7 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers
Hi All,
We've a VDI infrastructure in AWS (AWS workspaces) and we're planning to automate the process of provisioning workspaces. Instead of going to GUI console, and launching workspaces by selecting individual users is little time consuming. Thus, I want to create them in bunches from AWS CLI... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: arun_adm
6 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have 80 large files, from which I want to get a specific value to run a Bash script. Firstly, I want to get the part of a file which contains this:
Name =A
xxxxxx
yyyyyy
zzzzzz
aaaaaa
bbbbbb
Value = 57
This is necessary because in a file there are written more lines which... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: wenclu
6 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have a string assinged to a varaible as below.
FILE=/var/adm/message
If $FILE is the value where it stores the path of message file.
I would like to extract the location of the file message as below
LOCATION=/var/adm
FILE may have value like /var/adm/xxxx/message
... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: raghu.amilineni
2 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi there,
I am lil confused with the following issue.
I have a File, which has the following header: IMSHRATE_043008_101016
a sample detailed record is :9820101 A982005000CAVG030108000000000000010169000MAR 2008
9820102 MAR 2008 D030108
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: cmaroju
1 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I need to extract only a part of the filenames of some files. The files are named this way :
.tap_profile_SIT02
I want the "SIT02" part, which is not the same for each file. I was able to get what I want with bash, but not with ksh. Here is the command I used in bash :
find... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: flame_eagle
8 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
why we use strcpy and strcat in KSH program?? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: debasis.mishra
1 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Ok well this isn't homework or classwork, I have been done with school for many years. I offered to help my co-worker who's daughter needs help. I didn't realize I had got rid of all of my UNIX books until after I agreed to help. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: penguin123
3 Replies
Config::Model::models::Debian::Dpkg::Source(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Config::Model::models::Debian::Dpkg::Source(3pm)
NAME
Config::Model::models::Debian::Dpkg::Source - Configuration class Debian::Dpkg::Source
VERSION
version 2.021
DESCRIPTION
Configuration classes used by Config::Model
Model of files found under debian/source directory. See dpkg-source for details.
Elements
format - source package format
Specifies the format of the source package. A missing format implies a '1.0' source format.Mandatory. Type enum. choice: '1.0', '2.0', '3.0
(native)', '3.0 (quilt)', '3.0 (custom)', '3.0 (git)', '3.0 (bzr)'.
Here are some explanations on the possible values:
'1.0'
A source package in this format consists either of a .orig.tar.gz associated to a .diff.gz or a single .tar.gz (in that case the
package is said to be native).
'2.0'
was the first specification of a new-generation source package format. This format is not recommended for wide-spread usage, the format
"3.0 (quilt)" replaces it.
'3.0 (bzr)'
This format is experimental. It generates a single tarball containing the bzr repository.
'3.0 (custom)'
This format is particular. It doesn't represent a real source package format but can be used to create source packages with arbitrary
files.
'3.0 (git)'
This format is experimental. A source package in this format consists of a single bundle of a git repository .git to hold the source of
a package. There may also be a .git shallow file listing revisions for a shallow git clone.
'3.0 (native)'
extension of the native package format as defined in the 1.0 format.
'3.0 (quilt)'
A source package in this format contains at least an original tarball (.orig.tar.ext where ext can be gz, bz2, lzma and xz) and a
debian tarball (.debian.tar.ext). It can also contain additional original tarballs (.orig-component.tar.ext).
options
Source options as described in dpkg-sourceOptional. Type node.
SEE ALSO
o cme
o Config::Model::models::Debian::Dpkg::Source::Options
AUTHOR
Dominique Dumont
COPYRIGHT
2010,2011 Dominique Dumont
LICENSE
LGPL2
perl v5.14.2 2012-11-09 Config::Model::models::Debian::Dpkg::Source(3pm)