I think he means
This works in the newer versions of the Korn shell like Korn93. Otherwise, Perderabo has posted examples of timing out a read by using coprocesses. Search the form on read timeout.
I want to prompt a user for input but I want it to timeout after a specified time if no response is given. I tried the sleep command but this does not work. I am using ksh.
Thanks. (10 Replies)
Hi All,
Is there any way to read the previous line in file reading ?
or
is there any way to read a line twice in KSH ?
thanks in advance !!
Srini (6 Replies)
I have a script that at some point will ask the interactive user a question:
#!/bin/ksh
echo "What is your access code?"
read ans
...
Sometimes this script is run by other scripts and there are no interactive users. The script then hangs on the "read" command, waiting for a user response... (5 Replies)
hello every one ,
this is my first participation in the forum , I hope it'll be a good start
within a script I would like to put some code to read i\p from standard i\p using read command if it reads Y it will terminate the script if it reads N it will continue execution , if no i\p is... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I have a KSH script which is kicking off an sql scripts as follows:
/usr/local/installs/instantclient_10_2/sqlplus -s username/password @$sql_path/sql_query.sql > $tmp_path/sql_query_results
The problem I have is that sometimes the 10g Oracle Database spits out an error saying... (4 Replies)
i'm writing some code to simulate the boot progress after power on
but when i try to read the 2nd sector from a floppy disk, this operation always fail with ah=0x80h which means timeout, how can i get over this problem?
my code would be like this:
$ cat boot.S
.code16
#define SETUPLEN 4... (0 Replies)
i'm writing some code to simulate the boot progress after power on
but when i try to read the 2nd sector from a floppy disk, this operation always fail with ah=0x80h which means timeout, how can i get over this problem?
my code would be like this:
$ cat boot.S
.code16
#define SETUPLEN 4... (0 Replies)
i'm writing some code to simulate the boot progress after power on
but when i try to read the 2nd sector from a floppy disk, this operation always fail with ah=0x80h which means timeout, how can i get over this problem?
my code would be like this:
$ cat boot.S
.code16
#define SETUPLEN 4... (0 Replies)
I probably read all the threads in almost all the forums for a solution to my need. I am a beginner in shell scripting and I dont have a perfect solution yet. Below is my code snippet.
idql -n $REPOSITORY_NAME.$cs -Udmadmin -P"" -R$DM_SCRIPTS/test.api > /dev/null 2>&1
if ; then
echo... (7 Replies)
I saw several thread for this issue but none addresses my issue.
I have tried read -t but the result is read bad options
My requirement is
1. Ask for input
2. If input = y or no input in 60 seconds
then continue processing
else
exit
fi
Kindly consider this urgent. (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: rprasad
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
ssl_ctx_get_timeout
SSL_CTX_set_timeout(3) OpenSSL SSL_CTX_set_timeout(3)NAME
SSL_CTX_set_timeout, SSL_CTX_get_timeout - manipulate timeout values for session caching
SYNOPSIS
#include <openssl/ssl.h>
long SSL_CTX_set_timeout(SSL_CTX *ctx, long t);
long SSL_CTX_get_timeout(SSL_CTX *ctx);
DESCRIPTION
SSL_CTX_set_timeout() sets the timeout for newly created sessions for ctx to t. The timeout value t must be given in seconds.
SSL_CTX_get_timeout() returns the currently set timeout value for ctx.
NOTES
Whenever a new session is created, it is assigned a maximum lifetime. This lifetime is specified by storing the creation time of the ses-
sion and the timeout value valid at this time. If the actual time is later than creation time plus timeout, the session is not reused.
Due to this realization, all sessions behave according to the timeout value valid at the time of the session negotiation. Changes of the
timeout value do not affect already established sessions.
The expiration time of a single session can be modified using the SSL_SESSION_get_time(3) family of functions.
Expired sessions are removed from the internal session cache, whenever SSL_CTX_flush_sessions(3) is called, either directly by the applica-
tion or automatically (see SSL_CTX_set_session_cache_mode(3))
The default value for session timeout is decided on a per protocol basis, see SSL_get_default_timeout(3). All currently supported proto-
cols have the same default timeout value of 300 seconds.
RETURN VALUES
SSL_CTX_set_timeout() returns the previously set timeout value.
SSL_CTX_get_timeout() returns the currently set timeout value.
SEE ALSO ssl(3), SSL_CTX_set_session_cache_mode(3), SSL_SESSION_get_time(3), SSL_CTX_flush_sessions(3), SSL_get_default_timeout(3)0.9.7a 2001-08-17 SSL_CTX_set_timeout(3)