Anyone know of a guide or instructions for Solaris
I got to configure a SBUS HBA to talk to a tape robot.
I have done this on a switch but not point to point.
just going HBA >>>>> TAPE Fibre simple two nodes
Kie (6 Replies)
Hi the following c-code utilizing the 'read()' man 2 read method cant read in files larger that 2gig.
Hi I've found a strange problem on ubuntu64bit, that limits the data you are allowed to allocate on a 64bit platform using the c function 'read()'
The following program wont allow to allocate... (14 Replies)
Hi Guys,
Happy New Year to you all!
I have a requirement to read an embedded new-line using KSH's read builtin.
Here is what I am trying to do:
run_sql "select guestid, address, email from guest" | while read id addr email
do
## Biz logic goes here
done
I can take care of any... (6 Replies)
Hello All,
i am a newbie and need some help when reading a csv file in a bourne shell script. I want to read 10 lines, then wait for a minute and then do a reading of another 10 lines and so on in the same way. I want to do this till the end of file.
Any inputs are appreciated
... (3 Replies)
Hi
I am new to writing script and want to use a Bash Piped while-read and read from user input.
if something happens on server.log then do while loop or if something happend on user input then do while loop.
Pseudocode something like:
tail -n 3 -f server.log | while read serverline || read... (8 Replies)
hi,
I would like to ask or is it possible to dump a hex using dd from starting point to end point just like the "xxd -s 512 -l 512 <bin file>"
I know the redirect hexdump -C but i can't figure it out the combination options of dd.
Hope someone can share their knowledge..
Thanks in... (3 Replies)
For my backup , I mount and external hard disk to /mnt/mybackup and then I do an rsync to /mnt/mybackup
If for some reason the rsync fails, I want to prevent it from writing data on the server hard disk itself since the external hard disk will no longer be mounted on it.
I want /mnt/mybackup... (8 Replies)
Hi.
How can I create a history function? (By "read" command or so)
&
How can I configure a read command so that the arrow keys are not displayed so funny? (^[[A)
Thanks in advance. (4 Replies)
Hi again,
first thanks for all your suggestions. This forum it is very useful.
I have a question. Is it possible to read from the last line a file was closed. For example, imagine that i've got a file with a LOT of timestamps :
1467387616.868717770
1467387616.874189609... (1 Reply)
How to create a new mount point with 600GB and add 350 GBexisting mount point
Best if there step that i can follow or execute before i mount or add diskspace IN AIX
Thanks (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Thilagarajan
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
io::string
String(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation String(3)NAME
IO::String - Emulate file interface for in-core strings
SYNOPSIS
use IO::String;
$io = IO::String->new;
$io = IO::String->new($var);
tie *IO, 'IO::String';
# read data
<$io>;
$io->getline;
read($io, $buf, 100);
# write data
print $io "string
";
$io->print(@data);
syswrite($io, $buf, 100);
select $io;
printf "Some text %s
", $str;
# seek
$pos = $io->getpos;
$io->setpos(0); # rewind
$io->seek(-30, -1);
seek($io, 0, 0);
DESCRIPTION
The "IO::String" module provides the "IO::File" interface for in-core strings. An "IO::String" object can be attached to a string, and
makes it possible to use the normal file operations for reading or writing data, as well as for seeking to various locations of the string.
This is useful when you want to use a library module that only provides an interface to file handles on data that you have in a string
variable.
Note that perl-5.8 and better has built-in support for "in memory" files, which are set up by passing a reference instead of a filename to
the open() call. The reason for using this module is that it makes the code backwards compatible with older versions of Perl.
The "IO::String" module provides an interface compatible with "IO::File" as distributed with IO-1.20, but the following methods are not
available: new_from_fd, fdopen, format_write, format_page_number, format_lines_per_page, format_lines_left, format_name, format_top_name.
The following methods are specific to the "IO::String" class:
$io = IO::String->new
$io = IO::String->new( $string )
The constructor returns a newly-created "IO::String" object. It takes an optional argument, which is the string to read from or write
into. If no $string argument is given, then an internal buffer (initially empty) is allocated.
The "IO::String" object returned is tied to itself. This means that you can use most Perl I/O built-ins on it too: readline, <>, getc,
print, printf, syswrite, sysread, close.
$io->open
$io->open( $string )
Attaches an existing IO::String object to some other $string, or allocates a new internal buffer (if no argument is given). The
position is reset to 0.
$io->string_ref
Returns a reference to the string that is attached to the "IO::String" object. Most useful when you let the "IO::String" create an
internal buffer to write into.
$io->pad
$io->pad( $char )
Specifies the padding to use if the string is extended by either the seek() or truncate() methods. It is a single character and
defaults to "