Sponsored Content
Top Forums Programming Storing a Temporary File Using C Post 302931521 by Corona688 on Tuesday 13th of January 2015 01:34:12 PM
Old 01-13-2015
Honestly I wouldn't use rsync, I'd use scp.

Code:
scp username@host:/etc/passwd /tmp/filename

...and mkstemp will not do what I want because C is not creating the file here.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Ubuntu

Avoid creating temporary files on editing a file in Ubuntu

Hi, My ubuntu flavor always create temporary files having filename followed by ~ on editing. For eg: if I am editing a file called "sip.c", automatically a temporary (bkup) file is getting created with the name "sip.c~". How to avoid this file creation? (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: royalibrahim
7 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

remove temporary file ?

Hi all, In the script I am creating a temporary file with process id as temp.txt.$$ I want to remove this tomporary file first from the current directory when i'll run the same script next time. Note: Every time when the script executes then it has unique process id and it'll create a... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: varungupta
5 Replies

3. AIX

error : pg: 0652-122 Cannot write to the temporary file

Hi All, I'm getting this error when I use "pg". /tmp is not full and the permission is correct. root@axappk01::/home> hostname|pg pg: 0652-122 Cannot write to the temporary file. Please advise. (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: fara_aris
6 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Perl : how to modify a file without generate a temporary file

Hi All, I have a file like below, how can i insert one line after line 1 without using a temporary file in perl? line 1 line 2 line 3 expected result line 1 new line <---insert here line 2 line 3 (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: summer_cherry
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

temporary file to file then move to directory

Ok in my bash script i have 5 options to create a simple html script. I need to create a temporary file and whatever the user types will be stored in that file using html codes. And then I have another option in which that temporary file will be moved to the public_html directory in which the user... (19 Replies)
Discussion started by: gangsta
19 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

mailx command - Temporary mail file: permission denied

Hi , I am facing a problem with respect to mailx command in unix . Earlier it was working fine and I am facing this issue only from last week . I used mailx command and I am getting a error message as follows : temporary mail file: Permission denied If I run mailx command from... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: deepav1985
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to remove the first line of a file without using any temporary file

I want remove first line of the file without using any temporary file. Everything should be done in the original file itself since I don't any file creation access whereas I have modify access. It would be great if somebody help in this regard ASAP . Thanks in Advance. Kishore:mad: (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: tvbhkishore
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to remove a temporary file inside gawk

Hi- How can I make the temporary file 0 byte , created inside gawk. I am using system("rm -f temp_orders"); It seems system command is deleting file permanently and I am not able to execute below statement. print ORD_HEAD_FULL >> cFILE; (cFile is temp_orders) (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ashish_kaithi
2 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Mailx - temporary mail message file: No such file or directory

How would I go about resolving this error temporary mail message file: No such file or directory Can anybody tell me where the default location is for the temporary mail message file is for mailx? It appears that it doesn't exist. Thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: joen
1 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Finding specific string in file and storing in another file

Text in input file is like this <title> <band height="21" isSplitAllowed="true" > <staticText> <reportElement x="1" y="1" width="313" height="20" key="staticText-1"/> <box></box> <textElement> <font fontName="Arial" pdfFontName="Helvetica-Bold"... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: aankita30
4 Replies
dput.cf(5)							File Formats Manual							dput.cf(5)

