Hi ,
While trying to compile a PRO*C code on unix using makefile i get the following errors. i am now working on a 10g migration (from 8i) ...
these makefile perfectly work in previous version.
ld: fatal: file... (7 Replies)
This question always confuses me :-
Suppose I write a program and compile it on a machine with operating system A and processor B
will the exe file run on a machine
with operating system A2 but processor B
operating system A but processor B2
operating system A2 and processor B2........
... (9 Replies)
How to list out the files which are not accessed for the last n days?
and
How to list out all the executable files in a directory?
can anyone help me on the above?
Thanks in advance. (3 Replies)
I'm getting to grips with this concept of the umask.
What I thought was, setting umask uga+rwx would result in creating files with all permissions for everyone. Seems not to be the case though. Read and write bits get set, but not the execute bit.
Is there some gap in my understanding, or is... (2 Replies)
hello.
My question, basically is: what is the definition of unix/linux exec files, or
what makes a file executable?
More specifically, must a unix source file that was compiled using gcc have exec permissions in order to be considered executable?
Is it right to say that a unix/linux exec file... (1 Reply)
Hi all.
I've got a unix script at work that I just got done with. Now they want me to write some simple way to run it on Windows. Right now we log into a Solaris server using Hummingbird Exceed to gain a terminal. Im thinking that there really isn't any good way to get Windows and the server... (5 Replies)
I know shell is an interpreter language, but can I make an executable file just like in folder /bin, /usr/bin, etc which source code was from a .sh file or from some .sh files??
My main purpose is to hide the source code.
thanks. (1 Reply)
I wish to create an executable bash script that will run the following commands as root, that is, using sudo su
iptables-save | awk '/^
/ { print $1 }
/^:+ / { print $1 " ACCEPT" ; }
/COMMIT/ { print $0; }' | iptables-restoreMy first attempt at bash... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: thixeqi
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
lsacl
lsacl(1) General Commands Manual lsacl(1)NAME
lsacl - list access control lists (ACLs) of files
SYNOPSIS
file...
DESCRIPTION
lists access control lists (ACLs) of one or more files in symbolic, ``short'' form, one file's ACL per line of output, followed by the file
name; see acl(5) for ACL syntax.
Options
recognizes the following option:
Print ACLs in long form. Each file's ACL can be more than one line long, and is always preceded by file name, colon, and newline.
Consecutive file names are separated by blank lines.
If a hyphen is given as a file name argument, prints the ACL for the standard input. By default, it prints the file name as For the option
it prints a file name of
Unlike cannot list ACLs of files in subdirectories automatically or list the ACL entries of the files in the current directory by default.
A good way to do the latter is:
or
EXTERNAL INFLUENCES
Environment Variables
determines the language in which messages are displayed.
If is not specified or is set to the empty string, a default of "C" (see lang(5)) is used instead of If any internationalization variable
contains an invalid setting, behaves as if all internationalization variables are set to "C". See environ(5).
RETURN VALUE
If succeeds, it returns zero. If invoked incorrectly, it returns a value of If is unable to read the ACL for a specified file, it prints
an error message to standard error, continues, and later returns a value of
EXAMPLES
List the ACL for the file
List ACLs for all files in the current directory, in long form.
List ACLs for all files under
DEPENDENCIES
will fail when the target file resides on a file system which does not support ACLs.
NFS:
is not supported on remote files.
AUTHOR
was developed by HP.
SEE ALSO chacl(1), getaccess(1), ls(1), getacl(2), acl(5).
lsacl(1)