Sponsored Content
Homework and Emergencies Emergency UNIX and Linux Support Executing several commands in a text file Post 302963457 by otheus on Wednesday 30th of December 2015 09:09:12 PM
Old 12-30-2015
Simple:

Code:
sh scriptname

Now, you have some interesting options. You can log all the output and error to a file:

Code:
sh scriptname &> all-output.log

An important option is '-x' which will log each command as it is executed.

Code:
sh -x scriptname &> all-output.log

Another interesting option is "-e" which will abort on an error.

Code:
sh -e scriptname &> all-output.log

 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Executing commands with xargs

I have a SQL script that requires values from the environment in order to execute. I found a way to get the desired results but my process is a little choppy. Any suggestions on how to clean this up would be greatly appreciated. SQL Script ------------- select a, b, c from d where a =... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bmopal
1 Replies

2. Red Hat

How commands are executing ?

Hi Folks, I have a small doubt, the binary commands under /bin and /sbin as well as other path binary files, if you peek deep into that, you can find the difference in the way of normal perl programming and some commands will be like binary files. how are the commands executing like the... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: gsiva
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Executing many commands at once

Hi, I want to run these two commands one after the other. awk 'BEGIN {OFS="\t"} {print $2}' sort -u rather than typing awk 'BEGIN {OFS="\t"} {print $2}' file1 > file2, then sort -u file2 > file3. Is it possible to run both commands on file1 then get output file3? Its kinda hard for... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: kylle345
5 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Executing commands

I need to execute a command to run my script several times with varying parameters perl ex.pl -b 130198 -e 130884 -c plot plot.txt 1_plot.txt perl ex.pl -b 1345 -e 1308 -c plot plot.txt 2_plot.txt perl ex.pl -b 1345567 -e 130898 -c plot plot.txt 3_plot.txt . . . 100's of excutions ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Lucky Ali
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Commands to reorganize a text file

Hi! I am trying to create a script to reorder the contents of a text file. Below is the text file initially, followed by how I would like it reordered: File initially: --- Initial lines with text and/or numbers Initial lines with text and/or numbers Initial lines with text and/or numbers... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: gwr
11 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

executing commands from a file after filtering

Hi, I have a question here. Please suggest. I have a file which has some unix commands to be executed through shell scripting. The number of commands will be different every time based on some external instructions i received. I manually keep the instuctions in this file. i need to execute... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rbalaj16
1 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Calling a text file while executing a script

hi, I am trying to call a text file in a shell script. The text file has the variable defind like.. export vari_namee=/path/give/here ------------------------------------------------- I am able to execute the shell script through putty. But when I try to execute with informatica... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sunil0106
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Executing multiple commands in a file at same time

Hi Am having file.ksh as below wc -l file1.txt wc -l file2.txt wc -l file3.txt wc -l file4.txt i want all the commands in this file to execute in same time please help Thanks in advance (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ragu.selvaraj
1 Replies

9. Linux

How to run commands with pipe from text file?

Hello, I have standard loop while read -r info; do command $info done < info in info text file I have multiple commands each on line that I want to execute. When I used them in console they worked, but not with this loop. This is one of the commands in info file: grep... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: adamlevine
4 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Executing bash file with sudo for the second time, leads to permission denied, for some commands

I have a script that checks if the script has been ran with sudo. If the script is not ran as sudo, the current script is being executed with exec sudo bash. You are asked for a password, you type in the password, success. Everything is perfect - the commands inside the script are ran as sudo.... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: boqsc
1 Replies
rc0(8)							      System Manager's Manual							    rc0(8)

NAME
rc0 - Runs command script executed when stopping the system SYNOPSIS
rc0 DESCRIPTION
The rc0 script contains run commands that enable a smooth shutdown and bring the system to a single-user state; run levels 0 and s. In addition to commands listed in within the script itself, rc0 contains instructions to run commands found in the /sbin/rc0.d directory. The script defines the conditions under which the commands execute; some commands run if the system is being shut down while others run if the system is being shut down and rebooted to single user. By convention, files in the /sbin/rc0.d directory begin with either the letter "K" or the letter "S" and are followed by a two-digit number and a filename, for example: K00enlogin K05lpd K60cron K30nfs In general, the system starts commands that begin with the letter "S" and stops commands that begin with the letter "K." The numbering of commands in the /sbin/rc0.d directory is important since the numbers are sorted and the commands are run in ascending order. Files in the /sbin/rc0.d directory are normally links to files in the /etc/init.d directory. An entry in the inittab file causes the system to execute the rc0 script, for example: ss:Ss:wait:/sbin/rc0 shutdown < /dev/console > /dev/console 2>&1 s0:0:wait:/sbin/rc0 off < /dev/console > /dev/console 2>&1 The following operations are typical of those that result from executing the rc0 script and the commands located in the /sbin/rc0.d direc- tory: Notify users that the system is shutting down. Sync the disks Stop system services and daemons Stop processes Kill processes Unmount file systems Invoke init if the system is being shut down to single user The killall command sends a SIGTERM signal to stop running processes; SIGKILL follows to kill all processes except the process which initi- ated the call. The umount -a command unmounts all file systems except the root file system. FILES
Specifies the command path Specifies the directory of commands that corresponds to the run level RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: init(8), killall(8), rc2(8), rc3(8), shutdown(8) delim off rc0(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:07 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy