Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Capture an USSD output then sms it Post 302982560 by rbatte1 on Friday 30th of September 2016 04:17:37 AM
Old 09-30-2016
Hello jazzyzha,

I have a few to questions pose in response first:-
  • From what have you tried so far, what output/errors do you get?
  • What OS and version are you using?
  • What are your preferred tools? (C, shell, perl, awk, etc.)
  • What logical process have you considered? (to help steer us to follow what you are trying to achieve)
Most importantly, What else have you tried so far?

There are probably many ways to achieve most tasks, so giving us an idea of your style and thoughts will help us guide you to an answer most suitable to you so you can adjust it to suit your needs in future.


We're all here to learn and getting the relevant information will help us all.



Kind regards,
Robin
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Capture output from interactive script

I have written a menu driven script to walk users through bringing up and down an application process. Sometimes the user tells me the script does not work taking the application down, but he can't recall seeing an error message. Is there a way to capture std out and stderr out from an... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: MizzGail
6 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Capture scp output

I have a simple script that uses scp to copy some files from one server to another. I want to capture the files that are copied but simple redirection to a file does not work. So I want to capture this output from the scp command in a log file. -bash-3.00$ scp -pr /export/jumpstart/Files... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tornado
7 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Capture output to file and printer

Hi All : I wanted a unix command by which I could be able to print the output to a file and at the same time to a printer. Any help will be greatly appreciated. Regards, Ramamurthy Dasari (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rdasari
1 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

script to capture certain output

Hi All, I want to create a script that capture only Date & Time, Current CPU % usage, Disk % usage, Mem % usage and Top process based on this output; Data Collected: 05/17/08 17:19:49 Refresh Interval: 600 seconds GlancePlus Started/Reset: 05/17/08 08:19:45 B3692A GlancePlus... (18 Replies)
Discussion started by: fara_aris
18 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Enter the command to capture output--help

&& echo "PLEASE enter the command to capture output" || echo "Processing your command manual" x=$# echo $x while do while man $@ | read -r line do >$@.txt ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rrd1986
1 Replies

6. Programming

capture the output of printf into another variable

Hi , I wonder if in java I can pipe the below output of the printf into a variable: System.out.printf(" This is a test %s\n", myVariable); I want to keep the output of the printf command to create my history array. Thanks. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: arizah
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to capture output to log file

Hi I have a script that will run multiple unix & sql commands. I want to see the output as well as capture it to a log file for further analysis. Is there an easy way to do that instead of adding "tee -a logfile" on everyline or even on the execute line (i.e. script | tee -s logfile). Thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: nimo
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Want ro capture the debug in output file

I want to capture the debug for the below command in output file . i tried like this but its not working: sh -xv <scriptname> >> output.log i want the output in a log file. Anyone plz help in this (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: chakkaravarthy
2 Replies

9. Solaris

How to capture Output of truus command

Hi I want to check if some process is sleeping. I can see that in truss -p <pid> I want to capture output and check that output if proces sis sleeping. Please suggest way to capture output of truss command or other way to check if process is sleeping (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ankush_mehra
1 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Grep -P does not capture the desired output

Hi, I'm trying to filter the following output to only display information about an alarm where the Status: corresponds to Set. -------------------------------------------------------- Description: hw_optics: RX POWER LANE-0 LOW ALARM Location: Optics0/0/0/21... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: sand1234
6 Replies
IO::Capture::Stderr(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				  IO::Capture::Stderr(3pm)

