Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Why do these 2 methods result in different outcomes? Post 303021974 by rovf on Wednesday 22nd of August 2018 02:39:24 AM
Old 08-22-2018
After running ((counter++)), the exit code is 1, not zero, and hence the continue statement is not executed. The reason is that the value of counter++ is what is stored in counter BEFORE it is incremented, i.e zero. If the value of the expression is zero, the exit code of the ((....)) command is 1. If the value of the expression is not zero, the exit code of the ((....)) command is 0.
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

file transfer Methods

I would like to write shell script to transfer some ASCII files from HPUX server to Linux server or vice-versa. What options I have for file transfer Methods. 1) FTP 2) rcp 3) HTTP 4)Whatelse? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Teh Tiack Ein
2 Replies

2. What is on Your Mind?

Predict Future Outcomes in Our Event Prediction Market

Folks love to predict the future, so we have enabled predicting the future for members. So, please enjoy placing your Forum Bits predicting future outcomes in our new Event Prediction Market. Current events you can predict include science, technology, M&A and other global events: Oracle... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
0 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Methods to SSH (Perl)...

Can anyone break down the different methods of using SSH in perl? I'm currently using Net::SSH::Expect, which allows me to login to a machine and execute multiple commands without having to ssh again. This feature of holding the session works well for me, but it's slow. If I set timeouts to 4... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: mrwatkin
3 Replies

4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

yum provides methods

What is the difference between these yum provides and whatprovides methods? I know provides and whatprovides give the same results, but different methods of */ and \* give different results. Also whether you put */ and \* in front of the string or behind the string give different results. I have... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: cokedude
0 Replies

5. Solaris

Unix learning methods

I have recently completed Solaris 10 System Administration book by Bill Calkins. Now I want to learn more about UNIX. I have tried to research online but there is too much information and I am sort of overwhelmed and don't know where to start. Can anybody give some idea on how to pursue my learning... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: saudsos
3 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Perl Methods Calling

Hello I am on my way to improve my wonderful Perl skills, I got an issue which I want to share with you all. I have a Perl module which looks like package Cocoa; require Exporter; @ISA = qw(Exporter); my $a=''; my $b=''; my $c=''; sub new { my $this = shift; # Create... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: adisky123
8 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to compare the current result with previous line result.?

Hi Gurus, I have requirement to compare current result with previous reuslt. The sample case is below. 1 job1 1 1 job2 2 1 job3 3 2 job_a1 1 2 job_a2 2 2 job_a3 3 3 job_b1 1 3 job_b2 2 for above sample file, GID is group ID, for input line, the job run... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ken6503
1 Replies

8. Linux

Help with PAM Logging methods.

Hi Folks, Would like to understand if there exists any method to write the logs for LDAP authenticated users and Local Users separately in two different files. If not, then do I distinguish whether the user is LDAP or local without looking at passwd. Bye the way, I am trying this weird... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: awk-admirer
0 Replies

9. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

One Line Command how to use pipe statements to execute and comment on multiple possible outcomes

Hello Forum, I'm looking to expand the following command: INACTIVE_KERNELS=$(python -mplatform | grep -qi red && rpm -qa | grep '^kernel-' |grep -vE `uname -r` | paste -sd \; || echo "Not Red Hat Server") Currently this command will check if my server is RedHat server using the grep -qi... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: greavette
6 Replies
counter(n)						      Counters and Histograms							counter(n)

