I am working on a generic script that will run a shell script with the arguments passed and redirect errors to one file, and all other output to another file. Then if there is anything in the error file it emails the error to me, otherwise it exits.
The advantage for this approach is that I... (0 Replies)
hi guys,
i am very new to scripting & lookin for a shell script/perl script which would scan another file with the keyword "no change" & take a count of the same. Let me know if any further details are required. (3 Replies)
OS: SuSE Linux Enterprise Server 10
Goal:
To track the errors in log file, If they exits users will be notify by email.
We have a script below:
SrchKey="SRVE0242I:"
LogFile=/PATHtemOut.log
MailTo="DN@mail.com
http:// ! -f PATH/alert.last && touch PATH/alert.last
egrep $SrchKey $LogFile... (3 Replies)
Hello members,
I have some doubts on how to write a script that can reports success / failure of a batch job ?
1. Run a batch job:
2. Wait and search for a particular string in the Log file:
tail -f log01*.txt | egrep -v "^SUCCESSFUL"
echo "continue with the other tasks"
... (1 Reply)
I need to read the last line of a log file and save it, sleep for X minutes and read the last line again. If the line is the same, exit 1, otherwise sleep for X minutes until the last line contains 'Status: Process completed'. Can anyone offer advice here? Thanks. (2 Replies)
Hi there,
I have a log file that I need to check every 10 minutes to find if a specific error exists but only in that 10 minute period. The reason is that the log is quite large, and will frequently contain these errors, so I only want alerting if it in the last 10 minutes - I don't want... (3 Replies)
Hi there.
Is there a way to scan a specific log file for errors that occurred in the last hour (time when script is run - 60 minutes)?
I have a script that will change to a directory where the log files are kept and will then grep the files for defined strings, but I need to make sure that... (2 Replies)
Is there any way I can do scan of log file in Linux, where the log file entries for last 15 minutes can be searched for a particular pattern.
The log file entries are in below format.
2014-01-27T23:08:53.924-0500 LDAP authentication error
2014-01-27T23:08:53.934-0500 LDAP authentication... (4 Replies)
Good Morning,
Every so often, I have copy scripts that to don't complete, but I don't immediately know why. It usually ends up being a permissions issue or a length issue.
The scripts edit a log file, so I'd like to include any copy errors/issues in that file to check if the copies... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Stellaman1977
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT XFREE86
ncab2clf
ncab2clf(1) User Commands ncab2clf(1)NAME
ncab2clf - convert binary log file to Common Log File format
SYNOPSIS
/usr/bin/ncab2clf [-Dhv] [-i input-file] [-o output-file] [-b size] [-n number] [-s datetime]
DESCRIPTION
The ncab2clf command is used to convert the log file generated by the Solaris Network Cache and Accelerator ("NCA") from binary format, to
Common Log File ("CLF") format. If no input-file is specified, ncab2clf uses stdin. If no output-file is specified, the output goes to std-
out.
OPTIONS -b Specifies the binary-log-file blocking in kilobytes; the default is 64 Kbyte.
-D Specifies that direct I/O be disabled.
-h Prints usage message.
-i input-file Specifies the input file.
-n number Output number CLF records.
-o output-file Specifies the output file.
-s datetime Skip any records before the date and time specified in datetime. You can specify the date and time in CLF format or in the
format specified by the touch(1) utility. CLF format is the dominant format, so ncab2clf first analyzes datetime assuming
CLF.
-v Provides verbose output.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Converting a Binary File to a Common Log File Format
The following example converts the binary file /var/nca/logs/nca.blf to a file /var/nca/logs/nca.clf, which is in Common Log File format.
example% ncab2clf -D -i /var/nca/logs/nca.blf -o /var/nca/logs/nca.clf
Example 2: Converting Multiple Log Files
The following script may be used to convert multiple log files. The directory designated by "*" must only contain log files.
!/bin/ksh
for filename in *
do
ncab2clf -D < $filename > $filename.clf
done
Example 3: Using -s and -n on a Raw Device
The following example shows how ncab2clf can be used on a raw device. If not using the -n option, the default is to convert all records
from the starting location to the end of the file. The date and time specified with -s, below, is in CLF format.
example% ncab2clf -s '10/Apr/2001:09:23:13' -n 100 < /dev/dsk/c2t1d0s6
EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned:
0 The file converted successfully
>0 An error occurred.
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWncau |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Interface Stability |Evolving |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO nca(1), ncakmod(1), nca.if(4), ncakmod.conf(4), ncalogd.conf(4), attributes(5)
System Administration Guide: IP Services
NOTES
The binary log files generated by NCA can become very large. When converting these large binary files, use the -b option to the ncab2clf
command to help performance.
Direct I/O is a benefit to the user if the data being written does not come in as large chunks. However, if the user wishes to convert the
log file in large chunks using the -b option, then direct I/O should be disabled by using the -D option.
SunOS 5.10 28 Sep 2001 ncab2clf(1)