On Solaris 10, I tried the following, using the POSIX compliant utilities which are in /usr/xpg[46]/bin:
So tr did not work, but sed did
On Linux I had the same experience, but tr also gave an error message, so it appears it only uses single byte characters and it does not understand equivalence classes, but sed worked:
Last edited by Scrutinizer; 12-14-2019 at 06:33 AM..
These 2 Users Gave Thanks to Scrutinizer For This Post:
Hi, I'm trying to write a bash script to find some files. However it seems that the find command is not behaving the same way when the script is executed as it does when executed from the command line:
Script extract:
#!/bin/bash
...
NEW="/usr/bin/find current/applications/ -name '*jar'... (3 Replies)
I am thankful for this site and for the many links provided. I have been going through one of the tutorials, but as I try some things, they don't seem to work.
I am wondering if there is something I need first before being able to use a tutorial (like version number (HP-UX) or how I am getting... (1 Reply)
I use FreeBSD,and use signal,like follows:
signal(SIGHUP,sig_hup);
signal(SIGIO,sig_io);
when I run call following code,it can run,but I find a puzzled question,it should print some information,such as printf("execute main()") will print execute main(),but in fact,printf fuction print... (2 Replies)
Hi all.
I have a script as below:
cutmth=`TZ=CST+2160 date +%b`
export cutmth
echo $cutmth >> date.log
sed -n "/$cutmth/$p" alert_sbdev1.log > alert_summ.log
My purpose is to run through the alert_sbdev1.log and find the 1st occurence of 'Jan' and send everything after that line to... (4 Replies)
Following code is detecting solaris daytime,when I run it,I can't get any result,code is follows:
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#define BUFFSIZE 150
int main(){
... (2 Replies)
I use Solaris 10, I use following code:
#include <signal.h>
int main(void){
printf("----------testing-----------");
if(signal(SIGUSR1,sig_usr)==SIG_ERR)
err_sys("can't catch SIGUSR1");
for(;;)
pause();
sig_user(int signo){
.....
}
when I run above code,it print nothing... (3 Replies)
Hello all!
I have problem in hp-ux 11.11 in awk
I want to grep sar -d 2 1 only 3 column, but have error in awk in hp-ux 11.11
Example:
#echo 123 234 | awk '{print $2}'
123 234
The situattions in commands bdf | awk {print $5}' some...
In hp-ux 11.31 - OK!
How resolve problem (15 Replies)
Hi,
I installed solaris 10 x86 on my local system. it was working fine. today when i started the system, it started up without any problem. when i tried to open the terminal it didn't open any terminal.
Plz help me (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: malikshahid85
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
largefile
largefile(5) Standards, Environments, and Macros largefile(5)NAME
largefile - large file status of utilities
DESCRIPTION
A large file is a regular file whose size is greater than or equal to 2 Gbyte ( 2**31 bytes). A small file is a regular file whose size is
less than 2 Gbyte.
Large file aware utilities
A utility is called large file aware if it can process large files in the same manner as it does small files. A utility that is large file
aware is able to handle large files as input and generate as output large files that are being processed. The exception is where additional
files are used as system configuration files or support files that can augment the processing. For example, the file utility supports the
-m option for an alternative "magic" file and the -f option for a support file that can contain a list of file names. It is unspecified
whether a utility that is large file aware will accept configuration or support files that are large files. If a large file aware utility
does not accept configuration or support files that are large files, it will cause no data loss or corruption upon encountering such files
and will return an appropriate error.
The following /usr/bin utilities are large file aware:
adb awk bdiff cat chgrp
chmod chown cksum cmp compress
cp csh csplit cut dd
dircmp du egrep fgrep file
find ftp getconf grep gzip
head join jsh ksh ln
ls mdb mkdir mkfifo more
mv nawk page paste pathchck
pg rcp remsh rksh rm
rmdir rsh sed sh sort
split sum tail tar tee
test touch tr uncompress uudecode
uuencode wc zcat
The following /usr/xpg4/bin utilities are large file aware:
awk cp chgrp chown du
egrep fgrep file grep ln
ls more mv rm sed
sh sort tail tr
The following /usr/xpg6/bin utilities are large file aware:
getconf ls tr
The following /usr/sbin utilities are large file aware:
install mkfile mknod mvdir swap
See the USAGE section of the swap(1M) manual page for limitations of swap on block devices greater than 2 Gbyte on a 32-bit operating sys-
tem.
The following /usr/ucb utilities are large file aware:
chown from ln ls sed
sum touch
The /usr/bin/cpio and /usr/bin/pax utilities are large file aware, but cannot archive a file whose size exceeds 8 Gbyte - 1 byte.
The /usr/bin/truss utilities has been modified to read a dump file and display information relevant to large files, such as offsets.
cachefs file systems
The following /usr/bin utilities are large file aware for cachefs file systems:
cachefspack cachefsstat
The following /usr/sbin utilities are large file aware for cachefs file systems:
cachefslog cachefswssize cfsadmin fsck
mount umount
nfs file systems
The following utilities are large file aware for nfs file systems:
/usr/lib/autofs/automountd /usr/sbin/mount
/usr/lib/nfs/rquotad
ufs file systems
The following /usr/bin utility is large file aware for ufs file systems:
df
The following /usr/lib/nfs utility is large file aware for ufs file systems:
rquotad
The following /usr/xpg4/bin utility is large file aware for ufs file systems:
df
The following /usr/sbin utilities are large file aware for ufs file systems:
clri dcopy edquota ff fsck
fsdb fsirand fstyp labelit lockfs
mkfs mount ncheck newfs quot
quota quotacheck quotaoff quotaon repquota
tunefs ufsdump ufsrestore umount
Large file safe utilities
A utility is called large file safe if it causes no data loss or corruption when it encounters a large file. A utility that is large file
safe is unable to process properly a large file, but returns an appropriate error.
The following /usr/bin utilities are large file safe:
audioconvert audioplay audiorecord comm diff
diff3 diffmk ed lp mail
mailcompat mailstats mailx pack pcat
red rmail sdiff unpack vi
view
The following /usr/xpg4/bin utilities are large file safe:
ed vi view
The following /usr/xpg6/bin utility is large file safe:
ed
The following /usr/sbin utilities are large file safe:
lpfilter lpforms
The following /usr/ucb utilities are large file safe:
Mail lpr
The following /usr/lib utility is large file safe:
sendmail
SEE ALSO lf64(5), lfcompile(5), lfcompile64(5)SunOS 5.10 7 Nov 2003 largefile(5)