NAME
counter - Procedures for counters and histograms SYNOPSIS
package require Tcl 8 package require counter ?2.0? ::counter::init tag args ::counter::count tag ?delta? ?instance? ::counter::start tag instance ::counter::stop tag instance ::counter::get tag args ::counter::exists tag ::counter::names ::counter::histHtmlDisplay tag args DESCRIPTION
The counter package provides a counter facility and can compute statistics and histograms over the collected data. ::counter::init tag args This defines a counter with the name tag. The args determines the characteristics of the counter. The args are -group name Keep a grouped counter where the name of the histogram bucket is passed into ::counter::count. -hist bucketsize Accumulate the counter into histogram buckets of size bucketsize. For example, if the samples are millisecond time values and bucketsize is 10, then each histogram bucket represents time values of 0 to 10 msec, 10 to 20 msec, 20 to 30 msec, and so on. -hist2x bucketsize Accumulate the statistic into histogram buckets. The size of the first bucket is bucketsize, each other bucket holds values 2 times the size of the previous bucket. For example, if bucketsize is 10, then each histogram bucket represents time values of 0 to 10 msec, 10 to 20 msec, 20 to 40 msec, 40 to 80 msec, and so on. -hist10x bucketsize Accumulate the statistic into histogram buckets. The size of the first bucket is bucketsize, each other bucket holds values 10 times the size of the previous bucket. For example, if bucketsize is 10, then each histogram bucket represents time val- ues of 0 to 10 msec, 10 to 100 msec, 100 to 1000 msec, and so on. -lastn N Save the last N values of the counter to maintain a "running average" over the last N values. -timehist secsPerMinute Keep a time-based histogram. The counter is summed into a histogram bucket based on the current time. There are 60 per- minute buckets that have a size determined by secsPerMinute, which is normally 60, but for testing purposes can be less. Every "hour" (i.e., 60 "minutes") the contents of the per-minute buckets are summed into the next hourly bucket. Every 24 "hours" the contents of the per-hour buckets are summed into the next daily bucket. The counter package keeps all time-based histograms in sync, so the first secsPerMinute value seen by the package is used for all subsequent time-based histograms. ::counter::count tag ?delta? ?instance? Increment the counter identified by tag. The default increment is 1, although you can increment by any value, integer or real, by specifying delta. You must declare each counter with ::counter::init to define the characteristics of counter before you start to use it. If the counter type is -group, then the counter identified by instance is incremented. ::counter::start tag instance Record the starting time of an interval. The tag is the name of the counter defined as a -hist value-based histogram. The instance is used to distinguish this interval from any other intervals that might be overlapping this one. ::counter::stop tag instance Record the ending time of an interval. The delta time since the corresponding ::counter::start call for instance is recorded in the histogram identified by tag. ::counter::get tag args Return statistics about a counter identified by tag. The args determine what value to return: -total Return the total value of the counter. This is the default if args is not specified. -totalVar Return the name of the total variable. Useful for specifying with -textvariable in a Tk widget. -N Return the number of samples accumulated into the counter. -avg Return the average of samples accumulated into the counter. -avgn Return the average over the last N samples taken. The N value is set in the ::counter::init call. -hist bucket If bucket is specified, then the value in that bucket of the histogram is returned. Otherwise the complete histogram is returned in array get format sorted by bucket. -histVar Return the name of the histogram array variable. -histHour Return the complete hourly histogram in array get format sorted by bucket. -histHourVar Return the name of the hourly histogram array variable. -histDay Return the complete daily histogram in array get format sorted by bucket. -histDayVar Return the name of the daily histogram array variable. -resetDate Return the clock seconds value recorded when the counter was last reset. -all Return an array get of the array used to store the counter. This includes the total, the number of samples (N), and any type-specific information. This does not include the histogram array. ::counter::exists tag Returns 1 if the counter is defined. ::counter::names Returns a list of all counters defined. ::counter::histHtmlDisplay tag args Generate HTML to display a histogram for a counter. The args control the format of the display. They are: -title string Label to display above bar chart -unit unit Specify minutes, hours, or days for the time-base histograms. For value-based histograms, the unit is used in the title. -images url URL of /images directory. -gif filename Image for normal histogram bars. The filename is relative to the -images directory. -ongif filename Image for the active histogram bar. The filename is relative to the -images directory. -max N Maximum number of value-based buckets to display. -height N Pixel height of the highest bar. -width N Pixel width of each bar. -skip N Buckets to skip when labeling value-based histograms. -format string Format used to display labels of buckets. -text boolean If 1, a text version of the histogram is dumped, otherwise a graphical one is generated. counter 2.0 counter(n)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:01 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy