The single line shell script you have shown us:
makes absolutely no sense.
I will assume that there are some <newline> characters in that script that have been lost in some copy and paste activities. Please show us the actual script (with the line breaks) AND tell us:
what operating system you're using on host01 and the various VMs,
what is the name of your script,
exactly how your script is invoked, and
how the tar_host variable is assigned a value for use in your script.
mac 10.4>terminal>linux remote server>ssh login accepted>session closed-why?
AHHHH!!
I have been connecting to the server with the line: ssh userid@website.com
The remote server accepts my password; logs me in with ssh; posts a lovely welcome message AND closes the session. Is this a "term... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I have a script that runs for an hour.
Have to run it on remote server and need the output it produces on the remote server to decide for failure or success.
I run it through a Autosys Job which logs the outputs, both 1 & 2.
I use the commands
1) rsh <SERVER> 'nohup /tmp/xyz.ksh &'
2)... (5 Replies)
Hi Folks,
I want to create VNC session on the Remote RHEL machine on which ssh access is denied. Is there any way so that I can create VNC session without ssh access. Let me know all possible ways! (1 Reply)
I am running a useradd script, which works locally but I want to take some of that local information and send it to a remote system, ssh keys are set up between the two systems. I am attaching the script, look at the section titled
"Sending information to FTP2"
Removed attachment, added... (0 Replies)
I want to make a script to compare list of files in terms of its size on local & remote server whose names are same & this is required over ssh. How can I accomplish this.
Any help would be appreciated. (1 Reply)
Hi Guys,
So what I am trying to do is :
Host A should do a SSH to Host B to F. Login to the remote host and gather the output of uptime and write to to a file in HostA.
So by the end of the script, HostA should contain a file that contains the uptime output of Host B,C,D,E,F.
Right now... (1 Reply)
Is there a way that I can remotely control a user's ssh session so I can see what they are doing and walk them through the problem they are having on my AIX based application? (2 Replies)
Hello all,
i'm trying to create a report by greping a pattern on multiple remote hosts and creta a simple report,
actually i did this, is ther any better way to do this.
#!/bin/bash
for host in `cat RemoteHosts`
do
ssh $host -C 'hostname 2>&1; grep ERROR /var/log/WebServer.log.2019-09-21... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: charli1
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
apache::session::postgres
Session::Postgres(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Session::Postgres(3)NAME
Apache::Session::Postgres - An implementation of Apache::Session
SYNOPSIS
use Apache::Session::Postgres;
#if you want Apache::Session to open new DB handles:
tie %hash, 'Apache::Session::Postgres', $id, {
DataSource => 'dbi:Pg:dbname=sessions',
UserName => $db_user,
Password => $db_pass,
Commit => 1
};
#or, if your handles are already opened:
tie %hash, 'Apache::Session::Postgres', $id, {
Handle => $dbh,
Commit => 1
};
DESCRIPTION
This module is an implementation of Apache::Session. It uses the Postgres backing store and no locking. See the example, and the
documentation for Apache::Session::Store::Postgres for more details.
USAGE
The special Apache::Session argument for this module is Commit. You MUST provide the Commit argument, which instructs this module to
either commit the transaction when it is finished, or to simply do nothing. This feature is provided so that this module will not have
adverse interactions with your local transaction policy, nor your local database handle caching policy. The argument is mandatory in order
to make you think about this problem.
AUTHOR
This module was written by Jeffrey William Baker <jwbaker@acm.org>.
SEE ALSO
Apache::Session::File, Apache::Session::Flex, Apache::Session::DB_File, Apache::Session::Postgres, Apache::Session
perl v5.12.1 2007-09-28 Session::Postgres(3)