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Formatting Property Value Guidelines
The following guidelines will help ensure that you set properties correctly on the command line when using xconfmanager:
To specify a property whose value contains characters that might be interpreted by your shell (such as spaces and special characters), escape them using the appropriate technique for the shell you are using.
On a Windows system, you can include spaces in a value by enclosing the argument with doubles quotes or you can escape the space character with ^. For example, use either of the following:
-s "wt.inf.container.SiteOrganization.name=ACME Corporation"
-s wt.inf.container.SiteOrganization.name=ACME^ Corporation
On a UNIX system, you can use doubles quotes or you can escape the space character with \. For example, use either of the the following:
-s "wt.inf.container.SiteOrganization.name=ACME Corporation"
-s wt.inf.container.SiteOrganization.name=ACME\ Corporation
In many UNIX shells, the use of a backward slash (\) escapes the following character as a literal. In most cases, using forward slashes (/) in file paths is a simple way to specify a path without having to know the intricacies of your shell’s command line escaping rules.
On UNIX, dollar signs are usually interpreted by shells as variable prefixes. To set a property value that has a dollar symbol in it, use single quotes around the argument so that the shell does not interpreted it or use backslash to escape the dollar symbols. For example, use either of the following:
-s 'wt.homepage.jsp=$(wt.server.codebase)/wtcore/jsp/wt/portal/
index.jsp'
or
-s wt.homepage.jsp=
‘\$(wt.server.codebase)/wtcore/jsp/wt/portal/index.jsp
Other than escaping arguments so that the command-line shell does not misinterpret them, you should not need to escape other values to be compatible with XML or property file syntaxes. The xconfmanager escapes property names and values automatically if necessary.