No, I am not gonna leave the
on the same directory, at the end will rm sysctl.conf.mod file. I always prefer
instead of
if want to copy the content of the file.
Please let me know if any have thoughts
You need to use cp and rm if:
there are multiple hard links to the file you are overwriting,
you need to preserve file modes that might be different from what would be set using your current file mode creation mask (see umask()), or
the owner and group IDs of the file need to be preserved and you are running with a different user ID or primary group ID than are on the file you're overwriting.
Otherwise, mv is preferred because it is an atomic operation that always leaves you with either the old file contents or the (complete) new file contents as the contents of the target file. When you use cp instead of mv (from a file in the same filesystem), there will be a (hopefully short) period of time when the target file is contains a (possibly empty) subset of the contents that the file should contain. If the file is read during this time period, the incomplete contents of your configuration file could generate unexpected side effects.
Just using cp without following successful invocations with rm leaves you with two copies of the file.
This User Gave Thanks to Don Cragun For This Post:
Hi,
i am new to awk. I am using csv2pipe script(shown below)
BEGIN { FS=SUBSEP; OFS="|" }
{
result = setcsv($0, ",")
print
}
# setcsv(str, sep) - parse CSV (MS specification) input
# str, the string to be parsed. (Most likely $0.)
# sep, the separator between the values.
#
#... (6 Replies)
Dear All:
I am trying to do something that (I thought) was relatively straightforward, but my code snippet does not seem to work.
Any suggestions?
Thank you
Sincerely yours
Misha Koshelev
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I have a function in a bash script that returns a string after some operations using awk.
The following code returns 555
$VARIABLE="EXAMPLE"
get_number $VARIABLE
this value I'd like to pass it as a second argument of another script with the following usage
myscript.sh <param1>... (7 Replies)
Hi All,
Sorry if the title is not good but I did not know how to explain with only some words!
What I meant is: I have a unix command built from a private application vendor that when executed it prompts for two entries by the keyboard, let's say, for example:
... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I am hoping someone can help me with some scripting I need to complete using AWK.
I'm trying to process multiple fixed files to generate one concatenated fixed file in a standard format.
The Input file is:-
aaaa bbbbb ccccc 1 xxxx aaa bbb
aaaa bbbbb ccccc 2 abcd aaa CCC... (9 Replies)
Hi ,
i am having an file which contains 5 file_name data, i need to read the file name and will perform certain operation and generate out file names with named as 5 individual file_names
for eg:
file.txt contains
file_name1.txt|hai
file_name2.txt|bye
file_name3.txt|how... (3 Replies)
I have one input file ABC.txt and one output DEF.txt. After the ABC is processed and created output, I want to rename ABC.txt to ABC.orig and DEF to ABC.txt. Currently when I am doing this, it does not process the input file as it cannot read and write to the same file. How can I achieve this?
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The below awk improved bu @MadeInGermany, works great as long as the input file has data in it in the below format:
input
chrX 25031028 25031925 chrX:25031028-25031925 ARX 631 18
chrX 25031028 25031925 chrX:25031028-25031925 ARX 632 14... (3 Replies)