Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Executing commands with xargs Post 5373 by bmopal on Monday 13th of August 2001 04:05:04 PM
Old 08-13-2001
I had another thought:

echo "echo \"" > bmo.tmp.ux
cat bmo.sql >> bmo.tmp.ux
echo "\"" >> bmo.tmp.ux
chmod 700 bmo.tmp.ux
bmo.tmp.ux > bmo.tmp.sql
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Executing commands after I log off

Hi, guys ! I have at home a simple network. I have a server that shares the internet connection to my computer and another another computer which is located in another room. When I want to download something, I'd like to download directly on the server, without letting my computer on. The server... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Sergiu-IT
2 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Can Xargs execute multiple commands of evry input file

Hello , I am trying to print the footer of evry file in the given directory with xargs command like follows ls -1 | xargs -I {} gzcat {} | tail -1 now problem with this is only last file foooter is getting printed as " | tail -1 " is getting executed for the last file. I know this can... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: nilesrex
4 Replies

3. Red Hat

How commands are executing ?

Hi Folks, I have a small doubt, the binary commands under /bin and /sbin as well as other path binary files, if you peek deep into that, you can find the difference in the way of normal perl programming and some commands will be like binary files. how are the commands executing like the... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: gsiva
3 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Executing many commands at once

Hi, I want to run these two commands one after the other. awk 'BEGIN {OFS="\t"} {print $2}' sort -u rather than typing awk 'BEGIN {OFS="\t"} {print $2}' file1 > file2, then sort -u file2 > file3. Is it possible to run both commands on file1 then get output file3? Its kinda hard for... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: kylle345
5 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Executing commands

I need to execute a command to run my script several times with varying parameters perl ex.pl -b 130198 -e 130884 -c plot plot.txt 1_plot.txt perl ex.pl -b 1345 -e 1308 -c plot plot.txt 2_plot.txt perl ex.pl -b 1345567 -e 130898 -c plot plot.txt 3_plot.txt . . . 100's of excutions ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Lucky Ali
2 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Executing two commands in parallel

Hi, I am stuck into a situation where i want to execute a command in my shell script well along with a previous command in order to achieve something but i am not figuring out a way. here is a snippet: service management restart rm -rf lock.file in the above, if you see, i am trying to... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: sunrexstar
5 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Xargs: multiple commands to each argument

Hello. There is my one-liner to get subjects of potential spam mails sudo exiqgrep -bf "spamer@example.com" |cut -d' ' -f1 |xargs -I ~ sudo /usr/sbin/exim -Mvh ~ |grep 'Subject: ' I want to insert blank line after each iteration to make output more readable. I tried sudo exiqgrep -bf... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: urello
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Executing commands sequentially

Hello. I am new in shell script. Could anyone help me? I have un shell script. I need each command in it be sequentielly, when the first command ends the second starts. When the second ends et third starts, and so on Thanks in adavance (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: nurinolo
1 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Executing MQ commands in Perl

If you want to capture the output of any command, we then will be writing the system command in `` or qx. `` an qx works fine with all linux and windows system commands. But when I execute the below code.. it is displaying the output on the screen directly instead of storing to variable ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: giridhar276
3 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Piping commands using xargs

Need help in piping commands using xargs I have several .tar.gz files that I need to list the folder content in a subdirectory. For example, a.tar.gz b.tar.gz c.tar.gz The following command works great for each .tar.gz file but it's a pain to run the tar command for each file. tar -tf... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: april
11 Replies
xargs(1)						      General Commands Manual							  xargs(1)

Name
       xargs - construct argument list and execute command

Syntax
       xargs [flags] [ command [initial-arguments] ]

Description
       The command combines fixed initial-arguments with arguments read from standard input to execute a specified command one or more times.  The
       number of arguments read when a command is invoked and how they are combined is determined by the options specified.

       The specified command, (which can be a Shell file) is searched for using ones' $PATH specification.  If command is not specified, /bin/echo
       is used.

