Ben Wylie wrote:
I have a batch file which runs bash and calls a bash script.
My batch file reads:
cd F:\cygwin\bin
bash --login -i deletescript.sh F:/Progra~1/NAVIEG/queues/
The bash script is:
#!/bin/bash
cd $1
F:/cygwin/bin/find . -type f -exec awk '(/various/ || /search/ ||
/keywords/) {print FILENAME}' {} \; | xargs rm
When I run the batch file I get:
F:\>cd F:\cygwin\bin
F:\cygwin\bin>bash --login -i deletescript.sh F:/Progra~1/NAVIEG/queues/
: No such file or directoryine 2: cd: F:/Progra~1/NAVIEG/queues/
It doesn't seem to like the "cd F:/Progra~1/NAVIEG/queues/"
However if I load cygwin and type the commands directly, it all works fine.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~
$ cd F:/Progra~1/NAVIEG/queues/
[snip]
Hmm, it seems you are not using the version of Cygwin that smacks you
over the head with a wet tuna for doing such a thing (is that a feature
in the Vista-only 1.7.0?). Try using POSIX paths instead of DOS-style
paths, and see if that fixes it.
--
Matthew
Vs lbh pna ernq guvf jvgubhg fbsgjner, lbh ner n FREVBHF areq! --
Nqncgrq sebz Znggurj Jva (ivz-qri znvyvat yvfg)
--
Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple
Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html
Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html
FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/