8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have the following files
1.txt
a 10
b 11
c 12
d 13
e 14
f 15
g 16
h 17
i 18
j 19
k 20
2.txt
a 21
b 22 (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: jacobs.smith
15 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello
Any Unix programm can help me to solve thsi issue:
I have 2 venn digrams please checke the attached file for pictures of venn diagram for eg red is A yellow is B and green is C..Please see attached file for Venn diagrams
In one .....
I have 3 data set A , B and C
Venn diagram... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: manigrover
0 Replies
3. Hardware
Hi - we are looking for a (hopefully free/opensource) solution for diagramming our rack/hardware configuration. the rack solution seems easier to find than the hardware piece. i.e. on our IBM 770 with two CEC's, a method of noting what hardware points to what... for example, on the primary CEC,... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: TinWalrus
0 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I would like to develop a script which parses the log file and generates a flow diagram ( graphical display ).
We have an application, for understanding the sequence of functions call made, we have an debug line at "ENTRY/EXIT" of function. I have a small log parsing script which grep the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ennstate
2 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Experts, we do have a shell script for Unix Solaris, which will kill all the process manullay, it used to work in my previous env, but now it is throwing this error.. could some one please help me to resolve it
This is how we execute the script (and this is the requirement) ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: jonnyvic
2 Replies
6. Programming
Hi,
i need to find the process name using the process id in C. This has to be done in HP, AIX, Solaris & Linux??
How can this be done? Is there any common solution to all platforms?
On linux i have heard that /proc/<pid>/cmdline can be used. Is there a structure available to read this?
... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: molu
3 Replies
7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Ok heres the situation,
We use Solaris 8 at work with Sybase for the db. I need to be able to easily create visual diagrams of some of our more complex systems. I've been using Visio which is such a manual process and takes a while.
I was thinking maybe using Visio somehow in conjunction... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: fusion99
0 Replies
8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Can anybody help me in finding out a solution for the problem below?
When we write .unix or .sh files in windows OS and port them to Unix platforms there is a character ^M inserted at the end of each line of the script file.
During ftp porting I set the transfer mode as ASCII for the script... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: tamilselvi
7 Replies
TPSD(1) General Commands Manual TPSD(1)
NAME
tpsd - Tool for Process Structure Diagrams
SYNOPSIS
tpsd [options] [diagram]
DESCRIPTION
tpsd is an X11/Motif based graphical editor for drawing process structure diagrams. Diagrams can be loaded from and stored to a file. It
can print diagrams to a PostScript printer or save as PostScript to a file.
tpsd is part of The Toolkit for Conceptual Modeling (TCM).
ARGUMENTS
You can call tpsd with a single diagram name as argument. If this argument is an existing file then tpsd tries to load a diagram from it.
If it does not exist, a new diagram is created with the argument as diagram name. tpsd files should have suffix '*.psd'.
Without a diagram argument, tpsd creates a new empty process structure diagram with the name 'untitled.psd'.
In addition to the standard X11 toolkit options (see X11(7)) tpsd accepts the options listed below:
-drawing widthxheight
Create a drawing area of width pixels wide and height pixels high.
-help Write all available options to standard output and quit.
-maxdrawing widthxheight
The drawing area can not be larger than width pixels wide and height pixels high.
-priv_cmap
Start the editor with a private colormap.
-projdir directory
Set the project directory (current working directory) to directory.
-toEPS [file.eps]
Generate EPS (to file.eps or stdout when no file name was given) and quit.
-toFig [file.fig] [-latex]
Generate Fig format (to file.fig or stdout when no file name was given and quit. When the -latex option is given, LaTeX fonts are
generated, otherwise normal PostScript fonts are generated. The Fig format can be read by xfig(1) and fig2dev(1).
-toPNG file.png
Generate PNG format to file.png and quit.
-toPS [file.ps]
Generate PostScript (to file.ps or stdout when no file name was given) and quit.
-version
Write the TCM version to standard output and quit.
ENVIRONMENT
The TCM_HOME environment variable should be the directory where the TCM files are installed.
PATH Should include $TCM_HOME/bin
MANPATH
Should include $TCM_HOME/man
PRINTER
Name of the default printer that is used by tpsd.
LD_LIBRARY_PATH
Should include $TCM_HOME/lib when the distribution contains shared object libraries in $TCM_HOME/lib.
FILES
The following relative files are relative to $TCM_HOME.
bin/tpsd
the process structure diagram editor.
bin/psf
a program to filter PostScript output.
lib/banner.ps
PostScript banner page that can be used when the printer does not print a banner page.
lib/help/*
The help directory contains a collection of text files for the on-line help.
lib/TCM
X Resources (the same as the ones that are built-in). You can customize the fonts and colors by setting resources in your X
defaults database. Each string of the form ``TCM.resource:definition'' sets a resource.
/tmp/tcmXXXXXX
Pseudo random temporary file, for PostScript output.
lib/tcm.conf
TCM editor configuration file. This file contains values for some of the editor defaults like the page size, the default fonts etc.
This file is read by each editor upon startup.
$HOME/.tcmrc
Each user of TCM can override some of the options of tcm.conf by its own configuration file, installed in $HOME/.tcmrc.
SEE ALSO
Frank Dehne, Roel Wieringa and Henk van de Zandschulp -- TCM (Toolkit for Conceptual Modeling), User's Guide and Reference. This document
is available as PostScript and HTML in $TCM_HOME/doc or as HTML via the URL http://www.cs.utwente.nl/~tcm/tcm-usersguide.html.
tcm(1), X11(7), xfig(1), fig2dev(1)
AUTHOR
Frank Dehne (frank@cs.vu.nl).
BUGS
Please send bug reports to tcm@cs.utwente.nl.
9 January 2000 TPSD(1)