Edit: Sorry didn't see you'd tried this. I suspect your c program is detecting the stdout is not a terminal and is functioning differently.
Some script versions allow -c command eg:
I have a command which will run fine in a unix command prompt. Can you tell how to interprete this command inside perl script......
The command is :
perl -pe 's/(\|333\}.*)\}$/$1|1.6}/' FIA.txt
This will search for the number 333 and appends 1.6 at the end of that line....... (1 Reply)
I'm new to Linux. I have a bash script that invokes an executable. I'd like use the SCRIPT command inside the script and exit out of the script command after it writes to the file. Does this make sense? Below is an example of the contents of my script.
#BEGIN SCRIPT
script typescript... (6 Replies)
Hi everyone,
when executing this command in unix:
echo "WM7 Fatal Alerts:", $(cat query1.txt) > a.csvIt works fine, but running this command in a shell script gives an error saying that there's a syntax error.
here is content of my script:
tdbsrvr$ vi hc.sh
"hc.sh" 22 lines, 509... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
Is there any way to monitor a command inside shell script ? I have a script inside which I have a tar command which zips around 200GB data.
tar zcvf $Bckp_Dir/$Box-BaseBackup-$Day.tar.gz * --exclude 'dbserver_logs/*' --exclude postmaster.pid --exclude 'pg_xlog/*'
I want to... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have a script file in server A. Inside the script file, I first have a ssh command that will connect to a remote server B. In the same script file itself, I have a sequence of commands that has to be run in server B. I am embedding these commands in the script file that I have in server A.... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I've written a very robust script to get an external IP address from 'behind' a router. It uses many web pages randomly choosing which one/ones to use at run time. The "fetch the web page containing the IP address" is handled by either wget or curl both of which have their 'max time for the... (6 Replies)
hii,,
I am trying to automate jira. during my scripting using bash script, in the terminal i got the terminal message like this:
"Configure which ports JIRA will use.
JIRA requires two TCP ports that are not being used by any other
applications on this machine. The HTTP port is where you... (1 Reply)
Hi ,
DIR1 has only one file with .txt extension , trying to get the size of that file using the following script
#!/bin/ksh
foldr_1="/etc/DIR1"
#echo "$foldr_1"
sze_fdr1=$(ls -ltr foldr_1/*.txt |awk '{ print $5 }')
echo "$sze_fdr1"
After executing the above script getting... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: smile689
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENDARWIN
source
source(n) Tcl Built-In Commands source(n)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
source - Evaluate a file or resource as a Tcl script
SYNOPSIS
source fileName
source -rsrc resourceName ?fileName?
source -rsrcid resourceId ?fileName?
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
This command takes the contents of the specified file or resource and passes it to the Tcl interpreter as a text script. The return value
from source is the return value of the last command executed in the script. If an error occurs in evaluating the contents of the script
then the source command will return that error. If a return command is invoked from within the script then the remainder of the file will
be skipped and the source command will return normally with the result from the return command.
The end-of-file character for files is '32' (^Z) for all platforms. The source command will read files up to this character. This |
restriction does not exist for the read or gets commands, allowing for files containing code and data segments (scripted documents). If |
you require a ``^Z'' in code for string comparison, you can use `` 32'' or ``u001a'', which will be safely substituted by the Tcl inter- |
preter into ``^Z''.
The -rsrc and -rsrcid forms of this command are only available on Macintosh computers. These versions of the command allow you to source a
script from a TEXT resource. You may specify what TEXT resource to source by either name or id. By default Tcl searches all open resource
files, which include the current application and any loaded C extensions. Alternatively, you may specify the fileName where the TEXT
resource can be found.
SEE ALSO
file(n), cd(n)
KEYWORDS
file, script
Tcl source(n)