don@umd5 (Chris Sylvain) (11/21/86)
[] In case anyone wants to know what the string I was sending to system(), it certainly wasn't anything out of the ordinary. I was sending either "chmod 666 <full-path-file-name>" or "email <full-path-file-name>". "email" is a program I've written. With either string, I got the error message "00: is not an identifier" from system(), but the same string worked fine if I typed it myself. Also, this is a 4.3BSD microVAX, but I don't think that it matters so much either. I've even taken a peek at the BSD sources to try and see where/how the error is generated, but I didn't have any luck. -- --==---==---==-- .. And hast thou slain the Jabberwock? .. ARPA: don@umd5.UMD.EDU BITNET: don%umd5@umd2 UUCP: ..!seismo!umd5.umd.edu!don
mcferrin@inuxc.UUCP (11/23/86)
> [] > In case anyone wants to know what the string I was sending to system(), > it certainly wasn't anything out of the ordinary. > I was sending either "chmod 666 <full-path-file-name>" or > "email <full-path-file-name>". "email" is a program I've written. > With either string, I got the error message "00: is not an identifier" > from system(), but the same string worked fine if I typed it myself. > Also, this is a 4.3BSD microVAX, but I don't think that it matters so > much either. I've even taken a peek at the BSD sources to try and see > where/how the error is generated, but I didn't have any luck. > > -- > --==---==---==-- > .. And hast thou slain the Jabberwock? .. > > ARPA: don@umd5.UMD.EDU BITNET: don%umd5@umd2 > UUCP: ..!seismo!umd5.umd.edu!don I have experienced this problem in SYS-V. My problem had NOTHING to do with the "string" passed to system(). System() envokes the shell with the "-c string" format. During shell initialization, the enviornment variables are processed and enter into a internal list used by the shell. I have seen cases where a programmer did not allow room for the null byte and subsequently clobber the 1st byte of the next VARIABLE name, not its value. So make sure that you are not clobbering your enviornment variables (**environ) The one I usually ran into was LOGNAME. Sometimes someone would allow 8 bytes for its value and since my LOGNAME was 8 characters, various programs would fail on me and not other users. Paul McFerrin AT&T-IS Consumer Products Division Indianapolis, Ind.