David Christensen wrote:
I wrote:
$ cat ssh-backup-all.bat
C:\cygwin\bin\bash ./ssh-backup-all
Steve Holden wrote:
Wouldn't it be possible to omit the first two executable lines and
have the batch script read
c:\cygwin\bin\bash -l ./ssh-backup-all
I posted a sample shell session. The "$ cat ssh-backup-all.bat" is what I typed
into my shell and the "C:\cygwin\bin\bash ./ssh-backup-all" is the result (e.g.
the output of the "cat" command; the contents of "./ssh-backup-all").
And I posted alternative content for the batch script that would save
you from putting two unnecessary lines in the shell script. Or so I thought.
The -l (or --login) option has bash read its usual startup files,
thereby avoiding the need four the course (".") commands at the
beginning of the shell script.
regards
Steve
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