NAME
dput.cf - Debian package upload tool configuration file DESCRIPTION
This manpage gives a brief overview of dput's configuration file and the available options in it. dput is a tool to upload Debian packages to the archive. FORMAT
dput.cf consists of different groups of configuration options, one for each host where you want to be able to upload packages. Hosts are defined using an identifier header with a short name for the host, enclosed in square brackets. Note that only if multiple such headers are encountered in the configuration, only the group following the last header is considered. This is done to avoid confusion when overrid- ing a global configuration file with a user-specific one. There's a special identifier, [DEFAULT], which holds default parameters for all the hosts. The defaults can be overridden by redefining them again in each host section. The available parameters are listed below: fqdn This is the fully qualified domain name that will be used (can be specified as host:port for HTTP, HTTPS and FTP). login Your login on the machine named before. A single asterisk * will cause the scp and rsync uploaders to not use supply a login name when calling to ssh, scp, and rsync. incoming The directory that you should upload the files to. method The method that you want to use for uploading the files. Currently, dput accepts the following values for method: ftp the package will be uploaded via ftp, either anonymously or using a login/password. Note that ftp is unencrypted so you should not use password authentication with this. http and https the package will be uploaded via http or https using the PUT method as specified in WebDAV. The upload method will prompt for a password if necessary. scp the package will be uploaded using ssh's scp. This transfers files using a secure ssh tunnel, and needs an account on the upload machine. rsync the package will be uploaded using rsync over ssh. This is similar to scp, but can save some bandwidth if the destination file already exists on the upload server. It also needs a login on the remote machine as it uses ssh. local the package will be "uploaded" locally using /usr/bin/install. This transfers files to a local incoming directory, and needs appropriate permissions set on that directory. hash The hash algorithm that should be used in calculating the checksum of the files before uploading them. Currently, dput accepts the following values for hash: md5 use the md5 algorithm for calculation sha use the sha algorithm for calculation allow_unsigned_uploads This defines if you are allowed to upload files without a GnuPG signature to this host or not. allow_dcut This defines if you are allowed to upload a dcut changes file to the queue to remove or move files. distributions This defines a comma-separated list of distributions that this host accepts, used to guess the host to use when none is given on the command line. allowed_distributions A regular expression (of Python re module syntax) that the distribution field must match or dput will refuse the upload. delayed Set a numeric default parameter for delayed uploads (i.e. uploads to this queue will be delayed the specified number of days. Defaults to the empty string, meaning no delay. This only works with upload queues that support delayed uploads. run_lintian This option defines if lintian should be run before the package will be uploaded or not. If the package is not lintian clean, the upload will not happen. run_dinstall This options defines if dinstall -n should be run after the package has been uploaded or not. This is an easy way to test if your package would be installed into the archive or not. check_version This option defines if dput should check if the user has installed the package in his system for testing it before putting it into the archive. If the user has not installed and tested it, dput will reject the upload. passive_ftp This option defines if dput should use passive ftp or active ftp for uploading a package to one of the upload queues. By default, dput uses passive ftp connections. If you need to use active ftp connections, set passive_ftp to 0. progress_indicator This integer option defines if dput should display a progress indicator for the upload. (Currently implemented in ftp only.) Supported values: 0 (default) - no progress, 1 - rotating progress indicator, and 2 - kilobyte counter. scp_compress This option defines if the scp upload to the host will be compressed, or not. This option is only used for the 'scp' upload method, and has been found to decrease upload time for slow links, and increase upload times for faster links. ssh_config_options The arguments of this config options should be ssh config file options in the style documented in ssh_config(5). They will be passed to all automatic invocations of ssh and scp by dput. Note that you can define multiline (dput) configuration options by indenting the second line with whitespace (i.e. similar to RFC822 header continuations). post_upload_command This option defines a command to be run by dput after a successful upload. pre_upload_command This option defines a command to be run by dput before a upload happens. default_host_main This defines the default host for packages that are allowed to be uploaded to the main archive. This variable is used when guessing the host to upload to. BUGS
Please send bug reports to the author. FILES
/etc/dput.cf global dput configuration file ~/.dput.cf peruser dput configuration file AUTHOR
Christian Kurz. Updated by Thomas Viehmann <tv@beamnet.de>. Many other people have contributed to this code. See the Thanks file. SEE ALSO
dput(1) /usr/share/doc/dput COMMENTS
The author appreciates comments and suggestions from you, if any. April 8, 2001 dput.cf(5)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:08 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy