How to catch the exception


 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers How to catch the exception
# 1  
Old 02-08-2007
Question How to catch the exception

Dear friends,

I am transferring some files to a windows system from Unix m/c thru FTP Script given below.
echo "open $host
quote USER $userid
quote PASS $pwd
$verbose
$type
cd $dir
bin
put $file
close
quit"|$ftp -n

While transferring, I am getting "Connection refused." I have scheduled this script in crontab and writing logs to a file.

I want to check whether the files are transferred successfully or not by writing the log.

Could any one help me on this.

Regards,
Vijayakumar.PC Smilie
 
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Monitor logs for exception and if exception come then sent an email

Hi Folks, please advise , I have logs generated on unix machine at location /ops/opt/aaa/bvg.log , now sometimes there come exception in these logs also, so I want to write such a script such that it should continuously monitor these logs and whenever any exception comes that is it try to find... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: tuntun27272727
3 Replies

2. AIX

Catch Zombie Process

Hi All, Anyone have any shell script to capture the zombie process, as according to the support they need the real time zombie PID, they only provide the kdb (0) > p* |grep -i defunct (0) > p * | grep <hex pid> But this is doesn't seem easy to catch the zombie as it is not always... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ckwan
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

catch the output of the URL

Hi all, anybody can help me in this? how to catch the output of the URL in scripting. exmple: if i give the URL: https://www.unix.com/shell-programming-scripting/155750-use-sed.html#post302503291 then output should be in onefile newfile.txt thanks in advance.. (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: rajesh_pola
6 Replies

4. Programming

help with C try catch

can someone give me an example of try catch in C, everytime i do it under the main, i get some try undeclared error, and dont know how to fix it... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: omega666
3 Replies

5. Programming

Catch ctrl+d in C

Hello, I am programming some kind of shell in special distribution of Linux. My trouble comes with programming the sort function. It should work the same like in the standard shell. When you terminate input, there's need to put End Of Transmission character, which is CTRL+D. But I am not able to... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: samciz
2 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Catch a PL/SQL exception in ksh file

Hi all Im trying to call a PL SQl block from a ksh file like this : sqlplus -s $DB_USERID/$DB_PASSWD@$DB_NAME<<eof whenever SQLERROR exit 1 var varError VARCHAR2(200); exec ODAS_BATCH_JOBS_RETRIEVE.retrieve_user_info(:varError); eof If there is a error then varError will return a... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Sam123
1 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

catch unzip errors

Hi everybody, I'm new to linux world and I need your help!! I'm using vi to create a .sh script that process files moving them from a directory to another and unzipping a file. I need to catch errors while moving or unzipping files. For move command, I do: mv -f... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Laetitia
2 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to catch the exception on SFTP?

I just want to send files to remote machine via SFTP, my question is: how can I catch the exception when SFTP command error occur? for example: add a log when network interrupt on SFTP put(or failure on rename the remote file etc.). the shell run on linux. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: younggun
2 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to catch the output

Hi All, I have a shell script for ex- #bin/ksh sqlplus user/pass << EOF select x from y; EOF my question is can I store the value of x in a variable in unix program so that i can user that value in shell script..... additionally after catching the value i want to perform some... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: rpraharaj
4 Replies

10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

How to catch the rscyn errors?

Hi, In my code, I am running rsync, if any error comes, I have to wirte the error to temp file and I want to send this temp file content to specified email address, I am getting starnge outpout, can you pls help to solve this? My code is: tempfile=error.`date '+%m%d%Y_%H%M%SGMT'` rsync -az -e... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: redlotus72
3 Replies
Login or Register to Ask a Question
FTP-UPLOAD(1p)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					    FTP-UPLOAD(1p)

