Search Results

Search found 3730 results on 150 pages for 'bash'.

Page 110/150 | < Previous Page | 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117  | Next Page >

  • why the output of ls is like this

    - by dorelal
    I am using snow leopard and this is what I get in my terminal. By default I am using bash. > ls c* clock: PSD demo.html jquery.tzineClock script.js styles.css clock2: clojure-presentations: Clojure-1up.pdf ClojureInTheField-1up.pdf license.html Clojure-4up.pdf README ClojureForRubyists-1up.pdf keynote coffee-script: Cakefile README bin examples index.html package.json test LICENSE Rakefile documentation extras lib src vendor

    Read the article

  • How to force emacs to use \n instead of \r\n

    - by User1
    I have to use windows to write some shell scripts. I decided to use emacs, but I get a weird error when running the script: /bin/bash^M: bad interpreter: No such file or directory Correct me if I'm wrong, but that looks like the shebang ends in \r\n instead of just \n. How can I tell emacs to only write \n? I'm in Shell-script major mode. It's quite surprising this isn't fixed by default.

    Read the article

  • A Guide to Windows Hacking for Mac Users?

    - by Carlton Gibson
    I am a long-time Mac user looking to gain a decent understanding of Windows. I'm not really interested in the history except as it is still relevant to Windows 7. I'm competent with the Mac and UNIX/Linux environment. I'm live in C, Objective-C, Bash, Python, JavaScript, AppleScript and PHP. As such I want something that is introductory but not aimed at beginners. Can anyone recommend a decent book (or other resource) to get me started? TIA

    Read the article

  • powershell.exe tab completion - list alternatives?

    - by J Cooper
    I've never really used PowerShell before, and playing with it a bit, it looks like it uses cmd.exe's style of tab completion (fill in the first likely candidate, and then you can use tab to cycle through other alternatives). I'd much prefer the way e.g. bash works, where if there are multiple candidates, it shows a list of them. Is there an easy way to turn this on, by any chance?

    Read the article

  • Running iPython from the OSX terminal.

    - by Az
    So I'm going through the matplotlib documentation and prepared to use the iPython interactive Python shell with ipython -pylab. However I get this: Az's MBP:~ Az$ ipython -pylab -bash: ipython: command not found Did I fail to install iPython? I used easy_install as advised. Any ideas?

    Read the article

  • Hi, how to verify if file exists on windows bat file?

    - by CuSS
    Hi, i have to create a bat file that does this: 1 - If "C:\myprogram\sync\data.handler" exists, exit; 2 - If "C:\myprogram\html\data.sql" doesn't exists, exit; 3 - In "C:\myprogram\sync\" delete all files and folders except ('test','test3' and 'test2') 4 - Copy "C:\myprogram\html\data.sql" to "C:\myprogram\sync\" 5 - Call other bat file w/ option "sync.bat myprogram.ini". If it was in bash enviroment it was easy for me, but i don't know how to test if a file or folder exists and if it is a file or folder :/ Thanks

    Read the article

  • How can I make Rails work when it is installed as a gem in Ubuntu?

    - by Koning WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW
    I have installed Ruby on Rails in Ubuntu 10.04: $ sudo gem install rails $ echo $PATH prints: /home/koningbaard/.gem/ruby/1.8/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games But when I run $ rails --version, BASH tells me that rails is not currenly installed, and that I can install it with apt-get, which I don't want (I want it installed through gem). Can anyone help me where I can find it and how I can add it to my PATH? Thanks

    Read the article

  • read the contents of a directory using shell script

    - by jrharshath
    Hi, I'm trying to get the contents of a directory using shell script. My script is: for entry in `ls`; do echo $entry done However, my current directory contains many files with whitespaces in their names. In that case, this script fails. What is the correct way to loop over the contents of a directory in shell scripting? PS: I use bash.

    Read the article

  • javax.security.auth.login.LoginException: Login failed

    - by abdeslam
    I'm trying to run a hadoop job (version 18.3) on my windows machine but I get the following error: Caused by: javax.security.auth.login.LoginException: Login failed: CreateProcess: bash -c groups error=2 at org.apache.hadoop.security.UnixUserGroupInformation.login(UnixUserGroupInformation.java:250) at org.apache.hadoop.security.UnixUserGroupInformation.login(UnixUserGroupInformation.java:275) at org.apache.hadoop.mapred.JobClient.configureCommandLineOptions(JobClient.java:557) ... 3 more The same job works fine in an another windows machine. Do I have may be something wrong in the settings variabls? How can I fix this problem?

    Read the article

  • Setting windows powershell path variable

    - by Vasil
    So I've found out that setting the PATH environment variable affects only the old command prompt, powershell seems to have different environment settings. How do I change the environment variables for powershell (v1)? Note: I want to make my changes permanent, so I don't have to set it every time I run powershell. Does powershell have a profile file? Something like bash profile on unix?

