Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Script to loop process
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Script to loop process Post 302965377 by RavinderSingh13 on Thursday 28th of January 2016 03:44:27 AM
Old 01-28-2016
Quote:
Originally Posted by ust3
thank reply ,

I changed the code to as below

while read d1
do while read d2
do while read d3
do while read d4
do while read d5
do echo "abc"
done < f5
done < f4
done < f3
done < f2
done < f1
after run it , it pops "f1: No such file or directory" .
may be there is a simpler method .
if I would like to have a script a open a certain amount of files ( eg. 1000 ) in background mode , would advise how to write such script ?
thanks
Hello ust3,

I would like to suggest you please provide complete information about what you are trying to achieve here, it is the simple error which you are getting. You are getting "f1: No such file or directory" because there will not be any file present into your path named f1(You should provide files which are present in the path where you are trying the loop, else provide the exact files path to it.). Without knowing the complete picture of requirement we all here could only guess and increase the number of posts in this thread, hope this helps.

Thanks,
R. Singh
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

loop when process running

Hi Gurus, Could you please help me to create a shell script that will be started by a cron job once every night at 24.00 h (that should bee easy:)) The shell script should control every 30 seconds the name of a process, and when the process doesn't run anymore it should execute a few further... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: blackwire
12 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

script to loop all process ids and take pmap

Hi all, I need a script that will loop around all the current processes and take a pmap -x <process id> and output each pmap to a separate file. Would anyone have a quick command to do this? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: borderblaster
2 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to loop this process?

for two txt files, f1 and f2, I like to do the following grep "abcde" f1 > abcde$f1 grep "xyz" f1 > xyz$f1 can I use a loop to get this done? Thanks for i in f1 f2 do grep "abcde" $i > abcde$i grep "xyz" $i > xyz$i ... done (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: ksgreen
11 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Process checking loop

Hi, I want to create a script who will check if the java process is running & if it finds the process is still there it continues to execute & when the process completes it exit from the script. I have written a code to check & notify the process existence but i am not getting how to write... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: d8011
4 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Writing a loop to process multiple input files by a shell script

I have multiple input files that I want to manipulate using a shell script. The files are called 250.1 through 250.1000 but I only want the script to manipulate 250.300 through 250.1000. Before I was using the following script to manipulate the text files: for i in 250.*; do || awk... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: evelibertine
4 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

need to process for loop faster

I have the following code running against a file. The file can have upwards of 10000 lines. problem is, the for loop takes a while to go through all those lines. is there a faster way to go about it? for line in `grep -P "${MONTH} ${DAY}," file | ${AWK} -F" " '{print $4}' | awk -F":"... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: SkySmart
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Infinite while loop script shows more than one process

Hi, I have a script which triggers an infinite loop. #!bin/bash trig=`ls /home/trig.tch |wc -l` function callj { some commands... } while do callj & done The number of process after doing a ps -ef |grep Mon.sh returns processes even after the script is killed by deleting the... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: chetan.c
4 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Bash Question: HowTo Exit Script with User Input While Process is Running Mid-Loop?

Hi, I have written a script that allows me to repetitively play a music file $N times, which is specified through user input. However, if I want to exit the script before it has finished looping $N times, if I use CTRL+c, I have to CTRL+c however many times are left in order to complete the loop.... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: hilltop_yodeler
9 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

For loop in process each file

Hi I have following codecd /tmp/test/ for vfile in `ls -1` do for vlink in `ls -l /tmp/testfile/*|bin/grep "local/init\.d/$vfile$"|bin/awk -F"->" '{print($1)}'|bin/awk -F"/" '{print($NF)}'` I know `ls -1` list only file, but I don't... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: stew
3 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Process files in loop which have spaces in name

I have a folder with files and I have to process them in a loop. However the filenames have space characters, so the list get split. $ touch "File Number_1" $ touch "File Number_2" $ ls "/tmp/File Number"_* /tmp/File Number_1 /tmp/File Number_2 I tried following (sorry for using the... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Wernfried
3 Replies
chmod(1)						      General Commands Manual							  chmod(1)

Name
       chmod - change file mode

Syntax
       chmod [ -fR ] mode file...

Description
       Permissions on files are set according to mode and file parameters.

       For file, you can specify either a full or partial path.  You can specify multiple files, separated by spaces.

