Hey All,
I'm trying to clean up a variable using sed but It dosn't seem to work. I'm trying to find all the spaces and replace them with "\ " (a slash and a space). For Example "Hello World" should become "Hello\ World". But it does nothing. If I put it directly into the command line it works... (3 Replies)
Hi everyone,
I have a simple question to ask :
In a script that I'm writting, I need to create variables on-the-fly.
For instance, for every iterartion of the following loop a var_X variable should be generated :
#!/bin/ksh
a="1 2 3"
for i in $a
do
var_${i}=$i
echo "${var_$i}"
done
... (1 Reply)
I have run into a wall with my iptables firewall scripting.
I am blocking all of the private side IP addresses on the
WAN interface on systems running NAT. However, if the
system is not running NAT and needs to allow access to
the local LAN on the WAN interface, I need to block all
but one of... (2 Replies)
Hello,
i have another sed question.. I'm trying to do variable substition with sed and i'm running into a problem.
my var1 is a string constructed like this:
filename1 filerev1 filepath1
my var2 is another string constructed like this:
filename2 filerev2 filepath2
when i do... (2 Replies)
Hi,
That might be pretty simple.
How can I generate a variable name and get their value ?
Thanks a lot.
Something like:
>CUSTOMER_NF=26
> object=CUSTOMER
> echo ${object}_NF
CUSTOMER_NF
> echo ${${object}_NF}
ksh: ${${object}_NF}: 0403-011 The specified substitution is... (7 Replies)
file1.ksh
#!/bin/ksh
test5_create="I am a man" # test5 will be dynamic and the value will be passed from command line
a=${1}_create
echo $a # i need the output as "I am a man"
./file1.ksh test5 # i run the script like this
any suggessions guys... (1 Reply)
Hi ,
I have a variable as follows,
Temp=`cat ABC.txt | cut -c5-`
This will yeild a part of the date. say , 200912.
I would like to substitute this variable's value in a filename.
eg: File200912F.zip
when i say File$TempF.zip , it is not substituting.
Any help ?
Thanks in... (2 Replies)
For example I have variable like below
echo $OUTPUT
/some/path/`uname -n`
when I try to use the variable OUTPUT like below
cd $OUTPUT or cd ${OUTPUT}
I am getting bad substituion error message
$ cd $OUTPUT
ksh: cd: bad substitution
$ cd ${OUTPUT}
ksh: cd: bad substitution
... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have to write a shell script in which I have to substitute a variable within a variable. For example,
var1=aaa
var2=file.$var1.txt
The output should be,
echo $var2
file.aaa.txt
Can someone please help me in getting this. I tried using eval, but it didnt work. I might be using it... (2 Replies)
HI
i was studying about variable substitution. below are info which was given in a online tutorial.
${parameter:-word}---> If parameter is null or unset, word is substituted for parameter.
The value of parameter does not change.
${parameter:=word}---> If parameter is null or... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: scriptor
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
ssp
SSP(3) BSD Library Functions Manual SSP(3)NAME
ssp -- bounds checked libc functions
LIBRARY
Buffer Overflow Protection Library (libssp, -lssp)
SYNOPSIS
#include <ssp/stdio.h>
int
sprintf(char *str, const char *fmt, ...);
int
vsprintf(char *str, const char *fmt, va_list ap);
int
snprintf(char *str, size_t len, const char *fmt, ...);
int
vsnprintf(char *str, size_t len, const char *fmt, va_list ap);
char *
gets(char *str);
char *
fgets(char *str, int len, FILE *fp);
#include <ssp/string.h>
void *
memcpy(void *str, const void *ptr, size_t len);
void *
memmove(void *str, const void *ptr, size_t len);
void *
memset(void *str, int val, size_t len);
char *
strcpy(char *str, const char *ptr, size_t len);
char *
strcat(char *str, const char *ptr, size_t len);
char *
strncpy(char *str, const char *ptr, size_t len);
char *
strncat(char *str, const char *ptr, size_t len);
#include <ssp/strings.h>
void *
bcopy(const void *ptr, void *str, size_t len);
void *
bzero(void *str, size_t len);
#include <ssp/unistd.h>
ssize_t
read(int fd, void *str, size_t len);
int
readlink(const char * restrict path, char * restrict str, size_t len);
int
getcwd(char *str, size_t len);
DESCRIPTION
When _FORTIFY_SOURCE bounds checking is enabled as described below, the above functions get overwritten to use the __builtin_object_size(3)
function to compute the size of str, if known at compile time, and perform bounds check on it in order to avoid data buffer or stack buffer
overflows. If an overflow is detected, the routines will call abort(3).
To enable these function overrides the following should be added to the gcc(1) command line: ``-I/usr/include/ssp'' to override the standard
include files and ``-D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=1'' or ``-D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2''.
If _FORTIFY_SOURCE is set to 1 the code will compute the maximum possible buffer size for str, and if set to 2 it will compute the minimum
buffer size.
SEE ALSO gcc(1), __builtin_object_size(3), stdio(3), string(3), security(7)HISTORY
The ssp library appeared NetBSD 4.0.
BSD March 21, 2011 BSD