Can I presume that if you enter hawk then the output you get is:-
You code is doing what you are asking it to, but the issue (I presume) is a logical one.
You are checking if your input matches each of the items in turn, but you display the message every time. It would be better to define a flag/variable showing a failure before your loop then set the flag to a success within the loop if you meet the criteria. Then after the loop completes, you can display a message based on the flag.
Does that make sense? Sorry if it rather wordy.
Post your thoughts/next attempts and we can help with adjustments.
if i wanted to ping all the machines in a given directory (/etc/hosts) and return a total count of responses how would i go about scripting that?
complete newbie...so be gentle
if ; then //$1 = /etc/hosts
cd "$1"
//this puts me into the directory i need...but how do i send ... (2 Replies)
I would have searched for this but I couldn't really think of what to use for the search text...
I've got a situation where I need to automate responses to an executable when running it from a script so that it can be made into a job the operators don't have to interact with. When I run it... (2 Replies)
Unfortunately googling the word 'chat' gives you zebedee billion responses that relate to everything and few of them refer to the linux chat command. I've read the man page and found a couple of examples but can't see how to do this.
I want to query the modem for it's manufacturer, product id... (8 Replies)
Hello,
I am trying to count how many times a subject makes a correct switch or a correct stay response in a simple task. I have data on which condition they were in (here, labeled "IMAGINE" and "RECALL"), as well as whether they made a left or right button response, and whether the outcome was... (5 Replies)
Hello,
I'm looking for an awk one-liner that prints the first two data fields, then contains a conditional where if $3>$4, it prints $3-$4. Otherwise, it prints $3. Example:
Data file:
123,456,999,888
333,222,444,555
654,543,345,888
444,777,333,111
Output:
123,456,111
333,222,444... (2 Replies)
Greetings,
I've got a Zenoss v2.5 server monitoring a large video encoding farm. Needless to say, these systems are under high bandwidth and CPU utilization the majority of the time.
What I'm running into is that, occasionally, these systems will fail to respond to a standard SNMP request,... (1 Reply)
Hey everyone,
Okay, so I've been having some fun with the dig command, and wanted to dig my old school. Two questions came up from this. So I:
dig @8.8.8.8 +recurse njcu.edu ANY
and the result is about 8 records, including the SOA record. One of them is this weird TXT record, and the other is... (1 Reply)
I have two Linux machines, Linux1 and Linux2. They both have two NFS mounts. We'll call them /scratch1 and /scratch2. And they both reside on the same NetApp filer. If I copy a 512Mb file from /scratch1 to /scratch2 while logged on Linux1 it takes 40s. However if I scp this file from... (1 Reply)
So first: Sorry if the title is confusing...
I have a script I'm writing with a file with several names in it (some other info - but it's not really pertinent...) - I want to be allow the user to delete certain records, but I ran into a problem I'm not sure how to go about fixing.
If I were... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: sabster
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
wmanager-loop
WMANAGER-LOOP(1) BSD General Commands Manual WMANAGER-LOOP(1)NAME
wmanager-loop -- loop running window managers chosen with wmanager
SYNOPSIS
wmanager-loop [OPTIONS ...]
DESCRIPTION
The wmanager-loop program starts either the window manager specified by the WM variable or the first window manager listed in ~/.wmanagerrc
(or an X terminal emulator if none), and when it exits, runs wmanager(1) to prompt the user for the next window manager. It loops doing this
until the user chooses ``Exit this session'' in wmanager(1). Any options given to wmanager-loop will be passed on to wmanager(1).
If the WM environment variable is set, the wmanager-loop program tries to interpret it as a window manager specification in the following
ways in the specified order:
o a full path to an executable file to run as the window manager;
o the name of a window manager listed in the /.wmanagerrc file; e.g. ``fluxbox'' would match the following line:
fluxbox=/usr/bin/startfluxbox
o the program name of a window manager listed in the /.wmanagerrc file; e.g. ``startfluxbox'' would match the above example.
o the start of such a program name; e.g. ``start'' would match the above example.
o the end of such a program name; e.g. ``box'' would match the above example.
If the WM variable is set and there is more than one line in ~/.wmanagerrc that matches the specification, wmanager-loop will exit with an
error message.
As mentioned above, if no window manager is specified in the WM environment variable or found in the ~/.wmanagerrc file, the wmanager-loop
program attempts to start an X terminal emulator. If the WMTERM environment variable is set, the wmanager-loop program uses it as the path
to the emulator. Otherwise it searches the user's path for a program named ``x-terminal-emulator'', ``urxvt'', ``rxvt'', or ``xterm'' in
this order, and starts the first one found using its full path. If none of the common terminal emulators on the above list is found, the
wmanager-loop program just runs ``xterm'' in the hope that something will come up on the user's display.
ENVIRONMENT
The wmanager-loop program uses the following environment variables:
WM The name, path, or partial path to the first window manager to execute.
WMTERM The name of the X terminal emulator to execute if no window manager could be found in the ~/.wmanagerrc file. If not specified, the
wmanager-loop program searches the user's path as described above.
EXAMPLE
To start using wmanager-loop, create a ~/.wmanagerrc file - generally with wmanagerrc-update(1) - and add something like the following at the
end of your ~/.xsession file:
exec wmanager-loop -geometry +570+585
SEE ALSO wmanager(1), wmanagerrc-update(1)HISTORY
The wmanager-loop program was written by Tommi Virtanen in 2000 and later modified by Peter Pentchev. This manual page was originally writ-
ten in perldoc format by Tommi Virtanen in 2000, and converted to mdoc format and updated by Peter Pentchev in 2008.
AUTHORS
Tommi Virtanen <tv@debian.org>
Peter Pentchev <roam@ringlet.net>
BSD September 8, 2009 BSD