NAME
"IO::Capture::Stderr" - Capture all output sent to "STDERR" SYNOPSIS
use IO::Capture::Stderr; $capture = IO::Capture::Stderr->new(); $capture->start(); # STDERR Output captured print STDERR "Test Line One "; print STDERR "Test Line Two "; print STDERR "Test Line Three "; $capture->stop(); # STDERR output sent to wherever it was before 'start' # In 'scalar context' returns next line $line = $capture->read; print "$line"; # prints "Test Line One" $line = $capture->read; print "$line"; # prints "Test Line Two" # move line pointer to line 1 $capture->line_pointer(1); $line = $capture->read; print "$line"; # prints "Test Line One" # Find out current line number $current_line_position = $capture->line_pointer; # In 'List Context' return an array(list) @all_lines = $capture->read; # Example 1 - "Using in module tests" # Note: If you don't want to make users install # the IO::Capture module just for your tests, # you can just install in the t/lib directory # of your module and use the lib pragma in # your tests. use lib "t/lib"; use IO::Capture:Stderr; use Test::More; # Create new capture object. Showing FORCE_CAPTURE_WARN being cleared # for example, but 0 is the default, so you don't need to specify # unless you want to set. my $capture = IO::Capture:Stderr->new( {FORCE_CAPTURE_WARN => 0} ); $capture->start # execute with a bad parameter to make sure get # an error. ok( ! $test("Bad Parameter") ); $capture->stop(); DESCRIPTION
The module "IO::Capture::Stderr", is derived from the abstract class "IO::Capture". See IO::Capture. The purpose of the module (as the name suggests) is to capture any output sent to "STDOUT". After the capture is stopped, the STDOUT filehandle will be reset to the previ- ous location. E.g., If previously redirected to a file, when "IO::Capture->stop" is called, output will start going into that file again. Note: This module won't work with the perl function, system(), or any other operation involving a fork(). If you want to capture the output from a system command, it is faster to use open() or back-ticks. my $output = `/usr/sbin/ls -l 2>&1`; METHODS
new o Creates a new capture object. o An object can be reused as needed, so will only need to do one of these. o Be aware, any data previously captured will be discarded if a new capture session is started. start o Start capturing data into the "IO::Capture" Object. o Can not be called on an object that is already capturing. o Can not be called while STDERR tied to an object. o "undef" will be returned on an error. stop o Stop capturing data and point STDERR back to it's previous output location I.e., untie STDERR read o In Scalar Context o Lines are read from the buffer at the position of the "line_pointer", and the pointer is incremented by one. $next_line = $capture->read; o In List Context o The array is returned. The "line_pointer" is not affected. @buffer = $capture->read; o Data lines are returned exactly as they were captured. You may want to use "chomp" on them if you don't want the end of line charac- ter(s) while (my $line = $capture->read) { chomp $line; $cat_line = join '', $cat_line, $line; } line_pointer o Reads or sets the "line_pointer". my $current_line = $capture->line_pointer; $capture->line_pointer(1); ARGUMENTS
Pass any arguments to new() in a single array reference. IO::Capture::Stderr->new( {FORCE_CAPTURE_WARN => 1} ); FORCE_CAPTURE_WARN Normally, IO::Capture::Stderr will capture text from warn() function calls. This is because output from warn() is normally directed to STDERR. If you wish to force IO::Capture::Stderr to grab the text from warn(), set FORCE_CAPTURE_WARN to a 1. Then "IO::Cap- ture::Stderr" will save the handle that $SIG{__WARN__} was set to, redirect it to itself on "start()", and then set $SIG{__WARN__} back after "stop()" is called. SUB-CLASSING Adding Features If you would like to sub-class this module to add a feature (method) or two, here is a couple of easy steps. Also see IO::Capture::Over- view. 1 Give your package a name package MyPackage; 2 Use this "IO::Capture::Stderr" as your base class like this: package MyPackage; use base qw/IO::Capture::Stderr/; 3 Add your new method like this package MyPackage; use base qw/IO::Capture::Stderr/; sub grep { my $self = shift; for $line ( } See Also IO::Capture::Overview IO::Capture IO::Capture::Stdout AUTHORS
Mark Reynolds reynolds@sgi.com Jon Morgan jmorgan@sgi.com COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2003, Mark Reynolds. All Rights Reserved. This module is free software. It may be used, redistributed and/or modified under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.8.8 2007-07-30 IO::Capture::Stderr(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:43 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy