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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Help with awk using * (asterisk) as the delimiter Post 302759713 by newbie_01 on Tuesday 22nd of January 2013 09:06:33 PM
Old 01-22-2013
Help with awk using * (asterisk) as the delimiter

Hi

I am trying to parse the following lines and has to use * (asterisk) as the delimiter.

These lines are in a file, for example tmp.txt and I am using a while loop


Code:
 
 
tmp.txt:
 
14-OCT-2012 06:38:59 * (CONNECT_DATA=(SID=test)(GLOBAL_NAME=test.mydb.com.ch)(CID=(PROGRAM=Z:\Ora6i\BIN\ifrun60.EXE)(HOST=8000XXX05004RV)(USER=mickey
))) * (ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=11.90.24.239)(PORT=1552)) * establish * test * 0
14-OCT-2012 06:39:15 * (CONNECT_DATA=(SID=test)(GLOBAL_NAME=test.mydb.com.ch)(CID=(PROGRAM=Z:\Ora6i\BIN\RWRBE60.exe)(HOST=8000XXX05004RV)(USER=mickey
))) * (ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=11.90.24.239)(PORT=1574)) * establish * test * 0
14-OCT-2012 06:40:48 * (CONNECT_DATA=(SID=test)(GLOBAL_NAME=test.mydb.com.ch)(CID=(PROGRAM=Z:\Ora6i\BIN\ifrun60.EXE)(HOST=8200XXX138060Z)(USER=mouse))) * (ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=11.217.35.94)(PORT=2525)) * establish * test * 0
14-OCT-2012 07:01:04 * (CONNECT_DATA=(CID=(PROGRAM=)(HOST=server911)(USER=oracle))(COMMAND=status)(ARGUMENTS=64)(SERVICE=test)(VERSION=135296000)) *
status * 0
 
- while loop code block
 
   while read line
   do
      echo " ---> Parsing ---> "
      echo " - $line"
      echo ""
      timestamp=`echo $line | awk -F* '{ print $1 }'`
      echo " - timestamp = ${timestamp}"
      echo ""
      echo ""
   done < ${pid}.tmp.01

Instead of just getting the timestamp, I am getting the timestamp plus what looks like a directory listing of all files, i.e. like a timestamp and echo * of the directory that I am in.

Can anyone please advise how to get around this?

Feeback/advise much appreciated. Thanks in advance.

---------- Post updated at 09:06 PM ---------- Previous update was at 08:42 PM ----------

Note that the strings are supposed to be one long line of strings so tmp.txt should be as below:

Code:
 
14-OCT-2012 06:38:59 * (CONNECT_DATA=(SID=test)(GLOBAL_NAME=test.mydb.com.ch)(CID=(PROGRAM=Z:\Ora6i\BIN\ifrun60.EXE)(HOST=8000XXX05004RV)(USER=mickey))) * (ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=11.90.24.239)(PORT=1552)) * establish * test * 0
14-OCT-2012 06:39:15 * (CONNECT_DATA=(SID=test)(GLOBAL_NAME=test.mydb.com.ch)(CID=(PROGRAM=Z:\Ora6i\BIN\RWRBE60.exe)(HOST=8000XXX05004RV)(USER=mickey))) * (ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=11.90.24.239)(PORT=1574)) * establish * test * 0
14-OCT-2012 06:40:48 * (CONNECT_DATA=(SID=test)(GLOBAL_NAME=test.mydb.com.ch)(CID=(PROGRAM=Z:\Ora6i\BIN\ifrun60.EXE)(HOST=8200XXX138060Z)(USER=mouse))) * (ADDRESS=(PROTOCOL=tcp)(HOST=11.217.35.94)(PORT=2525)) * establish * test * 0
14-OCT-2012 07:01:04 * (CONNECT_DATA=(CID=(PROGRAM=)(HOST=server911)(USER=oracle))(COMMAND=status)(ARGUMENTS=64)(SERVICE=test)(VERSION=135296000)) * status * 0

 
GETDELIM(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 					       GETDELIM(3)

NAME
getdelim, getline -- read a delimited record from a stream LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS
#include <stdio.h> ssize_t getdelim(char ** restrict lineptr, size_t * restrict n, int delimiter, FILE * restrict stream); ssize_t getline(char ** restrict lineptr, size_t * restrict n, FILE * restrict stream); DESCRIPTION
The getdelim() function reads from the stream until it encounters a character matching delimiter, storing the input in *lineptr. The buffer is NUL-terminated and includes the delimiter. The delimiter character must be representable as an unsigned char. If *n is non-zero, then *lineptr must be pre-allocated to at least *n bytes. The buffer should be allocated dynamically; it must be possible to free(3) *lineptr. getdelim() ensures that *lineptr is large enough to hold the input, updating *n to reflect the new size. The getline() function is equivalent to getdelim() with delimiter set to the newline character. RETURN VALUES
The getdelim() and getline() functions return the number of characters read, including the delimiter. If no characters were read and the stream is at end-of-file, the functions return -1. If an error occurs, the functions return -1 and the global variable errno is set to indi- cate the error. The functions do not distinguish between end-of-file and error, and callers must use feof(3) and ferror(3) to determine which occurred. EXAMPLES
The following code fragment reads lines from a file and writes them to standard output. char *line = NULL; size_t linesize = 0; ssize_t linelen; while ((linelen = getline(&line, &linesize, fp)) != -1) fwrite(line, linelen, 1, stdout); if (ferror(fp)) perror("getline"); ERRORS
[EINVAL] lineptr or n is a NULL pointer. [EOVERFLOW] More than SSIZE_MAX characters were read without encountering the delimiter. The getdelim() and getline() functions may also fail and set errno for any of the errors specified in the routines fflush(3), malloc(3), read(2), stat(2), or realloc(3). SEE ALSO
ferror(3), fgets(3), fopen(3) STANDARDS
The getdelim() and getline() functions conform to IEEE Std 1003.1-2008 (``POSIX.1''). BSD
June 30, 2010 BSD
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