02-03-2016
Thanks Rudic
i want to make this as solved, can someone advise how to do this? i tried finding the tags, but could find it
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
:D I once again am looking through the man pages and am still working on the find command to fully comprehend all its attributes.. i am a little stuck on a problem with how many options to -print there are and the only two I know how to use are printf and -print..
i can not make heads or tails of... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: moxxx68
2 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
I am running this command to sftp a file:
sftp -o identityfile=/blah/blah/.ssh/key blah@mass019 > log.log
I want to write the output to a log file, but for some reason when the sftp errors out the log file is empty. It seems that it writes to the log only if the connection is... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: queenie680
2 Replies
3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
hi,
I need to sftp a file from one unix system to another unix system.
eg: filename is test.txt
servername : abc@xyz
please give me the sftp command for that.
thanks in advance..
mohan.p (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohanpadamata
2 Replies
4. AIX
Hello.
we're using sftp to send 2 files to a remote system. It seems that for every 'good' SFTP entry in the log - it is preceded immediately by an error - generally separated by a single second...but sometimes with the exact same timestamp. any idea why that is?
sftp.log:
02/17/09 at... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: udelalv
1 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Experts ,
I am new to unix programming please tell me how to write expect and hoe to call it for automated file upload process.
help me really ! (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: kulbhushan
0 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All,
I want to display content on command promt and also write in file.
For that iI ahve to write two sentence
echo "XXXXXXX"
echo "XXXXXXXX" >> 1.txt
Is there any way to write in one echo statement (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vivek1489
1 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have situation where i need to automate transferring 10000+ files using sftp.
while read line
do
if ; then
echo "-mput /home/student/Desktop/folder/$line/* /cygdrive/e/folder/$line/">>sftpCommand.txt
fi
done< files.txt
sftp -b sftpCommand.txt stu@192.168.2.1
The above... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: noobrobot
1 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All,
I am getting some file through using sftp from another server to my server.
I want know the exact file arrival time on my sytem
I have tried stat command . it gives me the below details
$ stat abc.txt
File: `abc.txt Size: 24231 Blocks: 48 IO Block:... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: aish11
5 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
I have
export LOG_FILE=$HOME_DIR/error.log
sqlplus -s /nolog << EOF
whenever sqlerror exit sql.sqlcode
@$HOME_DIR/connect.sql
whenever sqlerror exit sql.sqlcode
@$SQL_FILE
EOF
can display the sql error in putty, how can I write them into log file ?:( (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Hscript
2 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello Team-
we would like to implement an approach which has to write the log file simultaneously
when .sql file is executing by Unix process. At present,it is writing the log file
once the process is completed. I've tested the current process with the below
approaches and none of them... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Hima_B
1 Replies
CTAGS(1) General Commands Manual CTAGS(1)
NAME
ctags - Generates "tags" and (optionally) "refs" files
SYNOPSIS
ctags [-stvra] filesnames...
DESCRIPTION
ctags generates the "tags" and "refs" files from a group of C source files. The "tags" file is used by Elvis' ":tag" command, control-]
command, and -t option. The "refs" file is sometimes used by the ref(1) program.
Each C source file is scanned for #define statements and global function definitions. The name of the macro or function becomes the name
of a tag. For each tag, a line is added to the "tags" file which contains:
- the name of the tag
- a tab character
- the name of the file containing the tag
- a tab character
- a way to find the particular line within the file.
The filenames list will typically be the names of all C source files in the current directory, like this:
$ ctags -stv *.[ch]
OPTIONS
-t Include typedefs. A tag will be generated for each user-defined type. Also tags will be generated for struct and enum names.
Types are considered to be global if they are defined in a header file, and static if they are defined in a C source file.
-v Include variable declarations. A tag will be generated for each variable, except for those that are declared inside the body of a
function.
-s Include static tags. Ctags will normally put global tags in the "tags" file, and silently ignore the static tags. This flag causes
both global and static tags to be added. The name of a static tag is generated by prefixing the name of the declared item with the
name of the file where it is defined, with a colon in between. For example, "static foo(){}" in "bar.c" results in a tag named
"bar.c:foo".
-r This causes ctags to generate both "tags" and "refs". Without -r, it would only generate "tags".
-a Append to "tags", and maybe "refs". Normally, ctags overwrites these files each time it is invoked. This flag is useful when you
have to many files in the current directory for you to list them on a single command-line; it allows you to split the arguments
among several invocations.
FILES
tags A cross-reference that lists each tag name, the name of the source file that contains it, and a way to locate a particular line in
the source file.
refs The "refs" file contains the definitions for each tag in the "tags" file, and very little else. This file can be useful, for exam-
ple, when licensing restrictions prevent you from making the source code to the standard C library readable by everybody, but you
still everybody to know what arguments the library functions need.
BUGS
ctags is sensitive to indenting and line breaks. Consequently, it might not discover all of the tags in a file that is formatted in an
unusual way.
SEE ALSO
elvis(1), refs(1)
AUTHOR
Steve Kirkendall
kirkenda@cs.pdx.edu
CTAGS(1)