Coming back to one of the command that you mentioned, type would usually be the best command to use, rather than which, since it also shows if a command is a shell builtin or keyword, whereas which would not.
There is a nice option to type that shows all:
Hi,
I'm trying to locate the config files that are installed on a Unix/Linux system that belong to programs called Areca and IPMI. Two different programs. The most information I can get from IPMI is that it may be version 1.11 from Supermicro and it's installed by a CD. I checked the CD and... (1 Reply)
I want to compare "N" (around 2000+) number of huge files located in a directory A against "N" files located in a different directory using Bash scripting.
Please help me with any scripts available.
Thanks. (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I would like to know the dir location where all the source files for various file systems are located(not the compiled ones)?
I tried in /usr/src/uts , but thats as far as I can go.
After this i have the i86pc but there are no .c files anywhere.... (Impossible)
# find / -name *.c... (1 Reply)
Hi
I have below scenario, I hope this could be possible, but as of now no idea how to implement this.
Mount point in this location /abc/mp, and there will different users who will be executing one the file shell1.sh file located in /abs/mp, but every user will execute this shell1.sh file from... (1 Reply)
Hi,
When I query using ps -ef, the complete command is not displayed and is truncated.
Can you please tell me a method to resolve this ?
I have tried the below.
ps -ef | cat
ps -ef | grep imp >/tmp/t1.txt
/usr/ucb/ps -auxw
pargs <pid>
/usr/ucb/ps -aefyl | grep imp
Thanks (11 Replies)
how to display the unique strings in two files using shell script or commands.
I tried diff and cmp but it shows the entire line, i need only the mismatched strings.
File1:
sat,sun,mon,tue
rose,lilly,lotus
white,red,blue,green,pink
File2:
sat,sun,mon,tue
rose,sunflower,lotus... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
can some one suggest me a tool to compare file ownership/permission and contents of files located at two different unix servers?
Thanks,
Pranav (1 Reply)
Hello, please where are located DNS files on various linux distributions?
Mainly im interested in CentOS (RedHat) and Ubuntu (Debian).
I mean i will be changing IPs and i have registered nameservers on my domain registar and it points to OLD IP, so i need to know in which files to edit on... (3 Replies)
so i have a script that i do not want copies of that script to be roaming around. i want that script to be in only one location on the filesystem, and whoever wants to use it should just link to it.
any idea on how to exit from a script if it is detected that the running version is a copy and... (5 Replies)
Hello everyone,
I'm am a newbie to coding so I am reaching out in hopes that I can get some help from this forum.
I am trying to run the script below from a single directory, however the directory has many subfolders. In each of those subfolders is a file, uniquely named to that specific... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: azurite
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
pkgproto
pkgproto(1) User Commands pkgproto(1)NAME
pkgproto - generate prototype file entries for input to pkgmk command
SYNOPSIS
pkgproto [-i] [-c class] [path1]
pkgproto [-i] [-c class] [path1=path2...]
DESCRIPTION
pkgproto scans the indicated paths and generates prototype(4) file entries that may be used as input to the pkgmk(1) command.
If no paths are specified on the command line, standard input is assumed to be a list of paths. If the pathname listed on the command line
is a directory, the contents of the directory is searched. However, if input is read from stdin, a directory specified as a pathname will
not be searched.
OPTIONS -i Ignores symbolic links and records the paths as ftype=f (a file) versus ftype=s (symbolic link).
-c class Maps the class of all paths to class.
OPERANDS
path1 Pathname where objects are located.
path2 Pathname which should be substituted on output for path1.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Examples of the use of pkgproto.1.
The following two examples show uses of pkgproto and a partial listing of the output produced.
Example 1:
example% pkgproto /bin=bin /usr/bin=usrbin /etc=etc
f none bin/sed=/bin/sed 0775 bin bin
f none bin/sh=/bin/sh 0755 bin daemon
f none bin/sort=/bin/sort 0755 bin bin
f none usrbin/sdb=/usr/bin/sdb 0775 bin bin
f none usrbin/shl=/usr/bin/shl 4755 bin bin
d none etc/master.d 0755 root daemon
f none etc/master.d/kernel=/etc/master.d/kernel 0644 root daemon
f none etc/rc=/etc/rc 0744 root daemon
Example 2:
example% find / -type d -print | pkgproto
d none / 755 root root
d none /bin 755 bin bin
d none /usr 755 root root
d none /usr/bin 775 bin bin
d none /etc 755 root root
d none /tmp 777 root root
EXIT STATUS
0 Successful completion.
>0 An error occurred.
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWcsu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO pkgmk(1), pkgparam(1), pkgtrans(1), prototype(4), attributes(5)
Application Packaging Developer's Guide
NOTES
By default, pkgproto creates symbolic link entries for any symbolic link encountered (ftype=s). When you use the -i option, pkgproto cre-
ates a file entry for symbolic links (ftype=f). The prototype(4) file would have to be edited to assign such file types as v (volatile), e
(editable), or x (exclusive directory). pkgproto detects linked files. If multiple files are linked together, the first path encountered is
considered the source of the link.
By default, pkgproto prints prototype entries on the standard output. However, the output should be saved in a file (named Prototype or
prototype, for convenience) to be used as input to the pkgmk(1) command.
SunOS 5.10 6 Nov 2000 pkgproto(1)