Hello,
I am trying to get cron to work reliably on my pc (runs Windows XP). When I
type
cygrunsrv -S cron
I get an error message that the service did not respond in a timely fashion.
Looking under services from Control Panel, cron status is listed as
"Starting".
I cannot stop it by using cy
Igor Pechtchanski wrote:
On Mon, 14 Nov 2005, Arun Biyani wrote:
Hello,
I am trying to get cron to work reliably on my pc (runs Windows XP).
When I type
cygrunsrv -S cron
I get an error message that the service did not respond in a timely
fashion. Looking under services from Control
Larry Hall (Cygwin) wrote:
Arun Biyani wrote:
"httpd" server crashes with current snapshot. Runs fine with Jan 20
cygwin1.dll. Both
cygcheck outputs are attached.
Any chance you could narrow down a little more the working and
non-working
snapshots? Are you saying that httpd
Larry Hall (Cygwin) wrote:
Arun Biyani wrote:
"httpd" server crashes with current snapshot. Runs fine with Jan 20
cygwin1.dll. Both
cygcheck outputs are attached.
Any chance you could narrow down a little more the working and
non-working
snapshots? Are you saying that httpd
I have been running "updatedb" via a cron job for almost 6 months now.
It is started
at 11PM & is usually done in an hour. Recently, I have been noticing
that there is a
"find" job still running when I get in, in the morning. My crontab has -
# run updatedb daily
5 22 * * * /usr/bin/updatedb --
I am running it now with the command line -
/usr/bin/updatedb --localpaths="/ /c" --prunepaths="/a/proc"
Arun
Eric Blake wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
According to Arun Biyani on 7/10/2006 5:23 PM:
I have been running "updatedb&quo
This morning there were no "find" jobs running. It appears that adding
/proc to prunepaths
did work.
/usr/bin/updatedb --localpaths="/ /c" --prunepaths="/a/proc"
Arun
Eric Blake wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
According to Arun Biya
Thx, very much. There are 2 files there exactly as you state.
Arun
Christopher Faylor wrote:
On Thu, Sep 07, 2006 at 07:19:39PM +0100, Dave Korn wrote:
On 07 September 2006 19:08, Arun Biyani wrote:
Recently, I've run into this "cannot execute binary file" problem.
Larry Hall (Cygwin) wrote:
Arun Biyani wrote:
I am having some problems accessing files on a Linux server in
Cygwin. The files are
exported via Samba. I can see the whole directory using my computer,
which shows
a Y: directory on machine Goddard. However, "ls /y" prints no such
fil
mwoehlke wrote:
Arun Biyani wrote:
[download$:575] ls //goddard/y
ls: //goddard/y: No such file or directory
[download$:576] ls //goddard/abiyani
ls: //goddard/abiyani: No such file or directory
[download$:577]
Larry Hall (Cygwin) wrote:
what does 'ls /cygdrive/y' say?
You did
Larry Hall (Cygwin) wrote:
Arun Biyani wrote:
mwoehlke wrote:
Arun Biyani wrote:
[download$:575] ls //goddard/y
ls: //goddard/y: No such file or directory
[download$:576] ls //goddard/abiyani
ls: //goddard/abiyani: No such file or directory
[download$:577]
Larry Hall (Cygwin) wrote:
what
Larry Hall (Cygwin) wrote:
Arun Biyani wrote:
Larry Hall (Cygwin) wrote:
Arun Biyani wrote:
mwoehlke wrote:
Arun Biyani wrote:
[download$:575] ls //goddard/y
ls: //goddard/y: No such file or directory
[download$:576] ls //goddard/abiyani
ls: //goddard/abiyani: No such file or directory
Larry Hall (Cygwin) wrote:
Arun Biyani wrote:
Larry Hall (Cygwin) wrote:
See your cygcheck output:
I have a crontab task which generates a cygcheck.log file every
night. I've just realized that
the cygcheck output of the cron task is quite different from when I
run cygcheck as a us
I just upgraded to the current bash. Now I am getting an error. I
reinstalled, rebooted
the machine. Still get the same error. The variable $HOME is set correctly.
