I have to compare records in two files. It can be done using gawk/awk but i am unable to do it. Please help me
File1
ABAAAAAB BC asa sa
ABAAABAA BC bsa sm
ABBBBAAA BC bxz sa
ABAAABAB BC csa sa
ABAAAAAA BC dsa sm
ABBBBAAB BC dxz sa
File 2
ABAAAAAB BC aas ba
ABAAAAAB BC asa sa... (6 Replies)
Guess the subject lines says it all.
What is the perl equivalent to grep -c
-c, --count
Suppress normal output; instead print a count of match-
ing lines for each input file. With the -v, --invert-
match option (see below), count non-matching lines.
... (6 Replies)
Hi,
I am using the script to print the portion of the file containing a particular string. But it is giving error "For Reading (No such file or directory). I am using cygwin as unix simulator.
cat TT35*.log | gawk -v search="12345678" '
/mSOriginating /,/disconnectingParty/ {
... (1 Reply)
Hi folks
I am not allowed to install GNU grep on AIX.
Here my code excerpt:
grep_fatal () {
/usr/sfw/bin/gegrep -B4 -A2 "FATAL|QUEUE|SIGHUP"
}
Howto the same on AIX based machine?
from manual GNU grep
‘--after-context=num’
Print num lines of trailing context after... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I'm working with gawk (on DOS) today.
A goal is: find a string for-instance '123', cut a line in two columns and write second one. The problem is: command line works OK, awk file doesn't. But I would like to work with file because there are many strings to find.
input:
line command:
awk... (4 Replies)
I'm looking for SED equivalent for grep -w -f. All I want is to search a list of patterns from a file. Also If the pattern doesn't match I do not want "null returned", rather I would prefer some text as place holder say "BLANK LINE" as I intend to process the output file based on line number.
... (1 Reply)
I have to do grep -v in a perl script. I want to exclude blank lines and lines having visitor.
#grep -v visitor abc.txt |grep '.'
file:abc.txt
1340 not booked 16D:D9 tourist 8
1341 not booked 16C:D4 tourist 25
1342 not booked 16D:C4 visitor 7
1343 not booked 01C:D9 visitor 6
1344... (4 Replies)
I am trying to use gawk to search a file and put the second value of the string into a string.
gawk -F: '$1~/CXFR/ {print $2}' go.dat
Below is the file 'go.dat'
====================
HOME :/
CTMP :/tmp
CUTL :/u/rdiiulio/bin
CWRK :/u/work
CXFR :/u/xfer
... (1 Reply)
Need grep -v "Hello" equivalent for AIX (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohtashims
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
systemd-journald.service
SYSTEMD-JOURNALD.SERVICE(8) systemd-journald.service SYSTEMD-JOURNALD.SERVICE(8)NAME
systemd-journald.service, systemd-journald.socket, systemd-journald - Journal service
SYNOPSIS
systemd-journald.service
systemd-journald.socket
/usr/lib/systemd/systemd-journald
DESCRIPTION
systemd-journald is a system service that collects and stores logging data. It creates and maintains structured, indexed journals based on
logging information that is received from the kernel, from user processes via the libc syslog(3) call, from STDOUT/STDERR of system
services or via its native API. It will implicitly collect numerous meta data fields for each log messages in a secure and unfakeable way.
See systemd.journal-fields(7) for more information about the collected meta data.
Log data collected by the journal is primarily text-based but can also include binary data where necessary. All objects stored in the
journal can be up to 2^64-1 bytes in size.
By default, the journal stores log data in /run/log/journal/. Since /run/ is volatile, log data is lost at reboot. To make the data
persistent, it is sufficient to create /var/log/journal/ where systemd-journald will then store the data.
systemd-journald will forward all received log messages to the AF_UNIXSOCK_DGRAM socket /run/systemd/journal/syslog, if it exists, which
may be used by Unix syslog daemons to process the data further.
See journald.conf(5) for information about the configuration of this service.
SIGNALS
SIGUSR1
Request that journal data from /run/ is flushed to /var/ in order to make it persistent (if this is enabled). This must be used after
/var/ is mounted, as otherwise log data from /run is never flushed to /var regardless of the configuration.
SIGUSR2
Request immediate rotation of the journal files.
KERNEL COMMAND LINE
A few configuration parameters from journald.conf may be overridden on the kernel command line:
systemd.journald.forward_to_syslog=, systemd.journald.forward_to_kmsg=, systemd.journald.forward_to_console=
Enables/disables forwarding of collected log messages to syslog, the kernel log buffer or the system console.
See journald.conf(5) for information about these settings.
ACCESS CONTROL
Journal files are, by default, owned and readable by the "systemd-journal" system group but are not writable. Adding a user to this group
thus enables her/him to read the journal files.
By default, each logged in user will get her/his own set of journal files in /var/log/journal/. These files will not be owned by the user,
however, in order to avoid that the user can write to them directly. Instead, file system ACLs are used to ensure the user gets read access
only.
Additional users and groups may be granted access to journal files via file system access control lists (ACL). Distributions and
administrators may choose to grant read access to all members of the "wheel" and "adm" system groups with a command such as the following:
# setfacl -Rnm g:wheel:rx,d:g:wheel:rx,g:adm:rx,d:g:adm:rx /var/log/journal/
Note that this command will update the ACLs both for existing journal files and for future journal files created in the /var/log/journal/
directory.
FILES
/etc/systemd/journald.conf
Configure systemd-journald behaviour. See journald.conf(5).
/run/log/journal/machine-id/*.journal, /run/log/journal/machine-id/*.journal~, /var/log/journal/machine-id/*.journal,
/var/log/journal/machine-id/*.journal~
systemd-journald writes entries to files in /run/log/journal/machine-id/ or /var/log/journal/machine-id/ with the ".journal" suffix. If
the daemon is stopped uncleanly, or if the files are found to be corrupted, they are renamed using the ".journal~" suffix, and
systemd-journald starts writing to a new file. /run is used when /var/log/journal is not available, or when Storage=volatile is set in
the journald.conf(5) configuration file.
SEE ALSO systemd(1), journalctl(1), journald.conf(5), systemd.journal-fields(7), sd-journal(3), setfacl(1), pydoc systemd.journal.
systemd 208SYSTEMD-JOURNALD.SERVICE(8)