It always seemed to me that these utils are siblings.
All they do are that substitute values for variables, rearrange the parameters, and confuse the input with the output.
I tried to display their main signature in table together. To show their similarities
My script has the following for loop in it.
foreach id (CLKM4 DGTM4 GNNM4)
eval echo $id \$${id}sf \$${id}sfk
end
so "id" is a variable defined in the loop, and "idsf" and "idsfk" are variables defined in another part of the script, they return values of 0 or more. The problem i'm... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I'm running some encrypted data through a script I wrote. In order to do this, I'm using eval to resolve some of my variables. At the moment, when I use eval to resolve, it strips out some of my encrypted values, and totally drops some others. For example if I have the value ab1"3 it drops... (1 Reply)
Bit of a weird one i suppose, i want to use an echo inside an echo... For example...
i have a script that i want to use to take users input and create another script. Inside this script it creates it also needs to use echos...
echo "echo "hello"" >$file
echo "echo "goodbye"" >$file
... (3 Replies)
So, I'm looking over /proc/cpuinfo and have a question... I've read that "siblings" refers to hyperthreading, but that seems odd considering the contents of cpuinfo. Here's a part:
model name : Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5410 @ 2.33GHz
physical id : 0
siblings : 4
core... (1 Reply)
Hi:
how come this command does not work? the error message is:
xargs: cd: No such file or directory
yet, in the same time, 'echo dir_path | xargs ls' works.
Does it work in bash? We use csh.
Thanks.
NB Phil (7 Replies)
my command deletes the oldest file from a folder and I'd like to have some type of output when the file is selected or deleted.
ls -t -1 | tail -n 1 | xargs rm
I'm not sure how to incorporate echo into this.
Thanks, (2 Replies)
Hi all,
some small script with eval turned me to crazy.
my OS is linux
Linux s10-1310 2.6.16.53-0.8.PTF.434477.3.TDC.0-smp #1 SMP Fri Aug 31 06:07:27 PDT 2007 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
below script works well
#!/bin/bash
eval ssh remotehost date
eval ssh remotehost ls
below... (1 Reply)
PESIGN(1) General Commands Manual PESIGN(1)NAME
pesign - command line tool for signing UEFI applications
SYNOPSIS
pesign [--in=infile | -i infile]
[--out=outfile | -o outfile]
[--token=token | -t token]
[--certificate=nickname | -c nickname]
[--force | -f] [--sign | -s] [--hash | -h]
[--digest_type=digest | -d digest]
[--show-signature | -S ] [--remove-signature | -r ]
[--export-pubkey=outkey | -K outkey]
[--export-cert=outcert | -C outcert]
[--ascii-armor | -a] [--daemonize | -D] [--nofork | -N]
DESCRIPTION
pesign is a command line tool for manipulating signatures and cryptographic digests of UEFI applications.
OPTIONS --in=infile
Specify input binary.
--out=outfile
Specify output binary.
--token=token
Use the specified NSS token's certificate database.
--certificate=nickname
Use the certificate database entry with the specified nickname for signing.
--force
Overwrite output files. Without this parameter, pesign will refuse to overrite any output files which already exist.
--sign Sign the input binary with the key specified by --certificate.
--hash Display the cryptographic digest of the input binary on standard output.
--digest_type=digest
Use the specified digest in hashing and signing operations. By default, this value is "sha256". Use "--digest=help" to list the
available digests.
--show-signature
Show information about the signature of the input binary.
--remove-signature
Remove the signature section from the binary.
--export-pubkey=outkey
Export the public key specified by --certificate to outkey
--export-cert=outcert
Export the certificate specified by --certificate to outcert
--ascii
Use ascii armoring on exported certificates.
--daemonize
Spawn a daemon for use with pesign-client(1)--nofork
Do not fork when using --daemonize.
SEE ALSO pesign-client(1)AUTHORS
Peter Jones
Thu Jun 21 2012 PESIGN(1)