Then it would seem your "cd" is failing. If you were actually in that directory and issuing the command you've shown us, there's no reason for it to throw the error you posted that I can see. Does it work if you issue it manually and not "in code"?
-craig
"You can never have too many knives" -- Logan Nine Fingers
Well... in this example you left off the "./" from the front, that would cause it to fail on most systems as the current directory (represented by the ".") is not typically in the PATH. Nor is your "cli" directory... or it would have worked.
Lastly you are in the Korn shell, that's not what it is looking for.
-craig
"You can never have too many knives" -- Logan Nine Fingers
I am in cli directory and it doesn't matter if I put './' in front.
I still get the same error. Both the commands are giving me the same error.
ksh: ./istool: not found
I am going to open a PMR with IBM and see what they have to say.
I don't know if I need to install something extra to make this istool work on unix server.
When I run this command on IBM Information Server Command Line Interface, it works fine.
Let us know what they say. You would be getting a different message if you needed "something extra" installed, this is a fundamental O/S command line message saying it can't find what you want to run.
-craig
"You can never have too many knives" -- Logan Nine Fingers
The IBM lady said that the istool is a Python Script in AIX System and Perl Script in Unix Server.
And we don't have Python installed on our AIX Server.
She is recommending to install Python.
So right now I am going to ask my Unix Admin to install Python on the AIX Server.
I will keep you guys posted on it.