I am new to shell, and I am trying to do a if statement like the following:
if ; then
basically it works fine if both arguments of the if are met, however the next elif is:
elif ; then
if the conditions of the elif are met, then it says "final1.sh: line 67: [: too many arguments"
... (6 Replies)
how can I find cpu usage memory usage swap usage and
I want to know CPU usage above X% and contiue Y times and memory usage above X % and contiue Y times
my final destination is monitor process
logical volume usage above X % and number of Logical voluage above
can I not to... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I need to carry out the back up of the data if exists...(file size not equal to zero)
i tried in this way but it is not successful....where am making the mistakes? and if possible can i use case syntax in place of "if"
#!/bin/ksh
filename=`TZ=CST+24 date +%Y%m%d`
ZERO=0... (3 Replies)
I have an awk script which can be used in the following ways:
xi and xf will only be mandatory when processing the file fin.zc.
awk -v xi=0/-0.5 -v xf=80/30 -f ./zc2cmd.awk fin.zc > fout.cmod
awk -f ./zc2cmd.awk -u
awk -f ./zc2cmd.awk --usg
awk -f ./zc2cmd.awk -e
awk -f ./zc2cmd.awk... (1 Reply)
Hello friends,
I have a boubt passing different arguments at a time for any one option in below code.
I would also like to check which option has been selected (any one of i, r, u ) so that whether or not matching argument passed can be verified.
for i and r - install and re-install -... (4 Replies)
I am writing a script in bash and want to perform the operation
I check number of arguments and make a print statement with the passes arguments
If I pass 3 arguments I will do
printf "$frmt" "$1" "$2" "$3"If I have 4 arguments I do
printf "$frmt" "$1" "$2" "$3" "$4"etc (4 Replies)
Hi
Am pretty new to C..
Am trying to pass the arguments from command line and use them in switch case statement..
i have tried the following
#include <stdlib.h>
main(int argc, char* argv)
{
int num=0;
if ( argc == 2 )
num = argv;
printf("%d is the num value",num);
switch ( num )
... (2 Replies)
Hi,
Am working in a filenet domain where we are using AIX as our terminal to run the jobs and schedule the shell scripts to run . In my previous post regarding the "Log modification with finding errors" ... (12 Replies)
I'm stuck on a particular problem and need some guidance. I have a file with a name and a phone number in it (teledir.txt). I need to do a $# in a separate script to take a positional parameter and check to see if it is in the file. To quote the question:
If one argument is supplied, check... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Eric7giants
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
lua
LUA(1) General Commands Manual LUA(1)NAME
lua - Lua interpreter
SYNOPSIS
lua [ options ] [ script [ args ] ]
DESCRIPTION
lua is the stand-alone Lua interpreter. It loads and executes Lua programs, either in textual source form or in precompiled binary form.
(Precompiled binaries are output by luac, the Lua compiler.) lua can be used as a batch interpreter and also interactively.
The given options (see below) are executed and then the Lua program in file script is loaded and executed. The given args are available to
script as strings in a global table named arg. If these arguments contain spaces or other characters special to the shell, then they
should be quoted (but note that the quotes will be removed by the shell). The arguments in arg start at 0, which contains the string
'script'. The index of the last argument is stored in arg.n. The arguments given in the command line before script, including the name of
the interpreter, are available in negative indices in arg.
At the very start, before even handling the command line, lua executes the contents of the environment variable LUA_INIT, if it is defined.
If the value of LUA_INIT is of the form '@filename', then filename is executed. Otherwise, the string is assumed to be a Lua statement and
is executed.
Options start with '-' and are described below. You can use '--' to signal the end of options.
If no arguments are given, then -v -i is assumed when the standard input is a terminal; otherwise, - is assumed.
In interactive mode, lua prompts the user, reads lines from the standard input, and executes them as they are read. If a line does not
contain a complete statement, then a secondary prompt is displayed and lines are read until a complete statement is formed or a syntax
error is found. So, one way to interrupt the reading of an incomplete statement is to force a syntax error: adding a ';' in the middle of
a statement is a sure way of forcing a syntax error (except inside multiline strings and comments; these must be closed explicitly). If a
line starts with '=', then lua displays the values of all the expressions in the remainder of the line. The expressions must be separated
by commas. The primary prompt is the value of the global variable _PROMPT, if this value is a string; otherwise, the default prompt is
used. Similarly, the secondary prompt is the value of the global variable _PROMPT2. So, to change the prompts, set the corresponding
variable to a string of your choice. You can do that after calling the interpreter or on the command line (but in this case you have to be
careful with quotes if the prompt string contains a space; otherwise you may confuse the shell.) The default prompts are "> " and ">> ".
OPTIONS
- load and execute the standard input as a file, that is, not interactively, even when the standard input is a terminal.
-e stat
execute statement stat. You need to quote stat if it contains spaces, quotes, or other characters special to the shell.
-i enter interactive mode after script is executed.
-l name
call require('name') before executing script. Typically used to load libraries.
-v show version information.
SEE ALSO luac(1)
http://www.lua.org/
DIAGNOSTICS
Error messages should be self explanatory.
AUTHORS
R. Ierusalimschy, L. H. de Figueiredo, and W. Celes
$Date: 2010/10/31 11:16:49 $ LUA(1)