> bash: /c/home/abiyani/.bash_login: line 7: syntax error: unexpected
end of file
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] ~
> $ bash --version
> GNU
Original Message
Subject:Re: Bash problem - v3.1.17(8) - syntax error
Date: Tue, 26 Sep 2006 12:17:34 -0700
From: Arun Biyani <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Dave Korn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
References: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Dave Korn wrote:
On 26
Igor Peshansky wrote:
Is there any particular reason you post the output of od on .bashrc when
the error was reported in .bash_login?
BTW, for the future, you might want to run "od -c" instead -- its output
is a bit more readable.
Igor
Igor & Dave,
Thx. It is a CR/LF problem. I had
Very Good.
On the options dialog box, an apply button would be a good
Addition.
Arun
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[log$:513] name=$(date +tiny-%b-%d-%g)
[log$:514] bakup=$name.tz
The assignments above result in bakup being
"/c/home/bak/tiny-Feb-02-g\r.tz". I'd like to understand why this
happens
when the script is being run from cron (but not when I run it in a bash
shell). Is the fix is to put "/usr/bin/da
>-Original Message-
>From: cygwin-ow...@cygwin.com [mailto:cygwin-ow...@cygwin.com] On
Behalf Of >Eric Blake
>Sent: Tuesday, February 03, 2009 11:16 AM
>To: cygwin@cygwin.com
>Subject: Re: date generates a "\r"
>>Arun Biyani dickey-john.com> writes
>> No, the fix is to quit using linefeeds in your script files
>> unless you are willing to teach bash to ignore those line
>> feeds. d2u is your friend.
I ran dos2unix on that script. Its not the script.
I use emacs as editor. "crontab -e" invokes emacs. Maybe the crontab
file has something in
> No, the fix is to quit using linefeeds in your script files unless you
are
> willing to teach bash to ignore those line feeds. d2u is your friend.
Attached are the relevant files. I don't see where the problem is.
cygcheck.log
Description: cygcheck.log
crontab.log
Description: crontab.log
>> -Original Message-
>> From: cygwin-ow...@cygwin.com [mailto:cygwin-ow...@cygwin.com] On
Behalf
>> Of Dave Korn
>> Sent: Tuesday, February 03, 2009 12:40 PM
>> To: cygwin@cygwin.com
>> Subject: Re: date generates a "\r"
>>
>>Well this stuff don't look good:
>>
>> Missing file: /usr
>> -Original Message-
>> From: cygwin-ow...@cygwin.com [mailto:cygwin-ow...@cygwin.com] On
Behalf
>> Of Dave Korn
>> Sent: Thursday, March 05, 2009 9:48 PM
>> To: cygwin@cygwin.com
>> Subject: Re: How can I assign a hotkey to run a cygwin/bash script?
>>
>> Hongyi Zhao wrote:
>> > Hi all,
>>
>> Arun Biyani wrote:
>>
>> > It appears that Windows XP shortcuts have a limitation. The
shortcut
>> must
>> > be to a target on the desktop (or to a target in a folder on
desktop).
>>
>> Surely you can't mean what you
>> http://directedge.us/content/winhotkey
>>
When I execute "minty" using winhotkey, I get
bash: [: too many arguments
This is BASH 3.2 - DISPLAY on tty1 Mar 5
07:27:0.0
Fri Mar 6 12:51:45 PST 2009
[Home$:500]
This does not happen when I execute mintty directly (or
Chris Sutcliffe wrote:
Is there some sort of Cygwin command that -
1. Closes all Mintty windows
2. Unloads services - such as cron
3. Exits X server
in short, gets rid of all Cygwin processes so I can update & restart
without having to do all this myself.
I use the attached script (run it elev
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