Thank you, but this did not work. The error is exactly the same as before.
Yeah. On many shells, cd ~ is treated as a synonym for cd $HOME, however cd ~logname (where logname is your login name) should work.
But the real issue is that $HOME has been set incorrectly; it should ALWAYS be an absolute pathname.
It looks like you may have accidentally removed the leading "/" from $HOME. If you log out and log back in and $HOME still does not start with a "/", you'll need to dig through your shell's initialization files and correct the line that sets HOME.
Until you find the problem, assuming your login name is mecaka, the following should get your current shell execution environment back to a reasonable state:
Hi
I have this code, and i want work with a ls -shalR output in .txt
What i need read to do this??
Where start?
#!/usr/bin/perl
# Allrights- A perl tool for making backups of file permissions
# Copyright (C) 2005 Norbert Klein <norbert@acodedb.com>
# This program is free... (1 Reply)
hi,,
i have perl scipt with line :
system('./try.sh $t $d $m');
in shell scipt try.sh i have the line:
echo $1
its not printing value of $t that i hav passed..y is it so..i am running it from apache web server (2 Replies)
Novice to perl here.
I have created a simple web page in perl, with only one submit button. I would like to execute a bash script on the same server when this button is clicked on.
Is this possible in perl? I have spent a few days researching this and am unable to find any useful information.... (0 Replies)
Hi
I m new to perl. I m trying to write a perl script that calls a bash script; does anyone have a script already that they can provide or help me out? Thanks a lot. (2 Replies)
I am writing a script to write to and a sort txt file. After I sort the file I want to add 2 to each line of the file. My script thus far is
#!/bin/bash
cat > /ramdisk/home/stux/unsortedints.out
COUNT=0
FILE =/ramdisk/home/stux/unsortedints.out
for i in {1..100}
do
NUMBER = $
echo $NUMBER... (3 Replies)
Ok, don't ask me why, but all calls to perl must be called by a shell script. Its really not ideal, but its what I have to work with.
Calling it isnt the issue, its passing in the arguments.
I have about 1000 perl scripts to call by a shell script. Right now, I'm executing the shell script... (3 Replies)
In a bash script, one can call a perl command in the following manner, where "myperlcommand" is a perl command.
perl -e 'myperlcommand(arguments)'
perl -e 'print("UUUU"x4)'
Now, how can one call a bash command from within a perl script? (Suppose that mybashcommand is a bash... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
Just have a requirement, I am executing a bash shell script, my requirement is to catch the pid and job name to a txt file in the same directory, is there anyway to do it? please help me out.
Regards
Rahul
---------- Post updated at 08:42 AM ---------- Previous update was at... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I need help in writing a shell script which can read data from a text file (Cancel_ID.txt) and then calls sqlplus session (Cancel.sql) with the first line parameter of the text file ("0322600453") till all rows are not completed.
... (4 Replies)
Hi, I am complete new to C programming and shell scripting. I just wrote a simple C code to calculate integral using trapezoid rule. I am prompting user to pass me No. of equally spaced points , N , upper and lower limit. My code looks as follows so far:
#include<stdio.h>
#include<string.h>... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: bjhjh
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
biff
biff(1) General Commands Manual biff(1)NAME
biff - Notifies users when mail arrives
SYNOPSIS
biff [y | n]
DESCRIPTION
The biff command informs the system whether you want to be notified when mail arrives during the current terminal session. The following
command enables notification: biff y
The following command disables notification: biff n
When mail notification is enabled, the From: and Subject: header lines and up to the first five lines of the message are displayed. The
total display is 560 characters, or seven lines terminated by newline characters, whichever occurs first.
The biff y command is often included in the $HOME/.login or $HOME/.profile file to be executed each time you log in.
The biff command operates asynchronously. For synchronous notification, use the MAIL variable of sh or ksh, or the mail variable of csh.
EXAMPLES
To display the current setting, enter: biff To be notified during the current terminal session whenever mail arrives, enter the following
in your $HOME/.login or $HOME/.profile file: biff y
FILES
Read by login shell (after login. User profile.
SEE ALSO
Commands: comsat(8), csh(1), ksh(1), mail(1), mailx(1), Bourne Shell sh(1b), POSIX Shell sh(1p)biff(1)