Alright, I am stuck here.
I have this variable that stores the word = HELLO and I have converted it it to -----
I have asked user to input one character at a time. SAy, if they enter E.
Therefore, I need to search 2nd character and input E there.
makes it -E--- (other checkings have been... (2 Replies)
Hi,
For my bash script, terminal with bash is generate an OK output and program works right.
already,
terminal with ash have "line 48: syntax error: Bad substitution" output and program don't work.
:confused: (0 Replies)
Guys
I now have a script that's working in a BASH environment, however one line doesn't appear to be working on an embedded device that has a busybox therefore ASH shell. I've googled but there's very little I can find regarding the ASH shell.
In BASH the following line works...
if ] ;... (6 Replies)
I am trying to debug something using gdbserver, after the successful/YET REALLY SLOW debug session i see that the ash shell on the the target under debug is messed up.
Probably because gdbserver tries to open the core file which is binary. How do i recover from it?
Also any ideas to speed up... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a script that I wrote on a bash shell, I use it to sort files from a directory into various other directories. I have an variable set, which is an array of strings, I then check each file against the array and if it is in there the script sorts it into the correct folder.
But... (5 Replies)
I wrote Bash script and now I want to convert it to Ash. One headache is this function:
do_adduser() {
setaddprompt
_arr_add=("Add manually" "Add via TXT" "return to main menu" "exit program")
select add_action in "${_arr_add}"
do
case "$REPLY" in
1)... (7 Replies)
hello everybody,
i'm a beginner in ash and i want to convert this bash script to ash.
this script send a xml file to a nagios server :
#!/bin/bash
PROGNAME=$(basename $0)
RELEASE="Revision 0.3"
print_release() {
echo "$RELEASE"
}
print_usage() {
echo ""
echo "$PROGNAME... (6 Replies)
Hi,
I am new in bash scripting. In my work, I provide support to several users and when I connect to their computers I use the same admin and password, so I am trying to create a script that will only ask me for the IP address and then connect to the computer without having me to type the user... (5 Replies)
hi,
i would like to create a bash script that check which port in my Linux server are closed (not in use) from a specific range, port range (3000-3010).
the print output need to be only 1 port, and it will be nice if the output will be saved as a variable or in same file.
my code is:
... (2 Replies)
Perl::Critic::Policy::Subroutines::ProhibitUnusedPrivateUseroContributed PerPerl::Critic::Policy::Subroutines::ProhibitUnusedPrivateSubroutines(3)NAME
Perl::Critic::Policy::Subroutines::ProhibitUnusedPrivateSubroutines - Prevent unused private subroutines.
AFFILIATION
This Policy is part of the core Perl::Critic distribution.
DESCRIPTION
By convention Perl authors (like authors in many other languages) indicate private methods and variables by inserting a leading underscore
before the identifier. This policy catches such subroutines which are not used in the file which declares them.
This module defines a 'use' of a subroutine as a subroutine or method call to it (other than from inside the subroutine itself), a
reference to it (i.e. "my $foo = &_foo"), a "goto" to it outside the subroutine itself (i.e. "goto &_foo"), or the use of the
subroutine's name as an even-numbered argument to "use overload".
CONFIGURATION
You can define what a private subroutine name looks like by specifying a regular expression for the "private_name_regex" option in your
.perlcriticrc:
[Subroutines::ProhibitUnusedPrivateSubroutines]
private_name_regex = _(?!_)w+
The above example is a way of saying that subroutines that start with a double underscore are not considered to be private. (Perl::Critic,
in its implementation, uses leading double underscores to indicate a distribution-private subroutine -- one that is allowed to be invoked
by other Perl::Critic modules, but not by anything outside of Perl::Critic.)
You can configure additional subroutines to accept by specifying them in a space-delimited list to the "allow" option:
[Subroutines::ProhibitUnusedPrivateSubroutines]
allow = _bar _baz
These are added to the default list of exemptions from this policy. So the above allows "sub _bar {}" and "sub _baz {}", even if they are
not referred to in the module that defines them.
HISTORY
This policy is derived from Perl::Critic::Policy::Subroutines::ProtectPrivateSubs, which looks at the other side of the problem.
BUGS
Does not forbid "sub Foo::_foo{}" because it does not know (and can not assume) what is in the "Foo" package.
SEE ALSO
Perl::Critic::Policy::Subroutines::ProtectPrivateSubs.
AUTHOR
Chris Dolan <cdolan@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2009-2011 Thomas R. Wyant, III.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. The full text of this license
can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.
perl v5.16.32014-06-Perl::Critic::Policy::Subroutines::ProhibitUnusedPrivateSubroutines(3)