That's barely readable. Keep trying to upload the screenshots, it's not hard. click the 'manage attachments' button, click the various 'browse' buttons to find all your image files, then click the 'upload' button to the right of them to add them all. When it's finished, click 'close this window' in the upper right and finish your post in the main window.
Sorry I forgot to change from group cc to itt, although it didn't make any difference to avoid confusion. I reran the commands while all were in the same group.
Okay, your PATH is pretty screwed up:
By my count you've got "." in there four times, /usr/local/bin twice, /usr/local/pvi/release and /usr/local/pvi/release/bin thrice,
/usr/absoft/bin no less than nine times, and this really odd-looking one: /home/kit/bin
I hope you know what that is and it's not a rootkit.
Some shells may be more willing to put up with repeats in PATH than others.
[code]
/home/kit/antplot[kit@class antplot]$ !bash
bash -xv ./ccantplot cd # .bashrc
+ cd
Quote:
Originally Posted by vgersh99
What's this 'cd' doing and where is it coming from?
Do you have 'bash' somehow alias-ed to something doing 'cd' first?
That is part of the output of
. 'bash' isn't aliased to anything. 'bash' is just an executable in /bin.
I understand that 'cd' is part of the 'bash -xv' invocation. That's why I'm wondering where it/cd is coming from...
If somehow you're cd-ing before the the './ccantplot' is invoked by 'bash', you're no longer in the current (./) directory - but rather in in your $HOME directory...
See the point?
I need to find a file and print its contents
I am trying but it is not working
find -path /opt/app-root/src/.npm/_logs -type f -name "*.log" -print
Version
$ bash -version
GNU bash, version 4.4.12(1)-release (x86_64-pc-msys) (1 Reply)
As part of a bash the below line strips off a numerical prefix from directory 1 to search for in directory 2.
for file in /home/cmccabe/Desktop/comparison/missing/*.txt
do
file1=${file##*/} # Strip off directory
getprefix=${file1%%_*.txt}
... (5 Replies)
So, I made a script beginning with #!/bin/bash on gedit.
And I double clicked it to run in terminal and I end up with "The child process exited normally with status 127" and "command not found".
If I run the same script from the terminal as "tcsh (script name)" it runs just fine.
If I... (8 Replies)
As I stated in a previous thread - I'm a newbie to Unix/Linux and programming. I'm trying to learn the basics on my own using a couple books and the exercises provided inside.
I've reached an exercise that has me stumped. I need to write a bash script that will will read in a file and print the... (11 Replies)
Hello,
When i run a bash script on ubuntu i get this message..
#!/bin/bash cannot find file or directory...
Can anibody help me with this, because the file actually exists....
Is there any extra configuration to be made? (5 Replies)
Greetings!
I love the power and control offered by BASH but detest its syntax! Is there some alternative *nix shell language? (other than TCSH)
Or maybe a wrapper that affords the use of BASH commands via an easier syntax?
I considered creating a complicated system of aliases to... (8 Replies)
Hi,
I need to find tcsh shell version info on several boxes.
I made a script and running on boxes through SSH.
This is what i am doing :
echo /bin/tcsh -c 'echo $version' | ssh "box name"
but i dont see anything.
if i run /bin/tcsh -c 'echo $version' on ocal machine i see the... (2 Replies)
So I am new to unix, and actually anything outside drag and drop with the mouse (been learning for about a week so far) . I have been using the foreach command in tcsh because I am working on a group of files. Basically what I need is to insert part of the filename as the first line in the file.... (0 Replies)
In bash, I can match the ' character in a substition involving the line ending symbol $, easily.
In tcsh I ran into a problem.
Code:
sed "s/$/'/g" filename
sed "s/$/'/g" < filename
sed -e "s/$/'/g" filename
Unmatched '.
Where can I find out why this is the case? (2 Replies)