I have a script that askes users to enter in an oracle account and password, The information is displayed on the screen as they type it. Does anyone know how I can hide this output?
:confused: (1 Reply)
I need to suppress the output to the screen. I am appending to a file so do not need the output on the screen in the CLI environment.
eg.
cat $HOME/somefile >> $HOME/anotherfile
I am doing this a number of times with SQL output files so I can look at the finished file not on the screen in the... (3 Replies)
I need to put the following in a script:
echo $CCPDB will give me the db name on the screen. I need to use this name to tar cvfEh <newtarname> <dbname.exp>. I am not sure how to use the output that display on the screen in a script. I tried this
echo $CCPDB > file didn't work
Gundu (1 Reply)
I'm a newbie.
I'm having a problem at work with a script. What i'm trying to do is connect to a cisco switch from a sun station. After i run the script and telnet into the switch i don't get any output on the "xterm window" and all my commands from the script don't show up on the screen or on... (0 Replies)
hi,
is there anyway i can force a output of a command to the monitor.
for example
banner hello > /dev/console
it will show a hello in the console, so how do i make it to appear on the monitor screen when the console is been minmize. (6 Replies)
I want to check whether the variable read from the console is number or character , so i used echo $option|grep and checked the reuslt returned by grep cmd using $?
But since I use echo the value is getting printed in the screen , I want to supress the o/p. Can anyone suggest how this can be... (1 Reply)
Is it possible to split the screen and show, lets say a local directory listing on the left and a remote directory listing on the right with shell scripting?
I know it's usually done with curses/ncurses, but I'd really like to keep it simple as possible. I guess 'dialog' command could do it... (1 Reply)
Hey guys.....
Im new user for linux fedora 20.... i really need help ....... i have no idea why suddently when i turn on my laptop fedora turn to be black screen and ask me loging in , when i loging then nothing happen , it stay at the same screen... then i try to go to "with linux secure...,"... (12 Replies)
Hi All,
I am trying to out of shell script when i run it
like
sh /mypath/abc.sh
....a screen log should be generated whenever i input the values, when above the script prompt for values
Regards
Amarendra (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: amar1208
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
yapp
YAPP(1p) User Contributed Perl Documentation YAPP(1p)NAME
yapp - A perl frontend to the Parse::Yapp module
SYNOPSYS
yapp [options] grammar[.yp]
yapp -V
yapp -h
DESCRIPTION
yapp is a frontend to the Parse::Yapp module, which lets you compile Parse::Yapp grammar input files into Perl LALR(1) OO parser modules.
OPTIONS
Options, as of today, are all optionals :-)
-v Creates a file grammar.output describing your parser. It will show you a summary of conflicts, rules, the DFA (Deterministic Finite
Automaton) states and overall usage of the parser.
-s Create a standalone module in which the driver is included. Note that if you have more than one parser module called from a program,
to have it standalone, you need this option only for one of your parser module.
-n Disable source file line numbering embedded in your parser module. I don't know why one should need it, but it's there.
-m module
Gives your parser module the package name (or name space or module name or class name or whatever-you-call-it) of module. It defaults
to grammar
-o outfile
The compiled output file will be named outfile for your parser module. It defaults to grammar.pm or, if you specified the option -m
A::Module::Name (see below), to Name.pm.
-t filename
The -t filename option allows you to specify a file which should be used as template for generating the parser output. The default is
to use the internal template defined in Parse::Yapp::Output.pm. For how to write your own template and which substitutions are
available, have a look to the module Parse::Yapp::Output.pm : it should be obvious.
-b shebang
If you work on systems that understand so called shebangs, and your generated parser is directly an executable script, you can specifie
one with the -b option, ie:
yapp -b '/usr/local/bin/perl -w' -o myscript.pl myscript.yp
This will output a file called myscript.pl whose very first line is:
#!/usr/local/bin/perl -w
The argument is mandatory, but if you specify an empty string, the value of $Config{perlpath} will be used instead.
grammar
The input grammar file. If no suffix is given, and the file does not exists, an attempt to open the file with a suffix of .yp is tried
before exiting.
-V Display current version of Parse::Yapp and gracefully exits.
-h Display the usage screen.
BUGS
None known now :-)
AUTHOR
Francois Desarmenien <francois@fdesar.net>
COPYRIGHT
(c) Copyright 1998-1999 Francois Desarmenien, all rights reserved. See Parse::Yapp(3) for legal use and distribution rights
SEE ALSO Parse::Yapp(3)Perl(1)yacc(1)bison(1)perl v5.10.1 2001-02-11 YAPP(1p)