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1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello Team,
I need information on how to read one row at time using shell script. For example i have below data.
service-description servername warning critical mountpoint
disk-usage-tmp generic-service test1 80 90 /tmp
disk-usage-var ... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: ghpradeep
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2. IP Networking
Hi,
When can the read() system call gives timeout error when the same connection worked for writing data to the other end of the socket, while the next call with read() gives timeout error?
Can anyone please explain when this kind of situation appears?
Thanks,
Sanzee (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sanzee007
2 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello All,
I have a file like below....
dn: cn=user1,ou=org,o=org
cn=user1
uid=user1
cn=user2,ou=org,o=org
cn=user2
uid=user2
cn=user3,ou=org,o=org
cn=user3
cn=user33
uid=user3
cn=user4,ou=org,o=org
cn=user4
uid=user4 (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: s_linux
6 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello community,
what I need to do is read 2 rows at time from a file. I have this simple solution:
File to read:
LINE1
LINE2
LINE3
LINE4
LINE5
LINE6
LINE7
LINE8Read routine:#!/bin/ksh
sed '1,3d' /out.txt | while read line; do
read line2
echo $line $line2
doneResult:LINE1... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Lord Spectre
5 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi
I am new to writing script and want to use a Bash Piped while-read and read from user input.
if something happens on server.log then do while loop or if something happend on user input then do while loop.
Pseudocode something like:
tail -n 3 -f server.log | while read serverline || read... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: MyMorris
8 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
hi,
how to check the file latest read time.. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: rsivasan
2 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi friends,
It's urgent. I am facing a problem. I want to read two files at a time, i mean line by line.
My requirement is like , pls here find below
while read line1fromfile1;do
echo $line1fromfile1|
.. echo $line1fromfile2---How i will do this
done< file 1
can anyone... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: pritish.sas
5 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello
I'm stuck trying to solve this KSH issue and I'm hoping someone out there can offer some suggestions.
I want to read lots of large .gz files one line at a time in order to compare its Error entries with a list of known errors. I can't simply do "foreach ERROR do gzcat *.gz |grep... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: dayscripter
2 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All,
Please advise . Welcome more suggestions.
For examples, I have 1000 file with prefix x??? In fact, I want to convert them to x???.txt with max 10 files at a time. As such, I will need to call another script to read from those 10 *txt files and sleep 5000 to convert the next 10 again.... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: cedrichiu
10 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
There are two scripts. The second script is called from the first one. These will create two processes on unix. In the second script, there is a read statement in the while loop.
Under unexpected conditions, at the time of reading response from the user, if the terminal hungup happens,... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pkusumam
1 Replies
rc.config(4) Kernel Interfaces Manual rc.config(4)
NAME
rc.config, rc.config.d - files containing system configuration information
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
The system configuration used at startup is contained in files within the directory The file sources all of the files within and and
exports their contents to the environment.
/etc/rc.config
The file is a script that sources all of the scripts, and also sources To read the configuration definitions, only this file need be
sourced. This file is sourced by whenever it is run, such as when the command is run to transition between run states. Each file that
exists in is sourced, without regard to which startup scripts are to be executed.
/etc/rc.config.d
The configuration information is structured as a directory of files, rather than as a single file containing the same information. This
allows developers to create and manage their own configuration files here, without the complications of shared ownership and access of a
common file.
/etc/rc.config.d/* Files
This is where files containing configuration variable assignments are located.
Configuration scripts must be written to be read by the POSIX shell, and not the Bourne shell, or In some cases, these files must also be
read and possibly modified by control scripts or the sam program. See sd(4) and sam(1M). For this reason, each variable definition must
appear on a separate line, with the syntax:
No trailing comments may appear on a variable definition line. Comment statements must be on separate lines, with the comment character in
column one. This example shows the required syntax for configuration files:
Configuration variables may be declared as array parameters when describing multiple instances of the variable configuration. For example,
a system may contain two network interfaces, each having a unique IP address and subnet mask (see ifconfig(1M)). An example of such a dec-
laration is as follows:
Note that there must be no requirements on the order of the files sourced. This means configuration files must not refer to variables
defined in other configuration files, since there is no guarantee that the variable being referenced is currently defined. There is no
protection against environment variable namespace collision in these configuration files. Programmers must take care to avoid such prob-
lems.
/etc/TIMEZONE
The file contains the definition of the environment variable. This file is required by POSIX. It is sourced by at the same time the files
are sourced.
SEE ALSO
rc(1M).
rc.config(4)