I pasted the quoted code into a file and ran it and - to my surprise - it worked. I would have expected this:
to caue problems, it "just doesn't seem right", but then, i use Korn Shell most of the times and avoid bash like the plague. I would have written:
which should do the same and is POSIXly correct (notice the spaces around "((" and "))", they are necessary), but: never argue with success, yours obviously works.
One thing i noticed, though, was: as soon as i pressed "CTRL-C" the trap was executed but the "sleep 10" was interrupted and then skipped. Pressing CTRL-C often enough let me get through with the script in less than half a minute, whereas 10x 10 seconds of sleeping should have taken 1min 40sec (plus some for the rest).
So, probably there is something with your setup. I have no idea what that would be, though. I tried in an XTerm on Fedora without any real changes and it worked as expected.
My problem is this:
I need to have a catch-all for my processes. An example would be, using a trap, in the parent, to catch any non-0 exit or invalid command (a way to catch core dumps would be cool, too) in not only the parent, but it's children and they're children. Not only that, but I also... (7 Replies)
Hello all,
I'm hoping to get a little insight from some of the wily veterans amongst you.
I've written a script to check for new outgoing files to our vendors located on our ssl server. It seems to be working ok, but the final question here, will be one of logic, and/or a better way to... (4 Replies)
Hi
Our problem is knowing:
What is the "best" way of simulating a TRAP for ERR within a function, since we know this will not work directly with ksh93 and aix5. How can we save the error encountered in the function and then deal with it in the calling script?
Thanks! (3 Replies)
Hi All
"Identify the behavior of traps, mechanism to implement traps in the snmp framework"
What does it mean?? Can anybody explain.. Whats this Trap??
Thanx in Advance. (1 Reply)
I have a script
#!/bin/ksh
trap cleanup 20
cleanup()
{
cat $t.log
echo Caught
exit 1
}
if ;then
echo Found >>t.log
exit 20
else
echo Not found >>t.log
exit 20
fi (5 Replies)
Hi folks,
I have tried to add some trap detection in the below script....this script is used to monitor database activities...in a rather awkward way :rolleyes:....
The idea behind adding trap is that....this script creates lots of temporary files in the running folder to store the count... (1 Reply)
Hi
At the beginning of my script, i will create a file and at the end of the script i will delete that.
But i got to delete the file even if the process is forcefully killed, or server is rebooted...
I think i can make use of trap signal, but couldnt figure out how and where to use in my... (4 Replies)
First time trying to work with signals in Perl.
Reviewing example I try it, but not able to get it work for 'exit'.
I hope, I am correct, assuming, that the ending any code by
exit $return_code;
the $SIG{EXIT} should be de-referenced and processed?!
So, I have such code, that, I assume,... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: alex_5161
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
mustache
MUSTACHE(1) Mustache Manual MUSTACHE(1)NAME
mustache -- Mustache processor
SYNOPSIS
mustache <YAML> <FILE>
mustache --compile <FILE>
mustache --tokens <FILE>
DESCRIPTION
Mustache is a logic-less templating system for HTML, config files, anything.
The mustache command processes a Mustache template preceded by YAML frontmatter from standard input and prints one or more documents to
standard output.
YAML frontmatter beings with --- on a single line, followed by YAML, ending with another --- on a single line, e.g.
---
names: [ {name: chris}, {name: mark}, {name: scott} ]
---
If you are unfamiliar with YAML, it is a superset of JSON. Valid JSON should work fine.
After the frontmatter should come any valid Mustache template. See mustache(5) for an overview of Mustache templates.
For example:
{{#names}}
Hi {{name}}!
{{/names}}
Now let's combine them.
$ cat data.yml
---
names: [ {name: chris}, {name: mark}, {name: scott} ]
---
$ cat template.mustache
{{#names}}
Hi {{name}}!
{{/names}}
$ cat data.yml template.mustache | mustache
Hi chris!
Hi mark!
Hi scott!
If you provide multiple YAML documents (as delimited by ---), your template will be rendered multiple times. Like a mail merge.
For example:
$ cat data.yml
---
name: chris
---
name: mark
---
name: scott
---
$ cat template.mustache
Hi {{name}}!
$ cat data.yml template.mustache | mustache
Hi chris!
Hi mark!
Hi scott!
OPTIONS
By default mustache will try to render a Mustache template using the YAML frontmatter you provide. It can do a few other things, however.
-c, --compile
Print the compiled Ruby version of a given template. This is the code that is actually used when rendering a template into a string.
Useful for debugging but only if you are familiar with Mustache's internals.
-t, --tokens
Print the tokenized form of a given Mustache template. This can be used to understand how Mustache parses a template. The tokens are
handed to a generator which compiles them into a Ruby string. Syntax errors and confused tags, therefor, can probably be identified
by examining the tokens produced.
INSTALLATION
If you have RubyGems installed:
gem install mustache
EXAMPLES
$ mustache data.yml template.mustache
$ cat data.yml | mustache - template.mustache
$ mustache -c template.mustache
$ cat <<data | ruby mustache - template.mustache
---
name: Bob
age: 30
---
data
COPYRIGHT
Mustache is Copyright (C) 2009 Chris Wanstrath
Original CTemplate by Google
SEE ALSO mustache(5), mustache(7), gem(1), http://mustache.github.com/
DEFUNKT May 2010 MUSTACHE(1)