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Mail Archives: cygwin/2001/02/12/14:11:34

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Message-ID: <3A8827EF.B7C160E8@veritas.com>
Date: Mon, 12 Feb 2001 10:14:07 -0800
From: Bob McGowan <rmcgowan AT veritas DOT com>
Organization: VERITAS Software
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To: Earnie Boyd <cygwin AT cygwin DOT com>
CC: Matthew Smith <matts AT bluesguitar DOT org>
Subject: Re: dos/unix utilities
References: <F38Vc4Iu1B6gVs1tIzm00010695 AT hotmail DOT com> <013001c09475$5a80f860$3c5350d8 AT bluesguitar DOT org> <20010211170532 DOT B14860 AT redhat DOT com> <3A87E58B DOT 6A2C3DB7 AT yahoo DOT com>

From a command prompt, using a full path wihtout wildcards, the command works with either type of slash.  Put in a wildcard, and it fails.  I assume the presence of the
wildcard activates globbing routines but a backslash alone does not?  Is this what you mean?

I think there is also a problem with the /tmp/ctm*.* form.  It cannot match the file /tmp/ctm040701 because this file name does not contain the literal dot that is present
in the wildcard form.

Earnie Boyd wrote:
> 
> Christopher Faylor wrote:
> >
> > On Sun, Feb 11, 2001 at 03:55:31PM -0600, Matthew Smith wrote:
> > >> I have found the utilities extremely useful, in order to emulate
> > >processes,
> > >> that we run in a Unix environment, under Windows NT. I am running them in
> > >a
> > >> win98 environment and then, when the process is working, transferring them
> > >> to NT. I cannot see why there would be any problems. However, I am having
> > >a
> > >> problem with "wc" recognising that certain directories/files exist when
> > >> using wildcards for non 8.3 form file names..
> > >>
> > >> For example:
> > >> wc -l \postbox\ctm\ctm*.*      fails (with a ENOENT error msg)
> > >> wc -l \postbox\ctm\ctm040701   works fine however
> > >
> > >Output of cygcheck -srv would be appreciated.  Also, you neglect to say what
> > >environment this is failing under.  Are you trying this command from bash?
> > >cmd.exe?  You need to give us more info.
> >
> > You can't use wildcards with Windows filespecs.
> 
> Huh?  I can use wc -l /tmp/st*.* just fine in a COMMAND window.
> However, I can't use wc -l \tmp\st*.*.  Oh, I get it now, that's what
> you were saying.
> 
> > Cygwin is a UNIX emulation, remember?
> >
> > Try "wc -l /postbox/ctm/ctm*.*".
> >
> 
> True, the '\' is what Chris is in reference to.  You must use '/'.
> 
> Earnie.
> 
> P.S.: Sorry, Chris.  I was confused at first by your answer.  So, I
> decided to post anyway.
> 
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-- 
Bob McGowan
Staff Software Quality Engineer
VERITAS Software
rmcgowan AT veritas DOT com

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