> -----Original Message----- > From: m.roth2006@xxxxxxx [mailto:m.roth2006@xxxxxxx] > Sent: Thursday, December 13, 2007 1:22 PM > To: Steven Buehler > Subject: RE: script problem > > >Date: Thu, 13 Dec 2007 13:15:40 -0600 > >From: "Steven Buehler" <steve@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > >Never mind. A quick search showed me how to do that too. Thank you > for > >your help. > > No problem. I was thinking of a way to do it in shell - maybe > while > $NUM=$NUM+! > bu_fil=`awk -v RNUM=$NUM conf.file` > tar -cvf ${bu_fil}.tar $bu_fil > wend > > The perl just seemed the easier tool. As they said, years back in > SysAdmin, perl: the sysadmin's Swiss Army chainsaw. <g> > > mark I agree that perl is more powerful. I might convert some day when I have more time. To add the config file to my shell script, at the top of the file I just have: #!/bin/sh . backup.cfg That will load it in at the top of my script. The only problem is that the script then has to run from the same directory as the config file. Unless that line is edited to show the exact location of the cfg file. But if I do that, then it defeats the purpose of a config file so people would stay out of the script file. I tried running the file from the root directory like this: /bin/sh /root/backups/backup.sh But if I have the include line like I do above, it tries finding the file in the directory that I am in, not the directory that the script is in. Steve -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list