Hi all,
I might have found a way to avoid unkilled subprocesses when they are stuck in
the open syscall.
When the parent shell is killed, we can force it to open and close all the
named pipes that it still have.
It might be a bit harsh, but at least there is no unkilled processes anymore.
I
Hey. Goal: scheduling tasks along with visual output in terminal. I
concieved it could be achieved under Linux. I had defined a use-case for
that purpose..
$ at -q c now + 1 minute
warning: commands will be executed using /bin/sh
at> dnf check-update --security | gnome-terminal
at>
job 24 at Thu
On Wed, Feb 26, 2020 at 11:59:09AM -0500, Eli Schwartz wrote:
> On 2/26/20 10:48 AM, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > If you're trying to pre-populate the input buffer of a shell in a newly
> > launched terminal emulator, you're about to go down some very deep
> > rabbit holes. I suggest you look at tmux
On 2/26/20 10:48 AM, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> If you're trying to pre-populate the input buffer of a shell in a newly
> launched terminal emulator, you're about to go down some very deep
> rabbit holes. I suggest you look at tmux or screen. Those may have
> some of the features you're looking for,
On Wed, Feb 26, 2020 at 05:39:22PM +0200, Ricky Tigg wrote:
> Tested on *Gnome*; Component: bash.x86_64 5.0.11
>
> Used Shell;
> $ echo $SHELL
> /bin/bash
>
> Following command opens the queried graphical terminal emulator;
> $ echo q | gnome-terminal
>
> Result in opened terminal:
> [yk@localho
On 2/26/20 10:39 AM, Ricky Tigg wrote:
> Tested on *Gnome*; Component: bash.x86_64 5.0.11
>
> Used Shell;
> $ echo $SHELL
> /bin/bash
>
> Following command opens the queried graphical terminal emulator;
> $ echo q | gnome-terminal
>
> Result in opened terminal:
> [yk@localhost ~]$
>
> Redirecte
Tested on *Gnome*; Component: bash.x86_64 5.0.11
Used Shell;
$ echo $SHELL
/bin/bash
Following command opens the queried graphical terminal emulator;
$ echo q | gnome-terminal
Result in opened terminal:
[yk@localhost ~]$
Redirected output is thus not present as input there.