From: John Herlihy (johnh@e-dataservices.com.au)
Date: Sun Apr 07 2002 - 21:50:30 EDT
Hi,
I'm writing a ksh script that calls the Legato Networker save command in a
variable, but I'm having trouble getting save to see the browse & retention
variables. After a bit more investigation, I found that the same things
happen for native unix commands such as tar:
TAR="tar cvf /tmp/blah.tar \"/etc/hosts\" /var/adm/messages
echo $TAR
tar cvf /tmp/blah.tar "/etc/hosts" /var/adm/messages
This returns these messages when run:
tar: can't change directories to "/etc: No such file or directory
a /var/adm/messages 1K
So the first file, /etc/hosts, failed to backup with a similar problem to
the save command. I've tried this in csh with the same errors.
Here's the Legato SAVE variable I'm using:
SAVE="save -s nw_svr -l full -i -q -b BACKUPPOOL -w \"5 weeks\" -y \"5
weeks\""
When I echo the variable, it is shown as:
save -s nw_svr -l full -i -q -b BACKUPPOOL -w "5 weeks" -y "5 weeks"
BUT when I run it, I get the error:
save: invalid browse time: "5
At a glance, it appears that the backslash causes it to not read the rest of
the variable when there is a space or a forward slash (ie /) seperating the
contents of the double-quotes. (???)
Does anyone know how to allow a command that contains double-quotes to be
successfully called from a unix variable?
Cheers,
John
_______________________________________________
sunmanagers mailing list
sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org
http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagers
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.7 : Wed Apr 09 2008 - 23:24:10 EDT