09-28-2007
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. AIX
Hi all. I've been put in charge of updating one of our AIX 5.2 servers to ML7. (perhaps not wise since I'm an absolute n00b, but hey, it's good experience to fly by the seat of one's pants).
So:
a) I typed "oslevel -r" and got back "5200-04"
b) I went to IBM's Fix Central and downloaded... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pschlesinger
1 Replies
2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Is there any way to look for a directory path that is listed any number of lines *before* a keyword in an error message?
I have a script that is trying to process different files that are always down a certain portion of a path, and if there is an error, then says there is an error, contact... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: tekster757
2 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I have a variable , lets say
a=/disk1/net/first.ksh
i need to grep "first.ksh"
everytime "a" gets changed dynamically and i do not know how many '"/" are there in my variable.
Can somebody help me out. (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: giri_luck
9 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello. I'm not nearly good enough with awk/perl to create the logfile scraping script that my boss is insisting we need immediately. Here is a brief 3-line excerpt from the access.log file in question (actual URL domain changed to 'aaa.com'):
209.253.130.36 - - "GET... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kevinmccallum
2 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
I'm new to Unix scripting and I'm not sure if this can be done. Example:
search (grep) in a file for 'Control ID' and then replace with 4 blanks 7 bytes before 'Control ID.
input
"xxxxxx1234xxxxxxxControl IDxxxxxx"
output:
"xxxxxx xxxxxxxControl IDxxxxxx"
thanks! (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: jbt828
7 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
I'm having trouble writing a regular expression that matches the text I need it to. Let me give an example to express my trouble. Suppose I have the following text:
if(condition)
multiline
statement
else if(condition)
multiline
statement
else if(condition)
multiline
statement
else... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Altay_H
3 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
I'm trying to FTP what looks like a simple .txt file from my Windows XP desktop to my UNIX server. I've tried using several programs to do this including UltraEdit and FTP Commander. I have tried sending it ascii, binary and even let the program decide. But every time it arrives in UNIX... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Korn0474
4 Replies
8. Programming
Hi all,
I'm after some help with this small issue which i'm struggling to work out a fix for.
I have a file that contains records that all have a time stamp for each individual record, i need to search the file for a specific time stamp and then search back 10 seconds to see if the number... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sp3arsy
2 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I'm using the following to do a backwards search of a file for a string
sed s/^M//g FILE | nawk 'c-->0;$0~s{if(b)for(c=b+1;c>1;c--)print r;print;c=a}b{r=$0}' b=10 a=0 s="9005"|grep "policy "|sort -u |awk '{print $4}'|cut -c2-10
My issue is that because I'm looking back 10 lines it's... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: SaltyDog
11 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
hi all,
trying this using shell/bash with sed/awk/grep
I have two files, one containing one column, the other containing multiple columns (comma delimited).
file1.txt
abc12345
def12345
ghi54321
...
file2.txt
abc1,text1,texta
abc,text2,textb
def123,text3,textc
gh,text4,textd... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: shogun1970
6 Replies
DIFF(1) General Commands Manual DIFF(1)
NAME
diff - print differences between two files
SYNOPSIS
diff [-c | -e | -C n] [-br]file1 file2
OPTIONS
-C n Produce output that contains n lines of context
-b Ignore white space when comparing
-c Produce output that contains three lines of context
-e Produce an ed-script to convert file1 into file2
-r Apply diff recursively to files and directories of
EXAMPLES
diff file1 file2 # Print differences between 2 files
diff -C 0 file1 file2
# Same as above
diff -C 3 file1 file2
# Output three lines of context with every
diff -c file1 file2 # Same
diff /etc /dev # Compares recursively the directories /etc and /dev
diff passwd /etc # Compares ./passwd to /etc/passwd
DESCRIPTION
the same name, when file1 and file2 are both directories" difference encountered"
Diff compares two files and generates a list of lines telling how the two files differ. Lines may not be longer than 128 characters. If
the two arguments on the command line are both directories, diff recursively steps through all subdirectories comparing files of the same
name. If a file name is found only in one directory, a diagnostic message is written to stdout. A file that is of either block special,
character special or FIFO special type, cannot be compared to any other file. On the other hand, if there is one directory and one file
given on the command line, diff tries to compare the file with the same name as file in the directory directory.
SEE ALSO
cdiff(1), cmp(1), comm(1), patch(1).
DIFF(1)