Sorry for such a basic question, but I have spent hours trying to work this out! I need an awk command (or similar) that will look at a text file and output to the screen if the 4th column of each line has a value greater than or equal to x.
data.txt
This is the 1 line
This is the 2 line
This... (6 Replies)
I have a file which has a list of titles and then 14 lines afterwards. I need to find the 1 through 14 lines which are greater than 15k and print the title and the line which matched.
Sample before:
ABC.CDE.NORTH.NET
1:18427
2:302
3:15559
4:105
5:5
6:2
7:2
8:2
9:4
10:2
11:17
12:2... (3 Replies)
BASH problem with IS GREATER THAN OR EQUAL TO.
I have tried a dozen variations for this IF statement to work with IS GREATER THAN OR EQUAL TO. My code below WORKS.
array=( $( /usr/bin/sar -q 1 30 |grep Average |awk '{print $2,$3}' ) )
nthreads="${array}"
avproc="${array}"
if && ; then ... (6 Replies)
Hi
I want to find greater than and min value.
dategrep()
{
varlinenum=$1
varSESSTRANS_CL="$(egrep -n "<\/SESSTRANSFORMATIONINST>" tmpsess9580.txt | cut -d":" -f1)"
echo $varSESSTRANS_CL
}
dategrep 8
Output of the above command is:
I want to find out greater than 8 and... (9 Replies)
I have an output from db which looks like :
row1 row2 row3
abc 21.1 13
efg 21.1 45
ghi 21.1 75
when I apply following command ( cat my_output.txt | awk {'print $ 4' }
I have following output :
row3
13
45
75
now I want to figure out if... (4 Replies)
I have a file with multiple fields, example below
File 1:
Field 1|Field 2|Field 3|Field 4|Field 5|Field 6|Field 7|100
Field 1|Field 2|Field 3|Field 4|Field 5|Field 6|Field 7|101
Field 1|Field 2|Field 3|Field 4|Field 5|Field 6|Field 7|102
Field 1|Field 2|Field 3|Field 4|Field 5|Field... (4 Replies)
data.txt
August 09 17:16 2013
August 09 17:17 2013
August 09 17:19 2013
August 09 17:20 2013
August 09 17:21 2013
August 09 17:22 2013
August 09 17:23 2013
August 09 17:24 2013
to print from a point in this file, to the end of the file, i type:
awk '/August 09 17:22/,0' data.txt.
... (1 Reply)
I have large config-files for an application. The lines have different structure, but some of them contains the parameter 'TIMEOUT=x', where x is an numeric value. I want to change the value for that specific paramater if the value is greater than a specific value (got that?). The timeout-parameter... (3 Replies)
please let me know how to construct if then else by comparing two numbers if it is greater than 10000. I need to do some specific task executed.
can you help me out in shell scripting plz. (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: ramkumar15
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
plan9-test
TEST(1) General Commands Manual TEST(1)NAME
test - set status according to condition
SYNOPSIS
test expr
DESCRIPTION
Test evaluates the expression expr. If the value is true the exit status is null; otherwise the exit status is non-null. If there are no
arguments the exit status is non-null.
The following primitives are used to construct expr.
-r file True if the file exists (is accessible) and is readable.
-w file True if the file exists and is writable.
-x file True if the file exists and has execute permission.
-e file True if the file exists.
-f file True if the file exists and is a plain file.
-d file True if the file exists and is a directory.
-s file True if the file exists and has a size greater than zero.
-t fildes True if the open file whose file descriptor number is fildes (1 by default) is the same file as /dev/cons.
-A file True if the file exists and is append-only.
-L file True if the file exists and is exclusive-use.
-Tfile True if the file exists and is temporary.
s1 = s2 True if the strings s1 and s2 are identical.
s1 != s2 True if the strings s1 and s2 are not identical.
s1 True if s1 is not the null string. (Deprecated.)
-n s1 True if the length of string s1 is non-zero.
-z s1 True if the length of string s1 is zero.
n1 -eq n2 True if the integers n1 and n2 are arithmetically equal. Any of the comparisons -ne, -gt, -ge, -lt, or -le may be used in place
of -eq. The (nonstandard) construct -l string, meaning the length of string, may be used in place of an integer.
a -nt b True if file a is newer than (modified after) file b.
a -ot b True if file a is older than (modified before) file b.
f -older t True if file f is older than (modified before) time t. If t is a integer followed by the letters y(years), M(months), d(days),
h(hours), m(minutes), or s(seconds), it represents current time minus the specified time. If there is no letter, it represents
seconds since epoch. You can also concatenate mixed units. For example, 3d12h means three days and twelve hours ago.
These primaries may be combined with the following operators:
! unary negation operator
-o binary or operator
-a binary and operator; higher precedence than -o
( expr ) parentheses for grouping.
The primitives -b, -u, -g, and -s return false; they are recognized for compatibility with POSIX.
Notice that all the operators and flags are separate arguments to test. Notice also that parentheses and equal signs are meaningful to rc
and must be enclosed in quotes.
EXAMPLES
Test is a dubious way to check for specific character strings: it uses a process to do what an rc(1) match or switch statement can do. The
first example is not only inefficient but wrong, because test understands the purported string "-c" as an option.
if (test $1 '=' "-c") echo OK # wrong!
A better way is
if (~ $1 -c) echo OK
Test whether is in the current directory.
test -f abc -o -d abc
SOURCE
/src/cmd/test.c
SEE ALSO rc(1)TEST(1)