Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Need help with writing shell script Post 18435 by Jimbo on Thursday 28th of March 2002 09:49:43 AM
Old 03-28-2002
In the following script, awk counts, then prints, the number of alert lines. Either of the two conditions on a line will trigger an alert. If both need to be true on the same line, then change the || to &&.
Code:
#!/bin/sh
awk '\
BEGIN {while (substr($0,1,8)!="--------") getline}
{if ($2>0 || $4>0.1) alerts++}
END {print alerts}' rollback.lst |
read alerts

if [ "$alerts" -gt 0 ] ; then
   echo 'alert(s) found, do sendmail here'
fi

exit 0

Following version of the script can be used for testing. Instead of counting the lines, it will print each line and indicate ALERT or not:
Code:
#!/bin/sh
awk '\
BEGIN {while (substr($0,1,8)!="--------") getline}
{if ($2>0 || $4>0.1)
    msg="  ALERT"
 else
    msg=""
 printf "%-9s%4d  %10f%s\n",$1,$2,$4,msg}
' rollback.lst
exit 0

Jimbo
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Writing a shell Script

How to write a shell script file to read 5 numbers using a while loop. Finding the average, maximum and minumum for the numbers. Any help would be great. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Chin
1 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need help for writing shell script

Hello ALL, I am fresher in Unix . i need help to write small shell script . Please help me unix guru. I am developing the internal site in my office . the data files are generated in one directory everyday . I have to write shell script to sort those files and put it is internal site . ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: deepa20
3 Replies

3. AIX

Difference between writing Unix Shell script and AIX Shell Scripts

Hi, Please give me the detailed Differences between writing Unix Shell script and AIX Shell Scripts. Thanks in advance..... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: haroonec
0 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Writing shell script

Hi, I am a new for shell script. i need to write script using the following commands cd /usres/test # create directory mkdir temp+DATE( i need to append date ) #moving files from one directory to this directory(we need to check total files in source and taget) cd /users/sample ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: bmkreddy
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need help in writing the shell script

Can anyone please help me in writing a shell script that would check if a particular user(xyz) has logged in, and if yes, the audit daemon needs to be started. When the user logs off the dameon needs to shutdown , and the report needs to be e-mailed to a set of users. (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: ggayathri
12 Replies

6. UNIX and Linux Applications

Need help in writing shell script

I have written a shell script and when i ran the script,for some point of time it is asking to press enter key manually using keyboard.So i need it the enter key in shell itself. ex : in my shell script,i used the command ssh-keygen -t rsa so it asks the enter 3 times. can you please let me know... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: lkeswar
3 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Writing a shell script

Hi I have two files a.log and b.log . i need to append a.log and b.log so that at the end of first line in a.log i need the append the data of first line from b.log and end of the second line in a.log i need to append the data of second line from b.log and so on up to the end of the file can... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: lalu
3 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need help writing shell script!

Hi, I'm very new to this, so bear with me please. I want to write a sh script (or if there's a better format please let me know) that allows me to, when I run it, print the date to a file (1.out) take 2 arguments (files a.fa and b.fa), run them with another program, outputting to 2.out, and then... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ShiGua
2 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Need help writing shell script!

Hi, I'm very new to this, so bear with me please. I want to write a sh script (or if there's a better format please let me know) that allows me to, when I run it, print the date to a file (1.out) take 2 arguments (files a.fa and b.fa), run them with another program, outputting to 2.out, and then... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ShiGua
4 Replies

10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Need help in writing shell script

Dear Team, Below is the list of steps i need to perform manually as of now and completely new to shell scripting, could you help in writing a shell script to perform the below procedure? 1. Log in to primary DNS server 2. Check /etc/named.conf if zone is already created (grep –i... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: VKIRUPHAKARAN
2 Replies
HOBBITD_ALERT(8)					      System Manager's Manual						  HOBBITD_ALERT(8)

