind which prevents the
instance from starting. It is not easy to figure out which shared segments belong to which instance, in particular when more instances
are running as same user. What we use here is the "oradebug" feature and its "ipc" trace utility. It is not optimal to parse the
debugging information, but I am not aware of any other way to find out about the IPC information. In case the format or wording of the
trace report changes, parsing might fail. There are some precautions, however, to prevent stepping on other peoples toes. There is also
a dumpinstipc option which will make us print the IPC objects which belong to the instance. Use it to see if we parse the trace file
correctly. Three settings are possible: - none: don't mess with IPC and hope for the best (beware: you'll probably be out of luck,
sooner or later) - instance: try to figure out the IPC stuff which belongs to the instance and remove only those (default; should be
safe) - orauser: remove all IPC belonging to the user which runs the instance (don't use this if you run more than one instance as same
user or if other apps running as this user use IPC) The default setting "instance" should be safe to use, but in that case we cannot
guarantee that the instance will start. In case IPC objects were already left around, because, for instance, someone mercilessly
killing Oracle processes, there is no way any more to find out which IPC objects should be removed. In that case, human intervention is
necessary, and probably _all_ instances running as same user will have to be stopped. The third setting, "orauser", guarantees IPC
objects removal, but it does that based only on IPC objects ownership, so you should use that only if every instance runs as separate
user. Please report any problems. Suggestions/fixes welcome. (optional, string, default instance)
clear_backupmode
The clear of the backup mode of ORACLE. (optional, boolean, default false)
shutdown_method
How to stop Oracle is a matter of taste it seems. The default method ("checkpoint/abort") is: alter system checkpoint; shutdown abort;
This should be the fastest safe way bring the instance down. If you find "shutdown abort" distasteful, set this attribute to
"immediate" in which case we will shutdown immediate; If you still think that there's even better way to shutdown an Oracle instance we
are willing to listen. (optional, string, default checkpoint/abort)
SUPPORTED ACTIONS
This resource agent supports the following actions (operations):
start
Starts the resource. Suggested minimum timeout: 120.
stop
Stops the resource. Suggested minimum timeout: 120.
status
Performs a status check. Suggested minimum timeout: 5.
monitor
Performs a detailed status check. Suggested minimum timeout: 30. Suggested interval: 120.
validate-all
Performs a validation of the resource configuration. Suggested minimum timeout: 5.
methods
Suggested minimum timeout: 5.
meta-data
Retrieves resource agent metadata (internal use only). Suggested minimum timeout: 5.
EXAMPLE
The following is an example configuration for a oracle resource using the crm(8) shell:
primitive example_oracle ocf:heartbeat:oracle
params
sid=string
op monitor depth="0" timeout="30" interval="120"
SEE ALSO
http://www.linux-ha.org/wiki/oracle_(resource_agent)
AUTHOR
Linux-HA contributors (see the resource agent source for information about individual authors)
resource-agents 1.0.3 07/05/2010 OCF_HEARTBEAT_ORACLE(7)