10-24-2016
Quote:
Originally Posted by
RudiC
You have three
greps in your code - so which one is the culprit? Is it possible that some command is trying to read from the terminal becaues e.g.
$filename is not set? Is
$i defined, or empty?
Still it might be worthwhile to step back and reconsider the entire approach. The comments in your other thread, esp.
this post and post#11 there still apply. The entire thing might be doable in one single
awk script.
The below code fails as there will be no file having such pattern. $i is not available in the log files at start of the day till evening.in that case the below grep fails.
grep $i /home/lim/updates/logs/log*$d*
If this fails automatically the next two grep/awk fails.
Currently the working condition for me is using if and based on that proceed with script.
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proc(n) Tcl Built-In Commands proc(n)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
NAME
proc - Create a Tcl procedure
SYNOPSIS
proc name args body
_________________________________________________________________
DESCRIPTION
The proc command creates a new Tcl procedure named name, replacing any existing command or procedure there may have been by that name.
Whenever the new command is invoked, the contents of body will be executed by the Tcl interpreter. Normally, name is unqualified (does not
include the names of any containing namespaces), and the new procedure is created in the current namespace. If name includes any namespace
qualifiers, the procedure is created in the specified namespace. Args specifies the formal arguments to the procedure. It consists of a
list, possibly empty, each of whose elements specifies one argument. Each argument specifier is also a list with either one or two fields.
If there is only a single field in the specifier then it is the name of the argument; if there are two fields, then the first is the argu-
ment name and the second is its default value.
When name is invoked a local variable will be created for each of the formal arguments to the procedure; its value will be the value of
corresponding argument in the invoking command or the argument's default value. Arguments with default values need not be specified in a
procedure invocation. However, there must be enough actual arguments for all the formal arguments that don't have defaults, and there must
not be any extra actual arguments. There is one special case to permit procedures with variable numbers of arguments. If the last formal
argument has the name args, then a call to the procedure may contain more actual arguments than the procedure has formals. In this case,
all of the actual arguments starting at the one that would be assigned to args are combined into a list (as if the list command had been
used); this combined value is assigned to the local variable args.
When body is being executed, variable names normally refer to local variables, which are created automatically when referenced and deleted
when the procedure returns. One local variable is automatically created for each of the procedure's arguments. Global variables can only
be accessed by invoking the global command or the upvar command. Namespace variables can only be accessed by invoking the variable command
or the upvar command.
The proc command returns an empty string. When a procedure is invoked, the procedure's return value is the value specified in a return
command. If the procedure doesn't execute an explicit return, then its return value is the value of the last command executed in the pro-
cedure's body. If an error occurs while executing the procedure body, then the procedure-as-a-whole will return that same error.
SEE ALSO
info(n), unknown(n)
KEYWORDS
argument, procedure
Tcl proc(n)