This still is far from clear. Is the line you cited not the command line? Please give way more context.
Just guessing: Do you want to read/assign something into a shell variable and use that instead of the show log, and it must be single quoted? Try double quoting the entire single quoted variable, as single quotes lose their meaning inside double quotes:
hello,
can any help me how to can pass array as command line argument in korn shell.
also how to read a array from command line.
thanks
spandu (2 Replies)
Say I want to get the value of last command line argument using the value in $# (or some other way if u can suggest) how do I do it??
$"$#"
`$"$#"`
These don't work :( (4 Replies)
Hi ,
I have a piece of code ...wherein I need to assign the following ...
1) A command line argument to a variable
e.g origCount=ARGV
2) A unix command to a variable
e.g result=`wc -l testFile.txt`
in my awk shell script
When I do this :
print "origCount" origCount --> I get the... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I have a very simple C program which will run in UNIX. When i am passing * as the command line argument, i am gettig the below output.
Program:
#include <stdio.h>
#include "mylibrary.h"
int **environ;
int main(int argc,char *argv)
{
int i;
printf("\nHello... (2 Replies)
I have to write a script to determine whether given command line argument ($1) contains "*" symbol or not, if $1 does not contains "*" symbol add it to $1, otherwise show message "Symbol is not required". For e.g. If we called this script q5 then after giving ,
$ q5 /bin
Here $1 is /bin, it... (5 Replies)
Hi Guys
When I run the below command
ssh -o 'PasswordAuthentication yes' -o 'PreferredAuthentications publickey' -i $HOME/.ssh/id_dsa Server_Name
I found the below error
ommand-line line 0: Missing yes/no argument
Kindly help me to sort out
Double post, continued... (0 Replies)
HI ,
I am new to csh. I need to pass some command line arguments like
./abc.sh -os Linux -path abc -tl aa -PILX 1
I have defined the loop as shown below. But its taking "-os" switches as arguments. Its treating them as arguments.
How to resolve it?
while ( $#argv != 0 )
switch ($argv)
... (7 Replies)
I would like to use a string as a command line argument...is this possible using TCSH? For example say my script is called TEST and I would like to pass a string into my script stating why the test failed.
EXAMPLE:
TEST "Failed due to missing statement" (4 Replies)
I'm trying to write a bash script called YN that looks like the following
YN "Specify a question" "doThis" "doThat"
where "doThis" will be executed if the answer is "y", otherwise "doThat".
For example
YN "Do you want to list the file dog?" "ls -al dog" ""
Here's my attempt... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: LeoKSimon
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
th-cmd
TH-CMD(1) Triggerhappy daemon TH-CMD(1)NAME
th-cmd -- triggerhappy commander
SYNOPSIS
th-cmd --socket <socket> [--passfd] [--tag <foo>] [--clear|--enable|--disable|--mode <mode>|--quit|--udev|--add <devices...>|--remove
<devices...>]
DESCRIPTION
This program is used to issue commands to a running triggerhappy daemon. It utilizes an unix domain socket bound by the daemon.
OPTIONS --socket socket
The socket file opened by the running triggerhappy daemon instance.
--add <devices...>
Instruct the running daemon to open the input devices specified on the command line
--remove <devices...>
Remove specified devices from the running daemon.
--clear
Remove all devices from the running daemon.
--udev
Deduce operation and device name from udev environment (for use in udev rules).
--disable
Disable the execution of triggers.
--enable
Re-enable the execution of triggers.
--mode <newmode>
Change the mode of the triggerhappy daemon to <newmode>. If no new mode is specified, the daemon switches to default mode.
--quit
Terminate the triggerhappy daemon.
--passfd
Instead of instructing the daemon to open the device, open the device and pass the file descriptor to the daemon. This allows the
adding of new devices to a daemon having dropped its privileges, however the th-cmd process must have access to the device file.
--grab
Grab the device; the triggerhappy daemon will try to get exclusive access to the device, other applications will not receive the events
emitted by it.
--tag foo
Label the added device with the tag <foo>; this can be used to limit the scope of event handlers to a subset of input devices.
AUTHOR
Stefan Tomanek <stefan.tomanek+th@wertarbyte.de>
0.3.4 2011-05-10 TH-CMD(1)