12-10-2004
8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
a silly question but is there a way to display individual ascii values
say if i type 65 it will display the letter instead?
thanks fo any help. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: melkor
3 Replies
2. Solaris
Hi ,,,,
I have move an oracle db from old server to a new server ( solaris 5.9 is the operating system ) my problem is that to new server the datafile ( *.dbf ) are in a different path .....
example
old : /export/home/data/blobs ...........
new /oracle/data/blobs.......
how i can... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: tt155
3 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi gurus,
I have a file in unix with ascii values. I need to convert all the ascii values in the file to ascii characters. File contains nearly 20000 records with ascii values. (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: sandeeppvk
10 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
I am new to shell scripting.
I have dbf file and I need to convert it into csv file.
OR, can i read the fields from a .dbf file and OR seprate the records in dbf file and put into .csv or txt.
Actually in the .dbf files I am getting , the numbers of fields may vary in very record and... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: gauara
6 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Dear All,
Please help in this subject..
my requirement is list the files in directory and out of that list make the different set and each should set contains 10 files and assign to variable and start zipping in background. pick the second set files and same to be repeat the commands parallel.
i... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: nmadhuhb
3 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
This is not a valid command, but you get the idea: "cp *1.dbf *2.dbf"
I need to change the 1 to 2 on many file names.
Using csh. Any ideas?
MM (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: MartMX
3 Replies
7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Okay, I search around and couldn't find what I needed, so here goes:
I have a series of ArcGIS point shapefiles. If I open them in Excel I can save as an Excel or text file and get a 2 column list:
POINTID | GRID_CODE
1 | 2.34234
2 | 4.3425
3 | 6.32456
etc...
The problem is that I... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jbrandt1979
3 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All,
I have an ascii file in which few columns are having hex values which i need to convert into ascii. Kindly suggest me what command can be used in unix shell scripting?
Thanks in Advance (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: HemaV
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
smd-server
smd-server(1) Sync Mail Dir (smd) documentation smd-server(1)
NAME
smd-server - sends diffs and mails to smd-client
SYNOPSIS
smd-server [--exclude glob] [-v|--verbose] [-d|--dry-run]
[--get-mddiff-cmdline] [--stop-after-diff]
[--override-db dbf] [--dump-stdin tgt] endpoint mailboxes
DESCRIPTION
smd-server needs to know a name (endpoint) for the client (that must not be used by others) and a list of mailboxes (directories).
smd-server first calls mddiff(1), then prints on stdout the generated diff. It then accepts from stdin a small set of commands a client may
issue to request a file (or parts of it, like the header).
smd-server is in charge of committing the db file used by mddiff(1) in case the client communicates a successful sync.
OPTIONS
-v --verbose
Increase program verbosity (printed on stderr)
-d --dry-run
Do not perform any action for real
-n --no-delete
Do not track deleted files
--exclude glob
Exclude paths matching glob
--override-db dbf
Use dbf as the db-file
--get-mddiff-cmdline
Print the command line used for mddiff and then exist
--stop-after-diff
Send the actions to the other endpoint and exit. If used in conjunction with --override-db, dbf is removed just before exiting
--dump-stdin tgt
Dump standard input to tgt and exit
NOTES
smd-server is a low level utility. You should use higher level tools like smd-pull(1) and smd-push(1)
SEE ALSO
mddiff(1), smd-client(1), smd-pull(1), smd-push(1)
AUTHOR
Enrico Tassi <gares@fettunta.org>
11 June 2012 smd-server(1)