I am on AIX 5.1
If I have a crontab that looks like this
01 1 * * 6
What does the 6 mean ? if the * means that everyday it should run then why would the 6th day be signified ? Shouldn't it be a * also?
Thanks (1 Reply)
I have a tab delimited file with many lines, one for each record.
each line is tab delimited with a tab before the first data field, a tab between each data field, and a tab after the last data field before it moves onto the next line.
I need to remove only the preceeding tab before the first... (2 Replies)
When formatting a script let's say for instance the following:
case ${choice} in
1)
vi ${tmp1}.tmp
# overwrite the tmp1 var with any user changes
cp ${tmp1}.tmp ${tmp1}
;;
... (2 Replies)
Hi People,
Does gvim latest versions support tabs. I would like to open different files in tabs rather than new windows or split windows. I would like to whether the current version supports it, if it doesn't then how to add such feature.
Thanks,
:) (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file that has too many tabs between columns. I cannot get the tabs out. Basically the tab between column 1 and 2 are fine but between 2/3, 3/4 etc are like 5 tabs. How do I get rid of these 5 tabs so its just 1 tab.
thanks (3 Replies)
Hi Guys
i current use Kcosole i have this liitle code that changes the tilte to the current directory that i am in
# Set the terminal title to pwd
case $TERM in
xterm*)
precmd() {print -Pn "\e]0;%~ \a"}
;;
esac
in Kconsole you can have... (0 Replies)
I am trying to get this to display vertically like in a table but it keeps jumping to a new line
dev=$(df -h | grep ^/dev | cut -d " " -f1)
dev1=$(df -h | grep ^/dev | cut -f 2 -d "%")
dev2=$(df -h | grep ^/dev | cut -f 14-16 -d " ")
dev3=$(df -h | grep ^/dev | cut -f 18-20 -d " ")... (1 Reply)
I want to know how can I remove all the tabs (\t) from a tab delimited file. In my file some of the rows only contain one column and rest are unoccupied but the tabs are there. When I performed some regular expressions to do substitutions like:
%s/\t/\/\/ /ig
all the hidden tabs are converted... (4 Replies)
Hi Everybody! First post! Totally noobie.
I'm using the terminal to read a poorly formatted book.
The text file contains, in the middle of paragraphs, hyphenation to split words that are supposed to be on multiple pages. It looks ve -- ry much like this.
I was hoping to use grep -v " -- "... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: AxeHandle
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT LINUX
bzexe
BZEXE(1) General Commands Manual BZEXE(1)NAME
bzexe - compress executable files in place
SYNOPSIS
bzexe [ name ... ]
DESCRIPTION
The bzexe utility allows you to compress executables in place and have them automatically uncompress and execute when you run them (at a
penalty in performance). For example if you execute ``bzexe /bin/cat'' it will create the following two files:
-r-xr-xr-x 1 root bin 9644 Feb 11 11:16 /bin/cat
-r-xr-xr-x 1 bin bin 24576 Nov 23 13:21 /bin/cat~
/bin/cat~ is the original file and /bin/cat is the self-uncompressing executable file. You can remove /bin/cat~ once you are sure that
/bin/cat works properly.
This utility is most useful on systems with very small disks.
OPTIONS -d Decompress the given executables instead of compressing them.
SEE ALSO bzip2(1), znew(1), zmore(1), zcmp(1), zforce(1)CAVEATS
The compressed executable is a shell script. This may create some security holes. In particular, the compressed executable relies on the
PATH environment variable to find gzip and some other utilities (tail, chmod, ln, sleep).
BUGS
bzexe attempts to retain the original file attributes on the compressed executable, but you may have to fix them manually in some cases,
using chmod or chown.
BZEXE(1)