       Arguments  read	from  standard	input  are defined as contiguous strings of characters delimited by one or more blanks, tabs, or newlines;
       empty lines are always discarded.  Blanks and tabs can be embedded as part of an argument if they contain an escape character  or  if  they
       are  quoted.   Characters enclosed in quotes (single or double) are taken literally, and the delimiting quotes are removed; a backslash ()
       escapes the next character.

Options
       Each argument list begins with the initial-arguments, followed by arguments read from standard input, with the exception of the -i  option.
       See the description of the -i option for more information.

       The  options -i, -l, and -n determine how arguments are selected when each command is invoked.  If none of these options are specified, the
       initial-arguments are followed by arguments read continuously from standard input until the internal buffer is full; then, command executes
       with  the accumulated arguments.  This process repeats until no arguments exist.  When conflicts arise, such as the -l option used with the
       -n, the last option has precedence. The options values are as follows:

       -lnumber
	     Execute command for each non-empty number lines of arguments from standard input.	When command is invoked for the final time, it has
	     fewer  lines  of  arguments if fewer than a specified number remain.  A line ends with the first newline unless the last character of
	     the line is a blank or a tab; a trailing blank or tab signals continuation through the next non-empty line.   If  number  is  is  not
	     specified, the value 1 is assumed.  The option -x is forced.

       -ireplstr (Insert mode)
	     Execute  command for each line from standard input, taking the entire line as a single argument and inserting it in initial-arguments
	     for each occurrence of replstr.  A maximum of five arguments specified in initial-arguments can contain one  or  more  occurrence	of
	     replstr.	Blanks and tabs at the beginning of each line are discarded.  A constructed arguments cannot exceed 255 characters and the
	     option -x is a forced.  A {|} is assumed for replstr if not specified.

       -nnumber
	     Execute command using as many standard input arguments as possible, up to the specified number arguments  maximum.   Fewer  arguments
	     are used if their total size is greater than size characters, and when the last command is invoked, fewer number of arguments remain.
	     If the option -x is also include, each specified number of arguments must fit in the size limitation, or else xargs terminates execu-
	     tion.

       -t (Trace mode)
	     Echo the command and each constructed argument list to file descriptor 2 prior to their execution.

       -p (Prompt mode)
	     Asks  the user whether or not command should be executed each time command is invoked. Trace mode (-t) is turned on to print the com-
	     mand instance to be executed, followed by a ?... prompt.  A reply of y executes the command; any other response does not invoke  that
	     particular command.

       -x    Causes  the  command xargs to terminate if an argument list is greater than the specified size of characters; the option -x is forced
	     by the options -i and -l.	When the options -i, -l, or -n are included, the total length of all arguments must be within  the  speci-
	     fied size limit.

       -ssize
	     The maximum size of each argument list is set to size characters; size must be a positive integer less than or equal to 470. If -s is
	     not included, 470 is the default.	Note that the character count for size includes one extra character  for  each	argument  and  the
	     count of characters in the command name.

       -eeofstr
	     The  option  eofstr  is  taken  as the logical end-of-file string.  Underscore (_) is assumed for the logical EOF string if -e is not
	     specified.  The value -e without eofstr specified turns off the logical EOF string capability; the  underscore  is  taken	literally.
	     The command xargs reads standard input until either end-of-file or the logical EOF string is encountered.

       The command xargs terminates if it receives a return code of -1 from command or if it cannot execute command.  When command is a Shell pro-
       gram, it should explicitly exit with an appropriate value to avoid returning with -1.  See for more information.

Examples
       The following example moves all files from directory $1 to directory $2 and echoes the move command prior to executing it:

       ls $1 | xargs -i -t mv $1/{} $2/{}

       The following example combines the output of the parenthesized commands onto one line, which is then echoed to the end of file log:

       (logname; date; echo $0 $*) | xargs >>log

       In the next example, the user is prompted to specify which files in the current directory are to be archived.  The first  example  archives
       the files one at a time; the second example archives groups of files:

	 ls | xargs -p -l ar r arch

	 ls | xargs -p -l | xargs ar r arch

       The following example executes diff(1) with successive pairs of arguments originally typed as Shell arguments:

       echo $* | xargs -n2 diff

See Also
       sh(1).

																	  xargs(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:05 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy