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Full Discussion: advanced awk
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting advanced awk Post 302409266 by radoulov on Wednesday 31st of March 2010 01:47:42 PM
Old 03-31-2010
This one should work:
Code:
awk -v uname="user1" 'END {
  while (++j <= i) print netgroups[j]
  }
NF == 2 { currgrp = $1 }
$0 ~ uname { netgroups[++i] = currgrp }
' group_file

Use gawk, nawk or /usr/xpg4/bin/awk on Solaris.

---------- Post updated at 07:47 PM ---------- Previous update was at 07:39 PM ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by scottn
It was a bit complicated, I think for the task?
[...]
Sure, no END block is needed Smilie


Code:
awk  'NF == 2 { g = $1 }
$NF ~ u && $0 = g x
' u="user1" group_file

One of the previous solutions will fail if the username is 0 Smilie

... and my code assumes unique group names.

Last edited by radoulov; 03-31-2010 at 02:52 PM..
 

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sulog(4)							   File Formats 							  sulog(4)

NAME
sulog - su command log file SYNOPSIS
/var/adm/sulog DESCRIPTION
The sulog file is a record of all attempts by users on the system to execute the su(1M) command. Each time su(1M) is executed, an entry is added to the sulog file. Each entry in the sulog file is a single line of the form: SU date time result port user-newuser where date The month and date su(1M) was executed. date is displayed in the form mm/dd where mm is the month number and dd is the day number in the month. time The time su(1M) was executed. time is displayed in the form HH/MM where HH is the hour number (24 hour system) and MM is the minute number. result The result of the su(1M) command. A ` + ' sign is displayed in this field if the su attempt was successful; otherwise a ` - ' sign is displayed. port The name of the terminal device from which su(1M) was executed. user The user id of the user executing the su(1M) command. newuser The user id being switched to with su(1M). EXAMPLES
Example 1: A sample sulog file. Here is a sample sulog file: SU 02/25 09:29 + console root-sys SU 02/25 09:32 + pts/3 user1-root SU 03/02 08:03 + pts/5 user1-root SU 03/03 08:19 + pts/5 user1-root SU 03/09 14:24 - pts/5 guest3-root SU 03/09 14:24 - pts/5 guest3-root SU 03/14 08:31 + pts/4 user1-root FILES
/var/adm/sulog su log file /etc/default/su contains the default location of sulog SEE ALSO
su(1M) SunOS 5.10 6 Jun 1994 sulog(4)
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