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Search: Posts Made By: nitrobass24
2,132,834
Posted By ssk
sort -u filename > filename.new
sort -u filename > filename.new
3,371
Posted By elixir_sinari
You could try: $ STRING1='ABC XYZ' $...
You could try:
$ STRING1='ABC XYZ'
$ NEWVAR=STRING1
$ eval 'echo NEWVAR IS ACTUALLY "$'$NEWVAR'"'
NEWVAR IS ACTUALLY ABC XYZ
as a workaround. But, if I were you, I would change my shell to...
3,371
Posted By Don Cragun
Quoting from The New Kornshell Command and...
Quoting from The New Kornshell Command and Programming Language by Bolsky and Korn (copyright 1995):


There is probably a way to get replace the use of name references using eval, but I have...
3,835
Posted By guruprasadpr
Hi Adding a backslash WORDS2=`echo...
Hi
Adding a backslash

WORDS2=`echo $WORDS | sed 's/[!-/:-@[-\`{-~]/ /g'`

Guru.
1,585
Posted By elixir_sinari
Does this work in your ksh? if (( (FTPCOUNT!=0)...
Does this work in your ksh?
if (( (FTPCOUNT!=0) || (RCPCOUNT!=0) ))
If not, try:
if [ $FTPCOUNT -ne 0 -o $RCPCOUNT -ne 0 ]
3,971
Posted By Don Cragun
[/quote]That almost works. You don't need (or...
[/quote]That almost works. You don't need (or want) the asterisk in a call to gsub(). It matches every string of zero or more matches, which in this case effectively adds a space before any of the...
Forum: Red Hat 07-24-2012
7,493
Posted By admin_xor
C-shell has a built-in nohup command. ...
C-shell has a built-in nohup command.


[unixuser@blue ~]$ csh
[unixuser@blue ~]$ nohup
nohup: Can't from terminal.
[unixuser@blue ~]$ which nohup
nohup: shell built-in command.

...
2,279
Posted By alister
You don't need to call pax 70k times, i.e. once...
You don't need to call pax 70k times, i.e. once per file. You invoke pax once and it reads the list of files to copy from stdin. Using your variable names:
pax -rw "$DESTDIR" < "$TEMPFILE"

That...
6,586
Posted By alister
Actually, that will descend into an mvfs...
Actually, that will descend into an mvfs filesystem (for some reason, I thought there was another -prune in the mvfs expression). What you want is something like the following (untested):
find /...
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