       For mode, you specify one of two variants: absolute mode or symbolic mode.

   Absolute Mode
       For mode in absolute form, you specify an octal number constructed from the sum of one or more of the following values:

	      4000	set user ID on execution (applies to executable files only)
	      2000	set group ID on execution (applies to executable files only)
	      1000	set sticky bit (see for more information)
	      0400	read by owner
	      0200	write by owner
	      0100	execute, or search if file is a directory, by owner
	      0040	read by group
	      0020	write by group
	      0010	execute, or search if file is a directory, by group
	      0004	read by others
	      0002	write by others
	      0001	execute, or search if file is a directory, by others

       For  example, the absolute mode value that provides read, write, and execute permission to owner, read and execute permission to group, and
       read and execute permission to others is 755 (400+200+100+40+10+4+1).  The absolute mode value that provides read, write, and execute  per-
       mission to owner and no permission to group or others is 700 (400+200+100).

   Symbolic Mode
       To specify mode in symbolic form, use the following format:

	      [who] op permission [op permission] ...  Spaces are included in the preceding format so that you can read the arguments; however, as
	      will be shown in examples that follow, you do not enter spaces between mode arguments.

       Specify who using the letters u (for owner), g (for group) and o (for others) either alone or in combination.  You  can	also  specify  the
       letter  a (for all), which is is equivalent to the letter combination ugo.  If you omit the who parameter, a is assumed.  For more informa-
       tion, see

       For the op parameter, specify the plus sign (+) to add permission to the file's mode, the minus sign (-)  to  remove  permission  from  the
       file's  mode,  or the equal sign (=) to assign permission absolutely (denying or revoking any permission not explicitly specified following
       the equal sign).  The first command in the following example provides group with execute permission for in addition to  any  other  permis-
       sions group currently has for The second command limits the permission that group has for to execute alone:
       chmod g+x filea
       chmod g=x fileb

       For  the  permission  parameter,  specify any combination of the letters r (read), w (write), x (execute), s (set owner or group id), and t
       (save text - sticky).  Alternatively, you can specify the letter u, g, or o to set permission for the who parameter to be the same  as  the
       permission  currently granted to the user category indicated by the letter.  In the following example, the group (g) is given the same per-
       missions on as currently granted to owner (u):
       chmod g=u filea

       You can revoke all permissions by specifying the who argument followed by =, and omitting the permission argument.  For example,  the  fol-
       lowing command removes all permissions from others for
       chmod o= fileb

       When  specifying  more than one symbolic mode for file, separate the modes with commas. The mode changes are applied in the sequence speci-
       fied.  In the following example, write permission is added to the permissions already granted to the owner of and group is then granted the
       same permissions on as granted the owner:
       chmod u+w,g=u filea

Options
       -f   Inhibits display of errors that are returned if fails to change the mode on a file.

       -R   Causes  to	recursively descend any directories subordinate to file and to set the specified mode for each file encountered.  However,
	    when symbolic links are encountered, does not change the mode of the link file and does not traverse  the  path  associated  with  the
	    link.  Note that the option is useful only when file identifies a directory that is not empty.

Restrictions
       The permission letter s is used only with who letter u or g.

       Only the owner of a file  or someone logged on as superuser may change the mode of that file.

Examples
       Using  absolute	mode,  provide	read,  write, and search permission to the owner, and read and search permission to others for a directory
       named
       chmod 755 ~harris/public

       Using absolute mode, set the UID for execution to be the UID of of the file owner rather than the UID of the user running  the  program	as
       follows:
       chmod 4000 progrmb

       Using symbolic mode, perform the same operation as described for the preceding example:
       chmod u=s progrmb

       Using symbolic mode, deny write permission to others for the file
       chmod o-w ourspec

       Using symbolic mode, give execute permission on file to all user categories:
       chmod +x myprog

       Using symbolic mode, give write permission to all group members, deny write permission to others, and give search permission to owner on
       chmod g+w,o-r,u+x docdir

       Using  symbolic	mode, give read and execute permissions to others for a directory named and then recursively descend the paths subordinate
       to adding the  same permissions for others on all files and directories included in the subordinate paths:
       chmod -R o+rx programs
       In the preceding example, if were the name of a file rather than a directory, would change the mode only of the file.

See Also
       ls(1), chmod(2), stat(2), umask(2), chown(8)

																	  chmod(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:06 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy