[SOLVED] Field $() is incorrect 'what does it mean'
I am creating (or trying to) an awk script to retrieve various data from an input file and output the data in a different format. I think it is self explanatory what I am attempting but I getting the error Field $() isincorrect when I reun it using
I hope someone can explain why this may be the case.
Hello. I registered yesterday with a username of "kailor" and a password of removed. I could only logon with a username of "keithailor@comc" and the above password.
I want my username to become "kailor"
and my password to remain as removed.
Please email me with the steps to correct this.
... (1 Reply)
Hi to all,
I get a problem when i tried to modifie the password of the root,but thi s the message i have on root password,even i put the old password i have the same message "password has expired, you are allowed to entry by daemon"Could any one give me any suggestion to solve the problem?... (2 Replies)
Hey everyone,
I am trying to get a 2GB patch cluster FTP'd to a solaris 10 server. I have tried logging in via ftp, and both with root as well as my personal account, I get "Login Incorrect." I have verified that I can log in using telnet.
-bash-3.00$ netstat -a |grep ftp
*.ftp ... (10 Replies)
Hi,
I need help changing a field from MM/DD/YY to DD/MM/YY format. Suppose a file a.csv. The record is
"11/16/09","ABC"," 1","EU","520892414","1","600","31351000","1234567","ANR BANK CO. LTD"
"11/16/09","PQR"," 2","EU","520892427","1","600","31351000","5467897","ANR BANK CO.... (4 Replies)
I have ran into a heavy case of PEBCAK*) and could need some advice on what i do wrong:
OS is Linux (kernel 2.6.35), sort --version reports "8.5" from 2010, shell is ksh.
Originally i had a file with with the following structure:
hdisk1 yyy
hdisk2 yyy
hdisk3 yyy
hdisk4 yyy
hdisk5 yyy... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I have a file like following:
ALB_13554 1 1 1
ALB_13554 1 2 1
ALB_18544 2 0 2
ALB_18544 1 0 1
This is a sample of my file, my real file has 441845 number of fields. What I want to do is to calculate the number of 1 and 2 in each column using AWK, so, the output file looks like... (5 Replies)
Dear Experts,
How to use field separator in awk , when the field separation is needed as "||"
Example: (file1 )
aa || bb || cc || 1234
xx || yy || zz || 1123
Q:
If I want to print $3 and $4 only , with using the field separator "||"
How to write awk code: (6 Replies)
Hi All
I have a .dat file, the values are seperated by ". I wish to identify all field values in field 14 that are not '01-APR-2013' band then copy those records to a new file. Can anyone suggest the UNIX command required.
Thanks in advance
Andy (2 Replies)
Hi,
let's say an input looks like:
A|C|C|D
A|C|I|E
A|B|I|C
A|T|I|B
as the title of the thread explains, I am trying to get something like:
1|A=4
2|C=2|B=1|T=1
3|I=3|C=1
4|D=1|E=1|C=1|B=1
i.e. a count of every character in each field (first column of output) independently, sorted... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: beca123456
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
mailq
MAILQ(1) General Commands Manual MAILQ(1)NAME
mailq - print the mail queue
SYNOPSIS
mailq [-Ac] [-q...] [-v]
DESCRIPTION
Mailq prints a summary of the mail messages queued for future delivery.
The first line printed for each message shows the internal identifier used on this host for the message with a possible status character,
the size of the message in bytes, the date and time the message was accepted into the queue, and the envelope sender of the message. The
second line shows the error message that caused this message to be retained in the queue; it will not be present if the message is being
processed for the first time. The status characters are either * to indicate the job is being processed; X to indicate that the load is
too high to process the job; and - to indicate that the job is too young to process. The following lines show message recipients, one per
line.
Mailq is identical to ``sendmail -bp''.
The relevant options are as follows:
-Ac Show the mail submission queue specified in /etc/mail/submit.cf instead of the MTA queue specified in /etc/mail/sendmail.cf.
-qL Show the "lost" items in the mail queue instead of the normal queue items.
-qQ Show the quarantined items in the mail queue instead of the normal queue items.
-q[!]I substr
Limit processed jobs to those containing substr as a substring of the queue id or not when ! is specified.
-q[!]Q substr
Limit processed jobs to quarantined jobs containing substr as a substring of the quarantine reason or not when ! is specified.
-q[!]R substr
Limit processed jobs to those containing substr as a substring of one of the recipients or not when ! is specified.
-q[!]S substr
Limit processed jobs to those containing substr as a substring of the sender or not when ! is specified.
-v Print verbose information. This adds the priority of the message and a single character indicator (``+'' or blank) indicating
whether a warning message has been sent on the first line of the message. Additionally, extra lines may be intermixed with the
recipients indicating the ``controlling user'' information; this shows who will own any programs that are executed on behalf of this
message and the name of the alias this command expanded from, if any. Moreover, status messages for each recipient are printed if
available.
Several sendmail.cf options influence the behavior of the mailq utility: The number of items printed per queue group is restricted by
MaxQueueRunSize if that value is set. The status character * is not printed for some values of QueueSortOrder, e.g., filename, random,
modification, and none, unless a -q option is used to limit the processed jobs.
The mailq utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
SEE ALSO sendmail(8)HISTORY
The mailq command appeared in 4.0BSD.
$Date: 2013-11-22 20:51:55 $ MAILQ(1)