NAME
hobbitd_alert - hobbitd worker module for sending out alerts SYNOPSIS
hobbitd_channel --channel=page hobbitd_alert [options] DESCRIPTION
hobbitd_alert is a worker module for hobbitd, and as such it is normally run via the hobbitd_channel(8) program. It receives hobbitd page- and ack-messages from the "page" channel via stdin, and uses these to send out alerts about failed and recovered hosts and services. The operation of this module is controlled by the hobbit-alerts.cfg(5) file. This file holds the definition of rules and recipients, that determine who gets alerts, how often, for what servers etc. OPTIONS
--config=FILENAME Sets the filename for the hobbit-alerts.cfg file. The default value is "etc/hobbit-alerts.cfg" below the Xymon server directory. --dump-config Dumps the configuration after parsing it. May be useful to track down problems with configuration file errors. --checkpoint-file=FILENAME File where the current state of the hobbitd_alert module is saved. When starting up, hobbitd_alert will also read this file to restore the previous state. --checkpoint-interval=N Defines how often (in seconds) the checkpoint-file is saved. --cfid If this option is present, alert messages will include a line with "cfid:N" where N is the linenumber in the hobbit-alerts.cfg file that caused this message to be sent. This can be useful to track down problems with duplicate alerts. --test HOST SERVICE [options] Shows which alert rules matches the given HOST/SERVICE combination. Useful to debug configuration problems, and see what rules are used for an alert. The possible options are: --color=COLORNAME The COLORNAME parameter is the color of the alert: red, yellow or purple. --duration=SECONDS The SECONDS parameter is the duration of the alert in seconds. --group=GROUPNAME The GROUPNAME paramater is a groupid string from the hobbit-clients.cfg file. --time=TIMESTRING The TIMESTRING parameter is the time-of-day for the alert, expressed as an absolute time in the epoch format (sec- onds since Jan 1 1970). This is easily obtained with the GNU date utility using the "+%s" output format. --debug Enable debugging output. HOW HOBBIT DECIDES WHEN TO SEND ALERTS
The hobbitd_alert module is responsible for sending out all alerts. When a status first goes to one of the ALERTCOLORS, hobbitd_alert is notified of this change. It notes that the status is now in an alert state, and records the timestamp when this event started, and adds the alert to the list statuses that may potentially trigger one or more alert messages. This list is then matched against the hobbit-alerts.cfg configuration. This happens at least once a minute, but may happen more often. E.g. when status first goes into an alert state, this will always trigger the matching to happen. When scanning the configuration, hobbitd_alert looks at all of the configuration rules. It also checks the DURATION setting against how long time has elapsed since the event started - i.e. against the timestamp logged when hobbitd_alert first heard of this event. When an alert recipient is found, the alert is sent and it is recorded when this recipient is due for his next alert message, based on the REPEAT setting defined for this recipient. The next time hobbitd_alert scans the configuration for what alerts to send, it will still find this recipient because all of the configuration rules are fulfilled, but an alert message will not be generated until the repeat interval has elapsed. It can happen that a status first goes yellow and triggers an alert, and later it goes red - e.g. a disk filling up. In that case, hob- bitd_alert clears the internal timer for when the next (repeat) alert is due for all recipients. You generally want to be told when some- thing that has been in a warning state becomes critical, so in that case the REPEAT setting is ignored and the alert is sent. This only happens the first time such a change occurs - if the status switches between yellow and red multiple times, only the first transition from yellow->red causes this override. When an status recovers, a recovery message may be sent - depending on the configuration - and then hobbitd_alert forgets everything about this status. So the next time it goes into an alert state, the entire process starts all over again. ENVIRONMENT
MAIL The first part of a command line used to send out an e-mail with a subject, typically set to "/usr/bin/mail -s" . hobbitd_alert will add the subject and the mail recipients to form the command line used for sending out email alerts. MAILC The first part of a command line used to send out an e-mail without a subject. Typically this will be "/usr/bin/mail". hobbitd_alert will add the mail recipients to form the command line used for sending out email alerts. FILES
~xymon/server/etc/hobbit-alerts.cfg SEE ALSO
hobbit-alerts.cfg(5), hobbitd(8), hobbitd_channel(8), xymon(7) Xymon Version 4.2.3: 4 Feb 2009 HOBBITD_ALERT(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:36 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy