.Bat file to execute macro from attachmate EXTRA application - batch-file

How to execute macro file (.ebm) using batch script ?
Attachmate extra application has macro recording option after recording it saves .ebm file (macro) in local system. I have written a batch file to execute this macro. But its not working.
Thanks in advance!!
How I do it manually - I goes to the application in the folder and double click opens the attachmate application, when click on "Tools" option it displays list of recorded macros from that list I click on a macro to execute it. How can I automate this using batch script. please suggest
Solution found, Updated the script below.
start "" - After start command, you can give title or empty string (Thanks to compo for help)
extra.exe - This will open your aplication
/h <hostname> - Find your hostname/ip address in Options>Settings>Connection
/m macro path - Which macro you need to execute
Updated Batch script
#echo off
start "" extra.exe /h "tplxsuper.xyz.com" /m "C:\Users\Public\Documents\Attachmate\EXTRA!\macros\HELLO.EBM"
exit

This is how I have done it. Take your macro and change the file extension from .ebm to .elf your macro will be executable from a BAT or VBS file.

Related

Running ant commands using batch file

Currently this is how I have written the code in the batch file:
C:\ cd C:\abc\xyz\build-scripts-master
call setEnv.cmd
cmd ant do-clean
cmd ant do-dist
This is not working. It just executes the setEnv and breaks out. It does not run the remaining commands
Manually this is how it works:
I first go to the folder C:\abc\xyz\build-scripts-master through the Command Prompt
Then I type in setEnv, which is a windows command script, and hit return.
Then I type in ant do-clean
And then ant do-dist
I want to automate this process and hence was trying to achieve this using batch file.
Try the following:
#CD /D "C:\abc\xyz\build-scripts-master"
#Call setEnv.cmd
#Call ant.bat do-clean
#Call ant.bat do-dist
The latter two lines assume that ant.bat is located somewhere in the current working directory or %PATH%
It is not imperative that the directory path is doublequoted in this case, just good practice.You could continue not to use the .bat extension with ant. I've included it just to make it clear that it is a batch file, and should be Called in the same way as the setEnv batch file.
it didn't run the bat files because you didn't specify the files' location in the code. As it stands right now, the script expects the .bats to exist in the working directory or it has been placed in the folder. The only way it will run the files arbitrarily is if you had placed your working location in the system variables or set the Path to the folders location. I don't know if the cmd and call are needed. I have never used them in my scripts.

Batch How to start a program

I want to create a batch file to launch my executable file after it has made some changes to itself.
My batch file is:
START /D "C:\Users\me\AppData\Roaming\Test\Test.exe"
When I run it though I just get a brief console flash and Test.exe doesn't start up.
I've verified the EXE is there in the directory.
I've launched the exe manually to verify it is working as well.
My batch file resides in
C:\Users\admin\AppData\Roaming\run.bat"
There are two issues:
The /D option solely defines the starting or working directory, but not the program to execute.
The start command considers the first quoted argument as the title of the new window. To avoid confusion with other arguments, always provide a window title (that may also be empty).
There are two solutions, which are actually not exactly equivalent:
Remove the /D option, so the current working directory is used:
start "" "C:\Users\me\AppData\Roaming\Test\Test.exe"
Keep the /D option and explicitly provide the new working directory to be used:
start "" /D "C:\Users\me\AppData\Roaming\Test" "Test.exe"
try changing to this
start /d "C:\Users\me\AppData\Roaming\Test" Test.exe
You will see the console flash and your program should startup.
Update
Thanks for #SomethingDark 's suggestion to use the following code.
start "" C:\Users\me\AppData\Roaming\Test\Test.exe
However, the above code will not work if your filename contains space.
Try with the following command.Add it to your batch script.Notice that you have to add double quotes after start keyword if there is/are whitespaces in the path string.
start "" "C:\Users\me\AppData\Roaming\Test\Test.exe"
Enclose any directory names which are longer than one-word into quotation marks. So the following path:
start C:\Program Files\MySQL\MySQL Workbench 8.0 CE\MySQL.exe
Should become something like this:
start C:\"Program Files"\MySQL\"MySQL Workbench 8.0 CE"\MySQL.exe

Force bat file to use non default cmd.exe

I'm writing a .bat file to handle some script generation automatically so I don't have to type in half a dozen command arguments each time I want to run it.
I have to run a vb script from the batch file
#call ..\Database\scripts\runscriptupdates.vbs
However the script will only run if using the the command prompt from
C:\Windows\SysWOW64\cmd.exe
By default the bat file uses the cmd.exe in system32
C:\Windows\System32\cmd.exe
Is there a way to force the batch file to use this cmd.exe to run the vbs file? I've been trawling the web for about an hour now and haven't found anything which helps (so far).
I've tried running the syswow64 with "start ..." however it doesn't seem to take the arguments after it.
Many thanks, Neil
You can try:
%windir%\SysWoW64\cmd.exe /c mybatch.bat
This will run the batch itself from a 32-bit command prompt. Thus, the call to your vbs will also be coming from a 32-bit command prompt.
I also had this problem, and I found the way to solve it.
You just need to change System Variables.
Go to Control Panel » System » Advanced System Settings » Environment Variables.
Find the variable ComSpec, then just click Edit... and change the path to "C:\Windows\SysWow64\cmd.exe"
Try typing this one line in your batch file.
%windir%\SysWoW64\cmd.exe /c ["]cscript [script name] [host options] [script arguments]["]
Where:
script name is the name of the script file, including the file name extension and any necessary path information.
host options are the command-line switches that enable or disable various Windows Script Host features. Host options are always preceded by two slashes (//).
script arguments are the command-line switches that are passed to the script. Script arguments are always preceded by one slash (/).
Example:
%windir%\SysWoW64\cmd.exe /c "cscript VoltageDrop.vbs /"Campbell.sin" "L08""
Note: In this line I do not pass any host options. This command will execute the string,
cscript VoltageDrop.vbs /"Campbell.sin" "L08"
as a command in the 32-bit command prompt.

Run batch file in the background

I have a batch file, this batch file will not start automatically, it will only run when i double click on it.
Can I run the batch file in the background when I double click on it.
Well, you can start it minimized with start, if that is enough. Really hiding it is difficult (although I can think of an option right now).
Basically you need to determine whether the batch has been started by double-clicking it. You can do this by defining a special variable and look for it:
#echo off
if not defined FOO (
set FOO=1
start /min "" %~0
exit /b
)
rem here whatever you wanted to do originally in the batch
As long as the FOO variable isn't defined (which is probably the default almost everywhere), this batch will launch itself minimized again, but with the variable defined first. Environments are passed to subprocesses, which is why this works.
you would generally need something else to run the script in that manor
i.e.
Create a shortcut, and set the “Run” field for the shortcut to “Minimized’.
Once you click or tab away from the cmd.exe window that the batch file is running it, it's "in the background" -- I'm not really sure what you want but it sounds like you might be asking how to run the batch file without displaying the cmd.exe window.
If so I can think of two ways: first, you can create a shortcut to the batch file, right click it, and in the properties there set the shortcut to run minimized (should be a drop down option next to Run).
You can also wrap invocation of the batch file in a VBScript file using Windows Script Host's shell object (calling the Run method) to run the batch file invisibly. Passing 0 as the intWindowStyle parameter will suppress display of a window or anything.
#Ghyath Serhal
I have used cmdow to do this on another program, it is an external application that can be used to modify the command prompt. To use it, you will need to either enter this code (see below) into it's own batch file, or into the command prompt, where it will run 'BatchFile.bat' with a hidden terminal window. I haven't found a way to use this in a single batch file, but I only found out about this today.
cmdow /run /hid 'BatchFile.bat'
Hope this helps.

Windows batch file for iterative invocation of other batch files

Consider a directory structure containing the following files:
\1.3\Baseline\GeneratedScripts\One\FullInstall.cmd
\1.3\Baseline\GeneratedScripts\Two\FullInstall.cmd
\1.3\Baseline\GeneratedScripts\Three\FullInstall.cmd
\1.3\Patches\Patch1\GeneratedScripts\One\FullInstall.cmd
\1.3\Patches\Patch1\GeneratedScripts\Two\FullInstall.cmd
\1.3\Patches\Patch1\GeneratedScripts\Three\FullInstall.cmd
\1.3\Patches\Patch2\GeneratedScripts\One\FullInstall.cmd
\1.3\Patches\Patch2\GeneratedScripts\Two\FullInstall.cmd
\1.3\Patches\Patch2\GeneratedScripts\Three\FullInstall.cmd
\1.3\Patches\Patch3\GeneratedScripts\One\FullInstall.cmd
\1.3\Patches\Patch3\GeneratedScripts\Two\FullInstall.cmd
\1.3\Patches\Patch3\GeneratedScripts\Three\FullInstall.cmd
I would like to construct a Windows batch file InstallEnvironment.cmd which:
Takes an environment name as a parameter; then
Executes the baseline install script, and each of the patch scripts in turn.
The batch file should automatically execute any additional patches that are added later.
Essentially I need to do something along the lines of this:
for %%_ in (1.3\**\GeneratedScripts\%%1\FullInstall.cmd) do cal %%_
However I'm not sure the wildcard system is rich enough to allow this as I don't get any matches for the ** directory wildcard.
For example, calling with the parameter "Two" should execute the following scripts, in order:
\1.3\Baseline\GeneratedScripts\Two\FullInstall.cmd
\1.3\Patches\Patch1\GeneratedScripts\Two\FullInstall.cmd
\1.3\Patches\Patch2\GeneratedScripts\Two\FullInstall.cmd
\1.3\Patches\Patch3\GeneratedScripts\Two\FullInstall.cmd
This will execute all the *.cmd files in the sub folders based on the argument:
for /r 1.3\ %%X in (GeneratedScripts\%1\*.cmd) do call "%%X"
In my experience, the %1 substitution works within directory names.
This should work:
InstallEnvironment.bat:
\1.3\Baseline\GeneratedScripts\%1\FullInstall.cmd
\1.3\Patches\Patch1\GeneratedScripts\%1\FullInstall.cmd
\1.3\Patches\Patch2\GeneratedScripts\%1\FullInstall.cmd
\1.3\Patches\Patch3\GeneratedScripts\%1\FullInstall.cmd
Edit this batch file to add additional patches in order, and it works. If you need to run the same batch file on multiple directories, create another batch file:
call InstallEnvironment.bat %1
call InstallEnvironment.bat %2
If you want to run a batch file in the background, use a vbs file to run that bat file in background instead.
Here is the code:
CreateObject("Wscript.Shell").Run"""" & Wscript.Arguments(0)& """",0,False
Save this exactly as invisible.vbs (or anything) and then make another batch file which will call your batch file to run it in background.
The code for the second batch file is:
wscript.exe "invisible.vbs" "Your_Batch_File.bat"
Then run the second batch file.
Note: WSH should be enabled on your computer, and the invisible.vbs file and the second batch file should be in the same folder. If not then you can give the full path to the invisible.vbs file in the 2nd batch file's script.

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