However, MadeInGermany's post takes care of this issue too.
You could also switch/change to absolute paths too.
Or use a variable as 'basedir', to wich you change before executing the relative paths.
hi i have modified a program to display directory entries recursively in a tree like form
i need an output with the following guidelines:
the prog displays the contents of the directory
the directory contents are sorted before printing so that directories come before regular files
if an entry... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
The following is a script for displaying directory tree.
D=${1:-`pwd`}
(cd $D; pwd)
find $D -type d -print | sort |
sed -e "s,^$D,,"\
-e "/^$/d"\
-e "s,*/\(*\)$,\:-----\1,"\
-e "s,*/,: ,g" | more
exit 0
I am trying to understand the above script.But... (3 Replies)
Hello, I am hoping someone maybe able to help me.
I have set up an Apache web server on my sun server with user accounts in the main htdocs directory. My question is how to stop these users searching up the directory tree when they ftp/telnet to the server. Also is it possible to restrict the... (2 Replies)
I have the below code to recurse through a given file path. I am able to go to the leaf level once recursively but traversing out is not possible as the required varaibles don't have the values on return. Both typeset and local don't work for my variable definitions. I have the o/p of the sample... (2 Replies)
Is this possible? Let me know If I need specify further on what I am trying to do- I just want to spare you the boring details of my personal file management.
Thanks in advance-
Brian- (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I'd like to create a directory tree, and define from stdin how many levels deep and how many directories in each level should be created.
What I wrote does not work properly:#!/bin/bash
#set -x
read -p " What root directory? " rootDir
&& { /bin/rm -R $rootDir; mkdir $rootDir; } ||... (2 Replies)
find . -type d -print 2>/dev/null|awk '!/\.$/ {for (i=1;i<NF;i++){d=length($i);if ( d < 5 && i != 1 )d=5;printf("%"d"s","|")}print "---"$NF}' FS='/'
Can someone explain how this works..??
How can i add directory size to be listed in the above command's output..?? (1 Reply)
Hi All
I'm using a tree command in a script that for me outputs:-
| - - DIRECTORYNAME
However a different user is getting the following output:-
aaa (actually with an umlat above them) DIRECTORYNAME
I'm not sure where this could be coming from, any ideas anyone? (0 Replies)
Hi friends,
Hello again :)
i got stuck in problem. Is there any way to get a special directory from directory tree?
Here is my problm.." Suppose i have one fix directory structure "/abc/xyz/pqr/"(this will be fix).Under this directory structure i have some other directory and... (6 Replies)
Hi,
I cannot find a way to copy a directory to another location with all attributes (mode, ownership, timestamps) but withOUT recursion (after so many years of working with Linux).
Say I want to create /home/jail/tmp exactly like /tmp but with nothing in it. Here is what I tried:
... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: chebarbudo
7 Replies
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gdbinit
GDBINIT(5) GNU Development Tools GDBINIT(5)NAME
gdbinit - GDB initialization scripts
SYNOPSIS
/etc/gdbinit
~/.gdbinit
./.gdbinit
DESCRIPTION
These files contain GDB commands to automatically execute during GDB startup. The lines of contents are canned sequences of commands,
described in the GDB manual in node "Sequences" -- shell command "info -f gdb -n Sequences".
Please read more in the GDB manual in node "Startup" -- shell command "info -f gdb -n Startup".
/etc/gdbinit
System-wide initialization file. It is executed unless user specified GDB option "-nx" or "-n". See more in the GDB manual in node
"System-wide configuration" -- shell command "info -f gdb -n 'System-wide configuration'".
~/.gdbinit
User initialization file. It is executed unless user specified GDB options "-nx", "-n" or "-nh".
./.gdbinit
Initialization file for current directory. It may need to be enabled with GDB security command "set auto-load local-gdbinit". See
more in the GDB manual in node "Init File in the Current Directory" -- shell command "info -f gdb -n 'Init File in the Current
Directory'".
OPTIONS SEE ALSO gdb(1), "info -f gdb -n Startup"
The full documentation for GDB is maintained as a Texinfo manual. If the "info" and "gdb" programs and GDB's Texinfo documentation are
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info gdb
should give you access to the complete manual.
Using GDB: A Guide to the GNU Source-Level Debugger, Richard M. Stallman and Roland H. Pesch, July 1991.
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(a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: "You are free to copy and modify this GNU Manual. Buying copies from GNU Press supports the FSF in
developing GNU and promoting software freedom."
gdb-Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.6.1-51.el7 2014-06-10 GDBINIT(5)