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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Shell script for search and replace by field Post 302707967 by Don Cragun on Sunday 30th of September 2012 03:31:33 PM
Old 09-30-2012
Please use code tags when you post examples of file contents and program fragments!

What are the field separators in your input files and in your rules file? What field separator do you want in the output and reject files?

Am I correct in assuming that the reject file is supposed to contain the original contents of every line that was changed by one or more rules in the rules file while producing the output file?

What is the distinction between the conditions "Equals" (or "equals") and "contains" (or "contauns")? It looks like if the character(s) found in the search field in the rules file are found in the field specified by the field named in the rules file for either condition, the content of the replace field in the corresponding line in the rules file replaces what was matched by the search field.

Am I correct in assuming that the "contauns" was a typo?

Is the contents of the condition column supposed to be case insensitive or was the "Equals" also a typo?
 

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AUGENRULES:(8)						  System Administration Utilities					    AUGENRULES:(8)

NAME
augenrules - a script that merges component audit rule files SYNOPSIS
augenrules [--check] [--load] DESCRIPTION
augenrules is a script that merges all component audit rules files, found in the audit rules directory, /etc/audit/rules.d, placing the merged file in /etc/audit/audit.rules. Component audit rule files, must end in .rules in order to be processed. All other files in /etc/audit/rules.d are ignored. The files are concatenated in order, based on their natural sort (see -v option of ls(1)) and stripped of empty and comment (#) lines. The last processed -D directive without an option, if present, is always emitted as the first line in the resultant file. Those with an option are replicated in place. The last processed -b directive, if present, is always emitted as the second line in the resultant file. The last processed -f directive, if present, is always emitted as the third line in the resultant file. The last processed -e directive, if present, is always emitted as the last line in the resultant file. The generated file is only copied to /etc/audit/rules.d, if it differs. OPTIONS
--check test if rules have changed and need updating without overwriting audit.rules. --load load old or newly built rules into the kernel. FILES
/etc/audit/rules.d/ /etc/audit/audit.rules SEE ALSO
audit.rules(8), auditctl(8), auditd(8). Red Hat Apr 2013 AUGENRULES:(8)
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