... or make the script executable and and call it directly.
Then the shebang (the #! characters on the first line) will make sure the proper shell is used
This User Gave Thanks to Scrutinizer For This Post:
Hey there, I'm a total newbie unix guy here and just picking this stuff up. Have a very small script I put together that works fine from the command line but not once I put it in a cron job. Searched and found this thread and am wondering it it has something to do with setting variables, though the... (7 Replies)
Hi all,
The following script is fine when I work via command line
m=1
c=0
while
do
echo $m
gnokii --getsms IN $m > out.txt;
m=`expr $m + 1`;
cat out.txt >> message_log;
############
read first crap< <(sed -n '/Text:/{n;p;}' out.txt);
read message< <(sed -n '/Text:/{n;p;}'... (2 Replies)
Hi all-
I'm trying to search through some .gz log files to verify certain feeds have passed through our app.
I have a small script that I wrote in hopes that I could automate the checking but haven't been able to get the zgrep to work. When I copy it to the command line directly it works... (2 Replies)
When I run this code from the command line works
spinel.middlebury.edu:/u02/sct/banner/bandev2/middlebury/shl:DEV2$ ls ef*
eftseq.dat
spinel.middlebury.edu:/u02/sct/banner/bandev2/middlebury/shl:DEV2$ file_seq=$( < eftseq.dat) ... (1 Reply)
so in unix this command works works and shows me a list of directories
find . -name \*.xls -exec dirname {} \; | sort -u | > list.txt
but when i try running a perl script to run this command
my $query = 'find . -name \*.xls -exec dirname {} \; | sort -u | > list.txt';... (2 Replies)
Hey guys. Hopefully this is an easy one but having reference similar problems on the web I still can't fix it.
I am doing a recursive find and replace from a script. Of course I could just run the damn thing from the command line but it's bugging me now and want to get it working.
grep -rl... (4 Replies)
I have a really basic expect script which I call from php. I works fine when I run the php from the shell, but from the web it appears as if the output buffer gets chopped and never gets all of the contents.
php script: (runexpect.php)
<?php... (7 Replies)
Hi guys. My first post, so be gentle...
On my Solaris 10 machine vnc server is running. I need a command to extract most recent client session number (screen). So with:
Code:
bash-3.2# ps -ef | grep vnc | grep Xaut
root 19805 19797 0 15:41:44 ? 0:01 Xvnc :4 -inetd -once... (5 Replies)
I am working with a sh script on a solaris 9 zone (sol 10 host) that grabs information to build the configuration command line. the variables Build64, SSLopt, CONFIGopt, and CC are populated in the script. the script includes
CC=`which gcc`
CONFIGopt=' --prefix=/ --exec-prefix=/usr... (8 Replies)
I wish to replace "\\n" with a single white space.
The below does the job on command-line:
$ echo '/fin/app/scripts\\n/fin/app/01/sql' | sed -e 's#\\\\n# #g';
/fin/app/scripts /fin/app/01/sql
However, when i have the same code to a shell script it is not able to get me the same output:... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohtashims
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
tclsh
tclsh(1) Tcl Applications tclsh(1)__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
tclsh - Simple shell containing Tcl interpreter
SYNOPSIS
tclsh ?-encoding name? ?fileName arg arg ...?
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
Tclsh is a shell-like application that reads Tcl commands from its standard input or from a file and evaluates them. If invoked with no
arguments then it runs interactively, reading Tcl commands from standard input and printing command results and error messages to standard
output. It runs until the exit command is invoked or until it reaches end-of-file on its standard input. If there exists a file .tclshrc
(or tclshrc.tcl on the Windows platforms) in the home directory of the user, interactive tclsh evaluates the file as a Tcl script just
before reading the first command from standard input.
SCRIPT FILES
If tclsh is invoked with arguments then the first few arguments specify the name of a script file, and, optionally, the encoding of the |
text data stored in that script file. Any additional arguments are made available to the script as variables (see below). Instead of
reading commands from standard input tclsh will read Tcl commands from the named file; tclsh will exit when it reaches the end of the
file. The end of the file may be marked either by the physical end of the medium, or by the character, "