On 15.02.2010 09:21, Nerius Landys wrote:
> But in the case where you're assigning the output of ls directly to a
> variable like this:
>
> FOO=`ls`
>
> vs
>
> FOO="`ls`"
>
> the text assigned to FOO is the same, right?
Apparently, it is:
sh-4.0$ touch "x *"
sh-4.0$ FOO=`ls`;echo "$FOO"|od
00
On 15.02.2010 08:07, Nerius Landys wrote:
> DIRNAME="`dirname \"$0\"`"
> cd "$DIRNAME"
> SCRIPTDIR="`pwd`"
>
> What if I got rid of extra double quotes? Like this:
>
> DIRNAME=`dirname \"$0\"`
> cd "$DIRNAME"
> SCRIPTDIR=`pwd`
>
> Does this behave any differently in any kind of case? Are thes
On Thu, Apr 09, 2009 at 09:41:31AM +0200, Pieter Donche wrote:
> I have a mount_nfs process that refuses to get killed :
> # ps -jaxw | grep mount
> root 60342 1 60289 602890 D ??0:00.00 mount_nfs
[...]
> How to I get this process killed?
reboot. You can't kill a process with
On 13.03.2009 02:04, Mark McConnell wrote:
> On 12 Mar 2009 at 10:25, Jerry wrote:
> {Problem with Bash-4 and $(command) ...}:
[...]
> I found the same problem, and have reverted to
> bash3.2 until it's sorted out.
See if the following helps.
http://tiswww.case.edu/php/chet/bash/COMPAT
Especia
On 05.09.2007 11:22, Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:
[...]
> Your reaction is facinating considering the location implied by
> your e-mail reply address. I can perhaps understand your adversion
> to the use of metaphors in language - God know the Serbian propagandists
> warped the metaphor beyond the brea