10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers
HI Team -
I'm running into a weird issue when trying to call a .ksh script.
In my shell script, I'm using the following command to call my environment file:
cd /hypbin/test
./_env.ksh
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2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hey guys,
Suppose i run passwd via bash shell. It is a suid program, which temporarily runs as root(owner) and modifies the user entries.
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3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Guys,
I have used Perl scripting to convert XLSX file to TXT file using Perl module Spreadsheet::XLSX.
I processed one XLSX file having one column and 65k rows of data .
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Discussion started by: Rajk459
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4. Shell Programming and Scripting
I run this
#!/bin/bash
cron=$(ps aux | grep crond | grep -v grep | grep -o crond| uniq)
echo "cron :$cron:"
if ; then
echo "OK: crond service running fine on `hostname`"
exit 2
else
echo "CRITICAL: crond service not running on `hostname`"
exit 0... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: anil510
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5. AIX
We recently upgraded 2 of our AIX 6.1 servers from TL4 to TL5.
Both servers are on the same p7 780 frame, installed at the same time from the same image. Both servers are mounting the same nfs share after reboot what worked perfectly fine until the upgrade.
Since the patching, one of the two... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: zxmaus
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6. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have a file called merge2.t:
Hi
Hello how are you.
</Endtag> <New> I am fine.</New>
This is a test.
freelong
how
Here is the SED:
sed -n ' /<\/Endtag>/ !{
H
}
/<\/Endtag>/ {
x
p
} (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: freelong
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7. HP-UX
Hello all,
Normally I'm pretty comfortable with crontab, changing and updating (done it many-a-time).
But in the last two days I've been pulling my hair out over the following...
Details of OS:
HP-UX mdirect B.11.23 U ia64 2587410573 unlimited-user license
Issue:
Execute a script (very... (3 Replies)
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8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi All,
a bit of a weird one here. I'm trying to pass a variable into an awk command, and I keep getting an error.
I have the line
nawk -F"," -v red=$random_variable '{print $red}' $w_dir/$file_name > $w_dir/${column_name}
that keeps failing with the error
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9. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
OK so i have a virtual server where i store files. one day i tied to login and i couldn't connect to my sevrer so i logged into my ssh and checked to see if the process was running. proftp was not. I then tried to start it manually and got the error below. Now the domain listed there is not mine... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: thirddegreekris
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10. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
hey all, I guess I'm the newbie on these boards, anyways, hello.
I recently became the admin for a few Solaris machines, and I have recently discovered an issue with SSH on one of my machines.
On one of my machines, I can only SSH into the machine as root. I have tried the newest version... (6 Replies)
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share(1M) share(1M)
NAME
share - make local resource available for mounting by remote systems
SYNOPSIS
share [-F FSType] [-o specific_options] [-d description] [pathname]
The share command exports, or makes a resource available for mounting, through a remote file system of type FSType. If the option -F FSType
is omitted, the first file system type listed in /etc/dfs/fstypes is used as default. For a description of NFS specific options, see
share_nfs(1M). pathname is the pathname of the directory to be shared. When invoked with no arguments, share displays all shared file sys-
tems.
-F FSType
Specify the filesystem type.
-o specific_options
The specific_options are used to control access of the shared resource. (See share_nfs(1M) for the NFS specific options.) They may be
any of the following:
rw
pathname is shared read/write to all clients. This is also the default behavior.
rw=client[:client]...
pathname is shared read/write only to the listed clients. No other systems can access pathname.
ro
pathname is shared read-only to all clients.
ro=client[:client]...
pathname is shared read-only only to the listed clients. No other systems can access pathname.
Separate multiple options with commas. Separate multiple operands for an option with colons. See .
-d description
The -d flag may be used to provide a description of the resource being shared.
Example 1: Sharing a Read-Only Filesystem
This line will share the /disk file system read-only at boot time.
share -F nfs -o ro /disk
Example 2: Invoking Multiple Options
The following command shares the filesystem /export/manuals, with members of the netgroup having read-only access and users on the speci-
fied host having read-write access.
share -F nfs -o ro=netgroup_name,rw=host1:host2:host3 /export/manuals
/etc/dfs/dfstab
list of share commands to be executed at boot time
/etc/dfs/fstypes
list of file system types, NFS by default
/etc/dfs/sharetab
system record of shared file systems
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWcsu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
mountd(1M), nfsd(1M), share_nfs(1M), shareall(1M), unshare(1M), attributes(5)
Export (old terminology): file system sharing used to be called exporting on SunOS 4.x, so the share command used to be invoked as
exportfs(1B) or /usr/sbin/exportfs.
If share commands are invoked multiple times on the same filesystem, the last share invocation supersedes the previous--the options set by
the last share command replace the old options. For example, if read-write permission was given to usera on /somefs, then to give read-
write permission also to userb on /somefs:
example% share -F nfs -o rw=usera:userb /somefs
This behavior is not limited to sharing the root filesystem, but applies to all filesystems.
9 Dec 2004 share(1M)