I am installing 5.0.7 on an existing SCO network. The 2 other machines are using 5.0.5 and rcp works daily both ways between the 2 older machines.
However I cannot copy from either machine running 5.0.5 to the new 5.0.7 machine - "Permission Denied"
/etc/hosts is configured correctly... (4 Replies)
I'm trying to perform a rcp to a remote machine, but it keeps throwing up "LOGNAME: undefined variable" error. When I echo $LOGNAME, it comes up with my username. I have tried setting both the .rhosts and the .hosts.equiv file but to no avail (on both machines as well out of desperation!). Anyone... (8 Replies)
Hi,
Can anyone help me to trace who has made rcp to a HP-UX machine? Is there a file that keeps such records? I know ftp's are recorded in /var/adm/syslog but i only need rcp.Thanks... (0 Replies)
I am trying to set up RCP so root can access a few machines for file transfer. On the target machine, I have set up a .RHOSTS file that looks like:
10.33.1.59 root
However when I try to use RCP to copy a file to this machine, I get permission denied. Is it possible since another user is... (1 Reply)
i need some help on remote file copyieng.the queeries are:
1:>
m working on a machine say(abc) and i want to copy a directory(yes a directory) from a remote machine.
so what would be the command.
2:>
do in need to login on the source machine from where i want to copy a directory.
3:>
is it... (0 Replies)
Hi
I am using rcp command to copy the file one linux to other linux machine
I need the ouput log for this
like 1 file coied
size of the file
date stamp
my copy comman is
rcp 10.100.11.2:/u01/pr/uni.txt /u05/ryd/uni.txt
once this script run
i need to capture the... (3 Replies)
Hi,
When I try to use rcp I donīt recieve the file I try to fetch.
I donīt get any error message, it just execute and as far as I can tell doesnīt do anything.
I have no problem with using remsh to list the directory.
remsh 132.196.133.185 -l root ls
xdpyinfo: unable to open display... (7 Replies)
hi,
When i use RCP command to copy filr from a different servers, it is showing as connection refused???
ca anyone help me out???
thanks,
Arun Manas:b: (2 Replies)
Hi,
I need to rcp heavy files between 2 solaris 10/sparc M3000 computers. Currently theses 2 computers are linked via a switch/firewall and the rcp commands take a very long time, I have been told that this is because of the firewall (old one).
I asked my client to by a cross ethernet cable and... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: zionassedo
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
basename
DIRNAME(3) Linux Programmer's Manual DIRNAME(3)NAME
dirname, basename - Parse pathname components
SYNOPSIS
#include <libgen.h>
char *dirname(char *path);
char *basename(char *path);
DESCRIPTION
The functions dirname and basename break a null-terminated pathname string into directory and filename components. In the usual case,
dirname returns the string up to, but not including, the final '/', and basename returns the component following the final '/'. Trailing
'/' characters are not counted as part of the pathname.
If path does not contain a slash, dirname returns the string "." while basename returns a copy of path. If path is the string "/", then
both dirname and basename return the string "/". If path is a NULL pointer or points to an empty string, then both dirname and basename
return the string ".".
Concatenating the string returned by dirname, a "/", and the string returned by basename yields a complete pathname.
Both dirname and basename may modify the contents of path, so if you need to preserve the pathname string, copies should be passed to these
functions. Furthermore, dirname and basename may return pointers to statically allocated memory which may be overwritten by subsequent
calls.
The following list of examples (taken from SUSv2) shows the strings returned by dirname and basename for different paths:
path dirname basename
"/usr/lib" "/usr" "lib"
"/usr/" "/" "usr"
"usr" "." "usr"
"/" "/" "/"
"." "." "."
".." "." ".."
EXAMPLE
char *dirc, *basec, *bname, *dname;
char *path = "/etc/passwd";
dirc = strdup(path);
basec = strdup(path);
dname = dirname(dirc);
bname = basename(basec);
printf("dirname=%s, basename=%s
", dname, bname);
free(dirc);
free(basec);
RETURN VALUE
Both dirname and basename return pointers to null-terminated strings.
BUGS
In versions of glibc up to and including 2.2.1, dirname does not correctly handle pathnames with trailing '/' characters, and generates a
segmentation violation if given a NULL argument.
CONFORMING TO
SUSv2
SEE ALSO dirname(1), basename(1),
GNU 2000-12-14 DIRNAME(3)