Hi,
I am new to shell scripting.I have worked somewhat with Perl though.
I am not able to find what the second line does and how does it do.
<code>
FP_RUNNING=`service filepool status`
FP_RUNNING=${FP_RUNNING%% *}
<\code>
After the first line,the variable FP_RUNNING stores '1 FilePool... (2 Replies)
Hi,
Im pretty new to Unix. I came across a script which was using PLSQL inside a script and there was an unusual thing mentioned.
there was a variable assigned as
P_CUR=${1}
and one more as
V_TAGFILE="$1"
Couldnt find the difference. Also the variables were used in PLSQL... (1 Reply)
Must be a bug or something. Whether I escape them or not, it will not work. No matter what I set the minimum and maximum to nothing gets caught. For instance:
find / -regex "/.{0, 50}.*" -maxdepth 1 or find / -regex "/.\{0, 50\}.*" -maxdepth 1 should pretty much catch everything residing within... (4 Replies)
Hi everyone:
I'm stuck at this point, could you guys please give me some hints about what I am doing wrong in the following script, I'm using sed for windows:
sed ^"$ {^
a^
STRINGTABLE DISCARDABLE^
BEGIN^
#define CLIENT_MODULE, "%CLIENT_MODULE%"^
#define CLIENT_ID, "%CLIENT_ID%"^... (1 Reply)
I'm having trouble understanding the exclude option in tar. From some web sites, it seems one is able to exclude several strings by enclosing them in curly brackets. However it seems to be "random" what gets excluded when using the curlies.
I've been using the exclude-from=myfile option in a... (12 Replies)
Hi everyone,
I've got a file that looks like this:
uid{508}pid{22224}pname{/PPROGRAM/pprgramx -profile:LIVE -serv:as ...
I want to pull the value of pid between the curly braces, or 22224 in this example. pid is always the second pair of curly braces, but the length of the number is... (7 Replies)
Hi Everyone,
in the below "xyz (Exception e)" part... after the curly braces, there is a new line and immediately few tabs are present before closing curly brace.
xyz (Exception e) {
}
note: there can be one or... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have below command in one of the script. Can you please let me know what does the curly braces do over here \{1,\}. The remaining part of the code atleast I am able to understand.
sed -n 's/.*\-\()\{1,\}\)\-.*/\1/p' (13 Replies)
Hello, i was trying to find get a command to list duplicated files so i tried
ls dir1 dir2 | awk '{x++}'
and it didnt work.
After a bit of searching online i found that it works without the curly braces
ls dir1 dir2 | awk 'x++'
I thought the curly braces were needed in awk so... (6 Replies)
file.txt
apple
apples{
applepicture
apple9
apple cake{
abple
apple_and_cake
appleapple
apple
apple(
and my script
while read line; do
if ]; then
echo "$line"
fi
done <file.txt
read (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmdcmd
10 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
xml::sax::exception
XML::SAX::Exception(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation XML::SAX::Exception(3)NAME
XML::SAX::Exception - Exception classes for XML::SAX
SYNOPSIS
throw XML::SAX::Exception::NotSupported(
Message => "The foo feature is not supported",
);
DESCRIPTION
This module is the base class for all SAX Exceptions, those defined in the spec as well as those that one may create for one's own SAX
errors.
There are three subclasses included, corresponding to those of the SAX spec:
XML::SAX::Exception::NotSupported
XML::SAX::Exception::NotRecognized
XML::SAX::Exception::Parse
Use them wherever you want, and as much as possible when you encounter such errors. SAX is meant to use exceptions as much as possible to
flag problems.
CREATING NEW EXCEPTION CLASSES
All you need to do to create a new exception class is:
@XML::SAX::Exception::MyException::ISA = ('XML::SAX::Exception')
The given package doesn't need to exist, it'll behave correctly this way. If your exception refines an existing exception class, then you
may also inherit from that instead of from the base class.
THROWING EXCEPTIONS
This is as simple as exemplified in the SYNOPSIS. In fact, there's nothing more to know. All you have to do is:
throw XML::SAX::Exception::MyException( Message => 'Something went wrong' );
and voila, you've thrown an exception which can be caught in an eval block.
perl v5.16.2 2011-09-14 XML::SAX::Exception(3)