Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Second try mput failed
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Second try mput failed Post 302934404 by Don Cragun on Friday 6th of February 2015 03:44:16 PM
Old 02-06-2015
Please DO NOT send private mail to try to get a response to a question in these technical forums.

Robin requested information from you 5 hours ago trying to get information that would help the volunteers here help you solve your problem. Most of the questions Robin asked remain unanswered. Please answer Robin's questions. Help us help you. I would also like to see the permissions on the files in the directory (as well as the permissions the directory itself) for the files you're trying to replace with mput.
This User Gave Thanks to Don Cragun For This Post:
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

mget and mput...

hello, i was interested in knowing if you can mget or mput a sequence of files: example- say i have a dir with 1000 files with the same extension e.g. *.sgi, is there a way to mget only the last 200 files? i would assume that there is a flag i would use, or something like: mget... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: yoyomamma
14 Replies

2. Solaris

FTP limits - mput *

I am trying to upload via FTP 11,000 files in a Solaris 8 system. I am using Windows 2000 and its FTP client to upload the files. The command used is mput *.jpg.When the quantity of files reaches 10,000 the upload aborts. Is this problem related with the FTP client ? If yes, another FTP client... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: waldecy
2 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

mput is not working in ftp script

1)In this script mput command is not working( not transfering multiple files, it is able to send single file) 2)here is the script to automate the ftp process . 3)for transfering files from one machine to other machine using ftp can anyone can give me the solution in this issue Script is... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: gsri
6 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

SFTP - 'put' doing an 'mput'

Hi guys, I'm having a problem with F-Secure Unix. When I try a simple command; sftp> put local.test remote.test I expect that the local file local.test would be copied to the remote file remote.test However sftp is attempting to copy local.test & remote.test from the local machine, as if... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: b0bbins
2 Replies

5. AIX

SFTP Failed---Request for subsystem 'sftp' failed on channel 0

Hi, While I am trying SFTP my machine to another unix machine , it was working fine till 10 min back. But now i am getting the below error "Request for subsystem 'sftp' failed on channel 0" Could you please someone help me to solve or analyise the root cause... Cheers:b:, Mahiban (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: mahiban
0 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Ok. I've have looked and failed.

What I want seems to me should be simple but so am I so.... I have a Unix server that is running a program we will say logged in as UserA. The program is outputting a bunch of stuff to the terminal. I would like to log in from my machine to the server as Either UserA, UserB or if needed... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Dishevel
2 Replies

7. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers

How to grep and pipe to mput ftp

I am ptting the following into an FTOP script. date=`TZ="aaa24" date +'%Y%m%d'` # this gets Yesterday date . . . . mput < 'l | grep $Vdate' # the idea to grep a listing from a directory that has yesterday date in its file name then put it in the remote FTP server. How can I get it... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: raouf@comcast.n
4 Replies

8. Solaris

Cygwin X Server error: xdmcp fatal error session failed session 23 failed for display

Hi, i got the following error when i tried to access the cygwin x server from a windows XP PC. "xdmcp fatal error session failed session 23 failed for display" Alternatively, when i tried to access the same Cygwin X Server from another windows XP PC which is on a different LAN... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: HarishKumarM
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

mput question

I want to mput a file without extension, and while doing the mput i want to include the .txt as an extension to the file name. How can i do that? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: wizardofoz
2 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

.netrc does not execute mput command

Hi all :D i' ve a script running on freebsd system: echo "Start FTP Transfer" cd /tmp/elaboralog ftp -i 192.168.27.147 2100 > /tmp/elaboralog/ftp_log_phase2That call .netrc machine 192.168.27.147 login user password 12345 macdef backup binary cd tmp/elaboralog mput *-file.txt... (19 Replies)
Discussion started by: mirrorx
19 Replies
SNMPCONF(1)							     Net-SNMP							       SNMPCONF(1)

NAME
snmpconf - creates and modifies SNMP configuration files SYNOPSIS
snmpconf [OPTIONS] [fileToCreate] Start with: snmpconf -g basic_setup Or even just: snmpconf DESCRIPTION
snmpconf is a simple Perl script that walks you through setting up a configuration file step by step. It should be fairly straight forward to use. Merely run it and answer its questions. In its default mode of operation, it prompts the user with menus showing sections of the various configuration files it knows about. When the user selects a section, a sub-menu is shown listing of the descriptions of the tokens that can be created in that section. When a description is selected, the user is prompted with questions that construct the configuration line in question. Finally, when the user quits the program any configuration files that have been edited by the user are saved to the local directory, fully commented. A particularly useful option is the -g switch, which walks a user through a specific set of configuration questions. Run: snmpconf -g basic_setup for an example. OPTIONS
-f Force overwriting existing files in the current directory without prompting the user if this is a desired thing to do. -i When finished, install the files into the location where the global system commands expect to find them. -p When finished, install the files into the users home directory's .snmp subdirectory (where the applications will also search for configuration files). -I DIRECTORY When finished, install the files into the directory DIRECTORY. -a Don't ask any questions. Simply read in the various known configuration files and write them back out again. This has the effect of "auto-commenting" the configuration files for you. See the NEAT TRICKS section below. -rall|none Read in either all or none of the found configuration files. Normally snmpconf prompts you for which files you wish to read in. Reading in these configuration files will merge these files with the results of the questions that it asks of you. -R FILE,... Read in a specific list of configuration files. -g GROUPNAME Groups of configuration entries can be created that can be used to walk a user through a series of questions to create an initial configuration file. There are no menus to navigate, just a list of questions. Run: snmpconf -g basic_setup for a good example. -G List all the known groups. -c CONFIGDIR snmpconf uses a directory of configuration information to learn about the files and questions that it should be asking. This option tells snmpconf to use a different location for configuring itself. -q Run slightly more quietly. Since this is an interactive program, I don't recommend this option since it only removes information from the output that is designed to help you. -d Turn on lots of debugging output. -D Add even more debugging output in the form of Perl variable dumps. NEAT TRICKS
snmpconf -g basic_setup Have I mentioned this command enough yet? It's designed to walk someone through an initial setup for the snmpd(8) daemon. Really, you should try it. snmpconf -R /usr/local/snmp/snmpd.conf -a -f snmpd.conf Automatically reads in an snmpd.conf file (for example) and adds comments to them describing what each token does. Try it. It's cool. NOTES
snmpconf is actually a very generic utility that could be easily configured to help construct just about any kind of configuration file. Its default configuration set of files are SNMP based. SEE ALSO
snmpd(8), snmp_config(5), snmp.conf(5), snmpd.conf(5) V5.7.2 25 Feb 2003 SNMPCONF(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:46 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy