Hello All,
I have come across a small problem. It would be great if any of you could help me in resolving the issue.
one file named dummy.txt will be ftped to Unix machine twice daily. If i receive it second time in a day i need to do some processing with the file.
How to find the... (2 Replies)
Hi all:
Trying to count the number of oracle instances on HPUX 11.23 - using ksh. I have multiple instances running and I would like to have a count for how many processes for each instance. Example, run the 'ps -efu oracle' command and for each instance increment a counter. So I am looking for... (4 Replies)
I have a unix shell script (ex.sh) written.
How to find out how many users (incl. myself) have run this .sh ?
I can insert code snipet at top of script if need be.
- Ravi (2 Replies)
hi,
i've many unload files with delimiter '|'. I'm trying to load them to the specific tables from those unl's. The problem here is, some unl's are corrupted. To be exact, some files doesnt seem to have the exact number of fields as in the table. So im trying to identify the corrupted... (6 Replies)
Hi there,
im a beginner to the shell scripting.i trying to extract a table from a db(IMD) and i have to get the count of that table and size of the file.
can you help me out how to write the shall scriping for the above query. (2 Replies)
I have file listed in my directory in following format
-rwxrwxr-x+ 1 test test 4.9M Oct 3 16:06 test20141002150108.txt
-rwxrwxr-x+ 1 test test 4.9M Oct 4 16:06 test20141003150108.txt
-rwxrwxr-x+ 1 test test 4.9M Oct 5 16:06 test20141005150108.txt
-rwxrwxr-x+ 1 test ... (2 Replies)
Hi all;
Here is my file:
V1.3=4
V1.4=5
V1.1=3
V1.2=6
V1.3=6
Please, can you help me to write a script shell that counts the sum of values in my file (4+5+3+6+6) ?
Thank you so much for help.
Kind regards. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: chercheur111
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
binmail
BINMAIL(1) General Commands Manual BINMAIL(1)NAME
binmail - send or receive mail among users
SYNOPSIS
/bin/mail [ + ] [ -i ] [ person ] ...
/bin/mail [ + ] [ -i ] -f file
DESCRIPTION
Note: This is the old version 7 UNIX system mail program. The default mail command is described in Mail(1), and its binary is in the
directory /usr/ucb.
mail with no argument prints a user's mail, message-by-message, in last-in, first-out order; the optional argument + displays the mail mes-
sages in first-in, first-out order. For each message, it reads a line from the standard input to direct disposition of the message.
newline
Go on to next message.
d Delete message and go on to the next.
p Print message again.
- Go back to previous message.
s [ file ] ...
Save the message in the named files (`mbox' default).
w [ file ] ...
Save the message, without a header, in the named files (`mbox' default).
m [ person ] ...
Mail the message to the named persons (yourself is default).
EOT (control-D)
Put unexamined mail back in the mailbox and stop.
q Same as EOT.
!command
Escape to the Shell to do command.
* Print a command summary.
An interrupt normally terminates the mail command; the mail file is unchanged. The optional argument -i tells mail to continue after
interrupts.
When persons are named, mail takes the standard input up to an end-of-file (or a line with just `.') and adds it to each person's `mail'
file. The message is preceded by the sender's name and a postmark. Lines that look like postmarks are prepended with `>'. A person is
usually a user name recognized by login(1). To denote a recipient on a remote system, prefix person by the system name and exclamation
mark (see uucp(1C)).
The -f option causes the named file, for example, `mbox', to be printed as if it were the mail file.
When a user logs in he is informed of the presence of mail.
FILES
/etc/passwd to identify sender and locate persons
/usr/spool/mail/* incoming mail for user *
mbox saved mail
/tmp/ma* temp file
/usr/spool/mail/*.lock lock for mail directory
dead.letter unmailable text
SEE ALSO Mail(1), write(1), uucp(1C), uux(1C), xsend(1), sendmail(8)BUGS
Race conditions sometimes result in a failure to remove a lock file.
Normally anybody can read your mail, unless it is sent by xsend(1). An installation can overcome this by making mail a set-user-id command
that owns the mail directory.
7th Edition April 29, 1985 BINMAIL(1)