    Read the article

  • Running daemon through rsh

    - by Max
    I want to run program as daemon in remote machine in Unix. I have rsh connection and I want the program to be running after disconnection. Suppose I have two programs: util.cpp and forker.cpp. util.cpp is some utility, for our purpose let it be just infinite root. util.cpp int main() { while (true) {}; return 0; } forker.cpp takes some program and run it in separe process through fork() and execve(): forker.cpp #include <stdio.h> #include <errno.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <unistd.h> int main(int argc, char** argv) { if (argc != 2) { printf("./a.out <program_to_fork>\n"); exit(1); } pid_t pid; if ((pid = fork()) < 0) { perror("fork error."); exit(1); } else if (!pid) { // Child. if (execve(argv[1], &(argv[1]), NULL) == -1) { perror("execve error."); exit(1); } } else { // Parent: do nothing. } return 0; } If I run: ./forker util forker is finished very quickly, and bash 'is not paused', and util is running as daemon. But if I run: scp forker remote_server://some_path/ scp program remote_server://some_path/ rsh remote_server 'cd /some_path; ./forker program' then it is all the same (i.e. at the remote_sever forker is finishing quickly, util is running) but my bash in local machine is paused. It is waiting for util stopping (I checked it. If util.cpp is returning than it is ok.), but I don't understand why?! There are two questions: 1) Why is it paused when I run it through rsh? I am sure that I chose some stupid way to run daemon. So 2) How to run some program as daemon in C/C++ in unix-like platforms. Tnx!

    Read the article

  • Can an algorithmic process ever give true random numbers ?

    - by Arkapravo
    I have worked with random functions in python,ruby, MATLAB, Bash and Java. Nearly every programming language has a function to generate Random numbers. However, these apparently random sequences are termed as pseudo-random number sequences as the generation follows a deterministic approach, and the sequence seems to repeat (usually with a very large period). My question, can an algorithmic/programming process ever yield true random numbers ? The questions probably is more of theoretical computer science than just programming !

    Read the article

  • How to build and deploy Python web applications

    - by sverrejoh
    I have a Python web application consisting of several Python packages. What is the best way of building and deploying this to the servers? Currently I'm deploying the packages with Capistrano, installing the packages into a virtualenv with bash, and configuring the servers with puppet, but I would like to go for a more Python based solution. I've been looking a bit into zc.buildout, but it's not clear for me what I can/should use it for.

    Read the article

  • Finding process count in Linux via command line

    - by Moev4
    I was looking for the best way to find the number of running processes with the same name via the command line in Linux. For example if I wanted to find the number of bash processes running and get "5". Currently I have a script that does a 'pidof ' and then does a count on the tokenized string. This works fine but I was wondering if there was a better way that can be done entirely via the command line. Thanks in advance for your help.

    Read the article

  • Git is slow on startup

    - by Daniel Mahadi
    Hi, I have a small problem with git in my pc, I create a new folder and i start Git Bash, but it takes so long for it load git, as in it will show the command prompt but it need a while for the git line to show up. Any clue on this? Thanks

    Read the article

  • How do i run the Android command line tools?

    - by fordays
    I'm still pretty new to Android and programming in general, and I can't seem to get the command line tools packaged with the Android SDK to work. I'm running Mac OSX and each time I try to run layoutopt, for example, the terminal returns, *-bash: cmd: command not found * Also, is it okay to have my SDK located in the Developer directory and my android project in some unrelated directory when using these tools?

    Read the article

  • Run python in a separate process

    - by Bialecki
    I'm looking for a quick bash script or program that will allow me to kick off a python script in a separate process. What's the best way to do this? I know this is incredibly simple, just curious if there's a preferred way to do it.

    Read the article

  • how to start learning Java scripting

    - by antriksh
    Dear All, I am experienced in the technical support like Linux, oracle, sunos etc and but if i say scripting i know little bit of bash. Now i promoted to manage technical engineers inuding some java script developers, so i want to learn java scripting so that i can understand engineers. Hope you understand. Can you please advise me how can i start java scripting and point me to some simple docs and examples.

    Read the article

  • Zsh command substitution

    - by Dr. Watson
    I usually work with BASH, but I'm trying to setup a cronjob from a machine and user account that is configured with zsh. When the cronjob runs, the date variable does not contain the date, just the string for the command to return the date. DATE=$(date +%Y%m%d) 55 15 * * 1-5 scp user@host:/path/to/some/file/$DATE.log /tmp I've tried using backticks rather than $() around the command, but that did not work either. Is there a special way to do command substitution in zsh?

    Read the article

  • Is it possible to make a Firebug console automation?

    - by moogeek
    I want to automate actions in firebug JavaScript console. ie. Is it possible to load a page from url in firefox then after the page is loaded run a js code in console? I have googled for solutions and found one:Running_Automated_Test_Suite with FBTest is there any other ways to do that? Which one is easier? Some ways w/ windows cmd-line/bash scripts in linux/in mac? Selenium?

    Read the article

  • Catching and outputting stderr at the same time with python's subprocess

    - by Mediocre Gopher
    (Using python 3.2 currently) I need to be able to: Run a command using subprocess Both stdout/stderr of that command need be printed to the terminal in real-time (it doesn't matter if they both come out on stdout or stderr or whatever At the same time, I need a way to know if the command printed anything to stderr (and preferably what it printed). I've played around with subprocess pipes as well as doing strange pipe redirects in bash, as well as using tee, but as of yet haven't found anything that would work. Is this something that's possible?

    Read the article

  • Can I copy a cross compiler tool chain between systems (I did before)?

    - by Jamie
    I tested fairly extensively with Ubuntu 10.04 Beta 2 Server in a VM, and was able to simply copy (read tar x) a cross compiled tool chain from an Ubuntu 8.10 VM. I created the tar myself, which is essentially a lot of stuff in \usr\local. Now that I've got a bare metal installation of Ubuntu 10.04 proper, the copy isn't working. In particularly, I'm getting the error: $ arm-linux-gcc -bash: /usr/local/bin/arm-linux-gcc: No such file or directory I've got the systems side by side in SSH windows ... any suggestions?

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117  | Next Page >