Hongyi Zhao wrote:
On Sun, 4 Jan 2009 12:07:31 +0100, Spiro Trikaliotis
<an-cyg...@spiro.trikaliotis.net> wrote:
Hello,
* On Sun, Jan 04, 2009 at 06:20:20PM +0800 Hongyi Zhao wrote:
I've some cygwin/bash scripts and I want to invoke them without log
into the Cygwin's bash terminal. Is this possible?
d:\> bash -c ./myscript
I've use the command:
bash -c "help set"
to find that bash accept the following option:
-C If set, disallow existing regular files to be overwritten
by redirection of output.
But, I cann't find the *-c* parameter used here, could you please give
me some hints?
Note that you might have to add the path to bash (c:\cygwin\bin\bash or
similar) in case it is not in your path. Also, you might want/need to
add --login or -l to the options of bash.
Again, the bash's built-in help doesn't give me the abbr. *-l* for
*--login*, any hints on this?
Regards,
For all of the above you probably wouldn't find anything in bash
built-in help docs. You would find it in the man page for bash. Type
'man bash' in a cygwin window and you will find both -l and -c defined
there. Just for reference...
-l - Make bash act as if it had been invoked as a login shell.
--login - Same as -l.
-c string - If the -c option is present then commands are read from
string. if there are arguments after the string, they are assigned to
the positional parameters, starting with $0.
http://cygwin.com/acronyms/#RTFM
--
Robert Pendell
shi...@elite-systems.org
"A perfect world is one of chaos."
Thawte Web of Trust Notary
CAcert Assurer
--
Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple
Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html
Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html
FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/