Finally: you won't need the subshell execution any more utilizing the advice you already got, but for future reference, in the cases where you do need it: the backticks should not be used any more! They are a leftover from the original Bourne shell, which is outdated by some 25 years now. Use the modern POSIX way of process substitution:
Hi,
I have this following script below. Its searching a log file for 2 string and if found then write the strings to success.txt and If not found write strings to failed.txt . if one found and not other...then write found to success.txt and not found to failed.txt.
I want to optimize this... (3 Replies)
can we optimize this command ?
sed 's#AAAA##g' /study/i.txt | sed '1,2d' | tr -d '\n\' > /study/i1.txt;
as here i am using two files ...its overhead..can we optimise to use only 1 file
sed 's#AAAA##g' /study/i.txt | sed '1,2d' | tr -d '\n\' > /study/i.txt;
keeping them same but it... (9 Replies)
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use Date::Manip;
my $date_converted = UnixDate(ParseDate("3 days ago"),"%e/%h/%Y");
open FILE,">$ARGV";
while(<DATA>){
my @tab_delimited_array = split(/\t/,$_);
$tab_delimited_array =~ s/^\ =~ s/^\-//;
my $converted_date =... (2 Replies)
Pl help to me to write the below code in a simple way ...
i suupose to use this code 3 to 4 places in my makefile(gnu) ..
****************************************
@for i in $(LIST_A); do \
for j in $(LIST_B); do\
if ;then\
echo "Need to sign"\
echo "List A = $$i , List B =$$j"\
... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have to assign a value for a varaiable based on a Input. I have written the below code:
if
then
nf=65
elif
then
nf=46
elif
then
nf=164
elif
then
nf=545
elif
then
nf=56
elif
then (3 Replies)
Here is my code. What it does is it reads an input file (input.txt which contains roughly 2,000 search phrases) and searches a directory for files that contains the search phrase. The directory contains roughly 1900 files and 84 subdirectories. The output is a file (output.txt) that shows only the... (23 Replies)
Hello,
I'm wondering if there is a quicker way of doing this.
Here is my mv script.
d=/conversion/program/out
cd $d
ls $d > /home/tempuser/$$tmp
while read line ; do
a=`echo $line|cut -c1-5|sed "s/_//g"`
b=`echo $line|cut -c16-21`
if ;then mkdir... (13 Replies)
Hi All,
I have written a new script to check for DB space and size of dump log file before it can be imported into a Oracle DB.
I'm relatively new to shell scripting.
Please help me optimize this script further. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: narayanv
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
syslogout
SYSLOGOUT(8) System Manager's Manual SYSLOGOUT(8)NAME
syslogout - modular centralized shell logout mechanism
DESCRIPTION
syslogout is a generic approach to enable centralized shell logout actions for all users of a given system in a modular and centralized way
mostly aimed at avoiding work for lazy sysadmins. It has only been tested to work with the bash shell.
It basically consists of the small /etc/syslogout shell script which invokes other small shell scripts having a .bash suffix which are con-
tained in the /etc/syslogout.d/ directory. The system administrator can drop in any script he wants without any naming convention other
than that the scripts need to have a .bash suffix to enable automagic sourcing by the /etc/syslogout script.
For shell sessions, the contents of /etc/syslogout.d/" will be sourced by every user at logout if the following lines are present in his
$HOME/.bash_logout:
if [ -f /etc/syslogout ]; then
. /etc/syslogout
fi
If used for X sessions it is advisable to include the former statement into the Xreset script of the X display manager instead to prevent
that closing of an terminal emulator window yields unexpected results in your running X session if your X11 terminal emulator is using a
login shell. Be sure then to run it under the user-id of the X session's user. See the example files in /usr/share/doc/syslogout/ for
illustration.
Users not wanting /etc/syslogout to be sourced for their environment can easily disable it's automatic mechanism. It can be disabled by
simply creating an empty file called $HOME/.nosyslogout in the user's home directory using e.g. the touch(1) command.
Any single configuration file in /etc/syslogout.d/ can simply be overridden by any user by creating a private $HOME/.syslogout.d/ directory
which may contain a user's own version of any configuration file to be sourced instead of the system default. It's names have just to
match exactly the system's default /etc/syslogout.d/ configuration files. Empty versions of these files contained in the $HOME/.syslo-
gout.d/ directory automatically disable sourcing of the system wide version.
Naturally, users can add and include their own private scripts to be automagically executed by /etc/syslogout at logout time.
OPTIONS
There are no options other than those dictated by shell conventions. Anything is defined within the configuration scripts themselves.
SEE ALSO
The README files and configuration examples contained in /usr/share/doc/syslogout/ and the manual page for bash(1), xdm(1x),
xdm.options(5), and wdm(1x). Recommended further reading is everything related with shell programming.
If you need a similar mechanism for executing code at login time check out the related package sysprofile(8) which is a very close compan-
ion to syslogout.
BUGS
syslogout in its current form is mainly restricted to bash(1) syntax. In fact it is actually a rather embarrassing quick and dirty hack
than anything else - but it works. It serves the practical need to enable a centralized bash configuration until something better
becomes available. Your constructive criticism in making this into something better" is very welcome. Before i forget to mention it: we
take patches... ;-)
AUTHOR
syslogout was developed by Paul Seelig <pseelig@debian.org> specifically for the Debian GNU/Linux system. Feel free to port it to and use
it anywhere else under the conditions of either the GNU public license or the BSD license or both. Better yet, please help to make it into
something more worthwhile than it currently is.
SYSLOGOUT(8)