Hi,
I'm trying to delete a sleeping process (parent ID is not 1) with "kill -9" command by the owner of the process (infodba) but it doesn't get killed. Is there any way of killing this process without killing the parent process or rebooting? (I'm using HP Unix B.11.11)
$ ps -eflx | grep... (0 Replies)
I have the following line in file1
elif ; then
now if i try to grep this using following command
grep -e "elif ; then" file1
it is showing nothing...
how to grep such patterns (2 Replies)
Hi,
Some of the users on my freebsd server are getting the "unable to process from lines" error when accessing their mailbox.
I've checked their mailbox and found that there was a blank line at the top of the mailbox.
Everytime i remove it, it appears again sometime later.
I've tried... (1 Reply)
Hi
I want to write a shell script which can find the process id's of all the process and kill them eg:
ps ax | grep rv_
3015 ? S 0:00 /home/vivek/Desktop/rv_server
3020 ? S 0:00 /home/vivek/Desktop/rv_gps
3022 ? S 0:00 /home/vivek/Desktop/rv_show
... (7 Replies)
Hi Guys,
I am unable to kill the process . and same process is running so many times. If i am trying to kill once again it restarting/kicked off again.
and now i am unable to login . i am getting error message like "error -cannot fork too many process "
i know when we ll get this message... (8 Replies)
Hi All,
I have got a shell script that excutes some job and mails me the output as an attachment.
While running the script manually, its perfect.
when i am scheduling the job through crontab, i am getting the mail.
but the attachment but this is a blank file.
after the scheduler run, i can... (2 Replies)
I have a file with 2 lines of code
Rome is in Romeo
Romeo is in Rome
How do I grep, so that only last line would be the outcome.
sample output
Romeo is in Rome
I have tried with all possible greps but its resulting in both the lines in output.
Please help. (6 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to grep a filename from a script after taking the file name and other variables as keyboard input .When I run the grep command with the same filename on the prompt, it runs fine, but it is either not giving me the correct output or not running at all from the script using the... (13 Replies)
I wish to check if my file has a line that does not start with '#' and has
1. Listen and 2. 443
echo "Listen 443" > test.out
grep 'Listen *443' test.out | grep -v '#'
Listen 443
The above worked fine but when the entry changes to the below the grep fails... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohtashims
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT LINUX
npm-run-script
NPM-RUN-SCRIPT(1)NPM-RUN-SCRIPT(1)NAME
npm-run-script - Run arbitrary package scripts
SYNOPSIS
npm run-script <command> [--silent] [-- <args>...]
alias: npm run
DESCRIPTION
This runs an arbitrary command from a package's "scripts" object. If no "command" is provided, it will list the available scripts.
run[-script] is used by the test, start, restart, and stop commands, but can be called directly, as well. When the scripts in the package
are printed out, they're separated into lifecycle (test, start, restart) and directly-run scripts.
As of ` https://blog.npmjs.org/post/98131109725/npm-2-0-0, you can use custom arguments when executing scripts. The special option -- is
used by getopt https://goo.gl/KxMmtG to delimit the end of the options. npm will pass all the arguments after the -- directly to your
script:
npm run test -- --grep="pattern"
The arguments will only be passed to the script specified after npm run and not to any pre or post script.
The env script is a special built-in command that can be used to list environment variables that will be available to the script at run-
time. If an "env" command is defined in your package, it will take precedence over the built-in.
In addition to the shell's pre-existing PATH, npm run adds node_modules/.bin to the PATH provided to scripts. Any binaries provided by
locally-installed dependencies can be used without the node_modules/.bin prefix. For example, if there is a devDependency on tap in your
package, you should write:
"scripts": {"test": "tap test/*.js"}
instead of
"scripts": {"test": "node_modules/.bin/tap test/*.js"}
to run your tests.
The actual shell your script is run within is platform dependent. By default, on Unix-like systems it is the /bin/sh command, on Windows it
is the cmd.exe. The actual shell referred to by /bin/sh also depends on the system. As of `
https://github.com/npm/npm/releases/tag/v5.1.0 you can customize the shell with the script-shell configuration.
Scripts are run from the root of the module, regardless of what your current working directory is when you call npm run. If you want your
script to use different behavior based on what subdirectory you're in, you can use the INIT_CWD environment variable, which holds the full
path you were in when you ran npm run.
npm run sets the NODE environment variable to the node executable with which npm is executed. Also, if the --scripts-prepend-node-path is
passed, the directory within which node resides is added to the PATH. If --scripts-prepend-node-path=auto is passed (which has been the
default in npm v3), this is only performed when that node executable is not found in the PATH.
If you try to run a script without having a node_modules directory and it fails, you will be given a warning to run npm install, just in
case you've forgotten.
You can use the --silent flag to prevent showing npm ERR! output on error.
You can use the --if-present flag to avoid exiting with a non-zero exit code when the script is undefined. This lets you run potentially
undefined scripts without breaking the execution chain.
SEE ALSO
o npm help 7 scripts
o npm help test
o npm help start
o npm help restart
o npm help stop
o npm help 7 config
January 2019 NPM-RUN-SCRIPT(1)