I am using Red Hat Linux Enterprise version 5. I've noticed people sometimes running commands with a couple of & options. For example, in the below command, there are two & signs. What is the purpose of them? Are they always used together with nohup?
I'm looking for a specific command,if it exist... i want to login from my server to another Linux server,but the question is: can i do it in a one line command for ex: usually you type: ssh "user"@10.1.1.1 and then the password,but I'm looking for a command in one line a fake ex: ssh user@10.1.1.1 -p "password" something like that. I don't know if anyone of you understand what do i want to say .
I'm writing a shell script to check the I/O activity of a Linux box and if the server is quiet for a certain long time, the script should let the server go to sleep. But, after some Google searching, I didn't find a answer yet. Is there a shell script command to put a Linux box to sleep?
I tried to execute a shell command by M-! cmd RET but it did not work.M-! does not turn up in the microbuffer no matter how many times I press Alt+!.But if I go to Tools menu and select Shell Command... option then it writes M-! to the microbuffer and everything works fine.What is the problem here?
i have a text file generated automatically from a script , but the result in the script is not ordered in a readable way, so i need your help to fix it using a shell command the text file contain data in this way :
i want to arrange the data in this text file in a way that each line will concatenate the 2 lines after it , so that will be 1 line , i want all the lines to be treated in this way ,
Reading a BASH script, I saw a find command preceded with a backslash. It was similar to this:
Code: `find . -type f -name '*.xml' -print > xmlfilelist`
It's impossible to find documentation about this in man pages or on the internet, since 'backslash' are always evoked along with special characters. I also noticed that even though the command was surrounded with backquotes, the result was not affected to any variable. Maybe the backslash's presence is related with this?
I have a problem to make a shell, using mail command DestMail= cat /opt/scripts/maillist.txt mail -s"SUBJECT" $DestMail -- -r xxxxx@gmail.com < /opt/scripts/test.txt where: maillist.txt contain email adresse separated by comma test.txt mail text this script can eval DestMail variable!!
We use a SLES 10 SP2 file server. This file server has all type of files. We want to know what is the amount of space used by mp3 files. What we need to know is the total space in disk of mp3 files. I've been testing du command, and find command, but with no satisfactory results. Does anybody know how to do this?
I am unable to use clear or cls command on bash shell. I have recently installed Cygwin and am using that for practicing unix commands.
I see that I can use Ctrl + L to clear the screen. I created an alias in my .bashrc to do the same as alias cls='^L'
This is how i defined other aliases e.g.
And they work. Hence I assume cls will work too but this is what I get when I try to give cls on command prompt. Am i missing something? Is there a way to do this?
Then someone suggested, You cannot alias keystrokes to commands or vice versa. You could just alias cls to an echo command: echo -en "x0c"
And I added the following to .bashrc,
Sourced the .bashrc file. No errors but cls still does not clear the screen. Infact when I typed the echo -en "x0c on command prompt as well, nothing happened. What does this command do?
Consider that I am building my application in Linux shell using make command but somehow the build fails. Is there any way I can find out that the build has failed (of course looking at shell for error messages will do the job for me but I don't want that). Is there any flag make or shell will set/reset if such failure occurs ?
Given that I want my shell script be invoked at the command line using the above parameters - where [these brackets] denote that they are optional - what is the best method to parse them?
I have 2 computers with linux, How can i send with ftp files from computer1 to computer2 them(shell command)? Steps that i think should be done (miss shell commands): find inner ip of computer1 open the ftp port (21) of computer1 (make computer1 ftp server) send file from computer2 to computer1 with shell command
(i) In office i open many terminal windows when i start my day and in each terminal i keep on login as different users many times in a day to do some task, by the end of the day when i need to exit from all terminals in a safeway instead of directly closing it i need to execute exit command or CTRL+D many times to close a single terminal safely. Can anybody tell me a way to exit from each terminal in single go, is there any command to acheive this ? I wish if we had a command like exitall like in vi we have :qa command to close multiple files opened in single window. I hope friends you have got what i am asking for ?
(ii) I want a software for debugging shellscripts searched a lot but dint got it.
I'm relatively experienced with UNIX and Linux, but this has me thrown for quite a loop, and it seemed like such a simple question. How would I go about finding the newest file in a file system? I thought something like:
Code:
ls -ltr `find /usr -type f`
would work, but I seem to be exceeding the argument maximum for ls:
ksh: 0403-029 There is not enough memory available now
I thought something involving xargs might work, but I really suck with that command.
I am looking for a powerful command line tool to send and receive data via socket I mean define IP , port and data other options for command to send and receive data from sender.(like a high level socket programming)
Cis 140 student.how to use the test command to evaluate whether the shell variable I create contains a referance to the bash shell? and use the echo command to determine the result.
I write a script to read a file which is something like a pipe (or) queue , which shows the running status.In normal case, if i open this file with cat command, i have to use ctrl+c to exit this . What command shall i use to do the same inside a shell script ? I have tried ^C in my script , but it does not exit the process.
If i have a shell script to run on a Linux unit, which has a command to Reset(or say upgrade) the unit in between the script.Is it possible to find out the memory address of the next waiting command so that i can store the address to any environment variable in flash , then after Reset will continue Run from the stored address.