NAME
ftp-upload - batch transfer local files to an FTP server SYNOPSIS
ftp-upload [any-switch]... {[repeatable-switch]... file...}... DESCRIPTION
ftp-upload is used to send local files to an FTP server. It isn't interactive, it's meant to be used from scripts. It is disciplined about its exit value and it doesn't output informational messages by default. There are two kinds of switches. Initial switches have to appear before any filenames, they affect the session as a whole. Repeatable switches can appear interspersed with the file names, they affect the transfer of the files which appear after them on the command line. OPTIONS
Initial switches These have to be used before any file names listed on the command line. --debug Turn debugging on. --help Show the usage message and die. --ignore-quit-failure Don't complain or set a failure exit code just because the QUIT command fails. This can be necessary because some servers, in blatant disregard of RFC 959, close the command channel when you send them an ABOR command. -v, --verbose Print informational messages to stdout. --version Show the version number and exit. Initial switches which specify connection information These also have to be used before any file names listed on the command line. They specify the information used to set up the FTP connec- tion. --account account This specifies the account to be used when logging into the remote system. This is distinct from the user name used to log in. Few systems need this. There is no default. -h, --host host Specify the host to which to connect. There is no default, you have to specify this switch. --passive Force the use of passive (PASV) transfers. Passive transfers are required with some firewall configurations, but if you have such you'd do better to configure Net::FTP so that it knows when to use them (see Net::Config). If you need to use passive transfers with certain (broken) servers, however, this switch is your best bet. Alternatively, you can set $FTP_PASSIVE to 1 in the environment (see Net::FTP). --password pw This gives the password which will be used to login. The default is your email address. Note that you should not specify a real (secret) password this way, as on most systems anybody on the machine can see the arguments you pass to your commands. Use one of other password-setting switches instead. -s, --password-stdin This tells ftp-upload to read the password from standard input. No prompt will be printed, and a single line will be read. Most peo- ple will use this switch to specify the password. Eg, echo 3x9sjJJh | ftp-upload -sh $host -u $user $file Using echo this way is safe where the --password switch isn't if the echo command is built in to the shell. --password-fd fd This is like --password-stdin except that it reads the password from the file descriptor numbered fd. ftp-upload -h $host -u $user --password-fd=3 3<$pw_file $file -u, --user user Specify the user name to use when logging in. The default is "anonymous". Repeatable switches These switches can be used anywhere on the command line (except after the last file name). They affect the transfer of files listed after them. --as remote-name Normally a file is transferred using the same name it has locally. If you use this switch the next file transferred will be called remote-name on the other host instead. ftp-upload --host $host --as index.htm index.html -a, --ascii Perform transfers in ASCII mode. -b, --binary Perform transfers in binary mode. This is the default. -d, --dir dir Change directory to dir on the FTP server before continuing. You can use this multiple times between files, ftp-upload will chdir once for each time you specify it. Using ".." as the dir will cause an FTP "CDUP" to be done rather than a "CWD". --full-path Normally uploaded files go into the current directory on the remote host, even when the local file name given contains slashes. Eg, if you say ftp-upload -h $host /etc/motd ftp-upload will upload the file as motd, not /etc/motd. This differs from how the standard ftp program works, and it also differs with how ftp-upload worked before version 1.3. If you specify --full-path, you'll get the other behavior. A request to upload dir/file will tell the server to store dir/file rather than file. When you use --as the --full-path setting doesn't matter. --full-path only tells the program what name to use when it's choosing the name. --no-full-path Disable --full-path. This is the default. -l, --ls Try to get a remote directory listing of files after transferring them. I say "try" because there's no guaranteed way to do this with the FTP protocol. The command I run is "LIST file". This will generally work if file doesn't contain any special characters. -L, --no-ls Disable the --ls behavior. --tmp-none Transfer files directly, don't do anything special to try to ensure that they don't appear under their real names on the remote machine until the transfer is finished. Each file is transferred with a single simple "STOR". This is the default. --tmp-samedir Transfer files to the remote machine using a temporary name, then rename them when the transfer finishes. This won't work if the remote server doesn't give a recognizable response to the "STOU" command. If the server's response to "STOU" isn't recognized by Net::FTP but is reasonable, Graham Barr might be willing to change Net::FTP to recognize it. If you like you can send the "--debug" output to me and I'll coordinate such requests. --tmp-dir dir Transfer files to dir on the remote host, then rename them when the transfer is complete. This is safer than --tmp-samedir because it doesn't use "STOU" and so it works with more servers. ftp-upload -h $host --tmp-dir incoming $file --tmp-format fmt Transfer files to "sprintf(fmt, file base name)", then rename them when the transfer is complete. Like --tmp-dir, this is safer than --tmp-samedir because it doesn't use "STOU" and so it works with more servers. ftp-upload -h $host --tmp-format tmp.%s $file AUTHOR
Roderick Schertler <roderick@argon.org> perl v5.8.7 2006-03-16 FTP-UPLOAD(1p)