10-10-2012
Thanks, that saved some trouble, however, my output is putting out literal text, not the variable value. My output:
myip1 myhost1.test.com myhost1
myip2 myhost2.test.com myhost2
myip1 myhost1.test.com myhost1
myip2 myhost2.test.com host2
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Does anybody have an explanation for the following:
The following scripts runs fine on IRIX64 6.5 but has bugs on Solaris 8.
#! /bin/sh
echo run only on an SGI machine
echo type in linenumber
read j
echo value
read value
awk -f rmspass2 level=$value $j'step1.mlf'
When the script is... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: AreaMan
5 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi
I have a unix shell script with an awk statement. I would like to print some of the fields of an input file. However, I would like to print them dynamically, ie by passing the literal $1 $3 into the script to define the output.
I have tried the following:
variable1='$1'
awk... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Bab00shka
2 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
I am trying to pass the results from a variable gathered from awk, however when I echo the 'PARSE' and 'SUB', the response is blank. This is my command.
awk -F= '/Unit/''{ PARSE=substr($2,1,5) ; SUB=substr($2,1,1) }' inputfile.lst
Is this a kind of valid attempt or am I obligated to declare... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: gozer13
3 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
How to pass space seprated variables in awk. (HP-UX, sh shell)
I have the problem like below:
var="Hello"
var2="Manu Batham"
echo $var2 | awk -v variable=${var} '{ printf "%s %s", variable, $1}'
and its output is:
Hello Manu
while output should be:
Hello Manu Batham
Please... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: manubatham20
4 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi.
I need to parse file and assign some values to variables, right now i do like below
MYHOMEDIR=`awk '/Home/ {print $NF}' output.txt`
MYSHELL=`awk '/Shell/ {print $NF}' output.txt`
PRGRP=`awk '/Primary/ {print $NF}' output.txt`
SECGRP=`awk '/Second/ {print $NF}' output.txt`
In this... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: urello
10 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Using ksh to call a function which has awk script embedded.
It parses a long two element list file, filled with text numbers (I want column 2, beginning no sooner than line 45, that's the only known thing) . It's unknown where to start or end the data collection, dynamic variables will be used. ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: highnthemnts
1 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
I am wanting to pass variables from a file to an awk arithmetic formula.
When I use the formula with the value it works well. As soon as I make these variables I get an inf (infinity) response. I can certainly echo the variables back and they look correct. My googling for answers has... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: gafoleyo73
3 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi guys,
I need to fetch data from logfile between two given dates,i got the below code from our forum.It works perfect,but i need to enter the value dynamically to awk while running.
awk '/2012 Jun/{p=1}!/2012 Jul/ && prev~/2012 Jul/ && p{p=0}{prev=$0}p' file
i tried the below code,but... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohanalakshmi
4 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Trying to do so
echo "111:222:333" |awk -F: '{system("export TESTO=" $2)}'But it doesn't work (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: urello
2 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
Am looking to pass some Linux environment variables into AWK , can I simply use the -v option ?
awk -F: -v AHOME=$HOME '{ if
{rm AHOME/file.txt
a=2 } }'
config.txt
... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: alldbest
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
potool
POTOOL(1) General Commands Manual POTOOL(1)
NAME
potool - program for manipulating gettext po files
SYNOPSIS
potool FILENAME1 [ FILENAME2 ] [-f f|nf|t|nt|nth|o|no] [-n ctxt|id|str|cmt|ucmt|pcmt|scmt|dcmt|tr|linf]... [-s] [-c]
potool -h
DESCRIPTION
potool works in two (so far) modes. The first mode requires providing one file name, and works as a filter. In the second mode, the program
replaces the translations in FILENAME1 with the translations from FILENAME2. (So FILENAME1 is the base po file, while FILENAME2 is our
working copy.)
OPTIONS
-f filter
Determines which po file entries should be retained. In the second mode, the filters are applied only to FILENAME2 (the working
copy). Existing filters are:
t - translated entries
nt - untranslated entries
nth - untranslated entries and the header
f - fuzzy entries
nf - entries that are not fuzzy
o - obsolete entries
no - non-obsolete entries
It is possible to stack filters, by specifying multiple -f options.
-n filter
Determines which po file entries parts should not be retained. Any number of -n options is allowed. Valid parameters are:
ctxt - don't write 'ctxt' parts
id - don't write 'id' parts
str - don't write 'str' parts
tr - don't write translations
ucmt - don't write user's comments
pcmt - don't write the comments regarding position in source files
scmt - don't write special comments ('#, fuzzy, c-format, ...')
dcmt - don't write reserved comments (usually starting with a dot)
cmt - don't write any comments
linf - change source line numbers to '1'.
The last parameter is useful when you need to compare two po or pot files using diff(1) as it usually returns lots of unimportant
line number changes otherwise.
-s Don't display the entries themselves, only their count.
-c Overwrite all msgstrs with their msgids.
-h Display short usage help.
EXAMPLES
potool x.po -s -ft
displays the number of translated entries. See also postats(1).
potool x.po -nstr
Deletes all translations - so you can start from scratch! :-)
potool x.po -ft && potool x.po -fnt
displays firstly the translated and then the non-translated entries from file x.po (reverse order is not recommended because of the
first "header" entry). The output contains all information from x.po, with the difference that untranslated entries are located
together in a single place.
potool x.po -fnt > tmp.po && editor tmp.po && potool x.po tmp.po
lets you easily add new translations, without looking at the already translated entries
The last two examples are implemented as the potooledit(1) program.
SEE ALSO
potooledit(1), postats(1), msgmerge(1), msgfmt(1).
AUTHOR
Potool was written by Zbigniew Chyla and is now being maintained by Marcin Owsiany <porridge@debian.org>.
September 21, 2007 POTOOL(1)