Hello,
I want to rename multiple files at a time and I don't know how to do it.
I have various ".mp3" files, like "band name - music name.mp3" and I want to remove the "band name" from all files.
Anybody knows how to do it using shell script or sed or even perl?
Thanks (7 Replies)
Hi,
can anyone have a ksh script to rename multiple files (ie to remove .Z extension of the files)
can someone correct this?
for i in *.Z
do
var1 = substr($i, 1,at(".Z",$i)-1)
mv $i $var1
done
Thanks..
Antony (13 Replies)
I have several hundred files in one directory which I need to move to another directory with the new extension, for example:
/bb/data/rptmgr* are in the source directory need to be moved to
/bb/data55/rptmgr*.new
Is there an efficient way to do it? Thanks -A (4 Replies)
Hi all, I have some files like:
pickup.0000043200.t001.t001.data
pickup.0000043200.t001.t002.data
pickup.0000043200.t002.t001.data
pickup.0000043200.t002.t002.data
pickup.0000043200.t003.t001.data
pickup.0000043200.t003.t002.data
I need to rename these files to
... (4 Replies)
Hi,
In my directory I have many files, for e.g.
file_123
file_124
file_125
file_126
file_127
Instead of renaming these files one by one, I would like to rename them at a same time using same command... they should appear like
123
124
125
126
127
What command(awk or ls or... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have hundreds of files with XXX in their file name and I want to rename all of them with YYY in place of XXX.
for ex:
$ ls -1
123XXX789
345XXX678
Output
$ ls -1
123YYY789
345YYY678
I know we can loop in each file and sed to replace and rename each file but ren *XXX* *YYY*... (4 Replies)
I have multiple files in folder which i want to rename. hence I am using the below command in my script by I get an error:
export XXX_LOG_DIR="${LOG_DIR}/${XXX_HOST}/xxx/${REPORT_DATE}"
mv $XXX_LOG_DIR/*.audit.gz $XXX_LOG_DIR/*.audit.log.gz
But I get the below error:
mv: target... (5 Replies)
Hey guys,
I have wrote the following script to apply a module named "trinity" on my files. (it takes two input files and spit a trinity.fasta as output)
#!/bin/bash -l
#SBATCH -p node
#SBATCH -A <projectID>
#SBATCH -n 16
#SBATCH -t 7-00:00:00
#SBATCH --mem=128GB
#SBATCH --mail-type=ALL... (1 Reply)
OS : Oracle Linux 6.8
shell : bash
As shown below, I have multiple files like below (query1-extract_aa, query1-extract_ab, query1-extract_ac, ....)
$ ls -l
total 235680
-rw-rw-r-- 1 reportusr reportusr 30M May 3 11:25 query1-extract_aa
-rw-rw-r-- 1 reportusr reportusr 30M May 3 11:25... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: kraljic
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
apache::testmm
Apache::TestMM(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Apache::TestMM(3)NAME
Apache::TestMM - Provide MakeMaker Wrapper Methods
SYNOPSIS
require Apache::TestMM;
# import MY::test and MY::clean overrides for MM
Apache::TestMM->import(qw(test clean));
# parse command line args
Apache::TestMM::filter_args();
# autogenerate the script
Apache::TestMM::generate_script('t/TEST');
DESCRIPTION
"Apache::TestMM" provides wrappers for the "ExtUtils::MakeMaker" craft, making it easier to extend the autogenerated Makefile with
"Apache::Test".
FUNCTIONS
"import"
use Apache::TestMM qw(test clean);
or:
Apache::TestMM->import(qw(test clean));
Imports "MY::" overrides for the default "ExtUtils::MakeMaker" test and clean targets, as if you have defined:
sub MY::test {...}
sub MY::clean {...}
in Makefile.PL. "Apache::TestMM" does this for you so that these Makefile targets will run the Apache server and the tests for it, and
clean up after its mess.
"filter_args"
push @ARGV, '-apxs', $apxs_path;
Apache::TestMM::filter_args();
WriteMakefile(...);
When "WriteMakefile()" is called it parses @ARGV, hoping to find special options like "PREFIX=/home/stas/perl". "Apache::Test" accepts a
lot of configuration options of its own. When "Apache::TestMM::filter_args()" is called, it removes any "Apache::Test"-specific options
from @ARGV and stores them internally, so when "WriteMakefile()" is called they aren't in @ARGV and thus won't be processed by
"WriteMakefile()".
The options can be set when Makefile.PL is called:
% perl Makefile.PL -apxs /path/to/apxs
Or you can push them manually to @ARGV from the code:
push @ARGV, '-apxs', $apxs_path;
When:
Apache::TestMM::generate_script('t/TEST');
is called, "Apache::Test"-specific options extracted by "Apache::TestMM::filter_args()" are written to the autogenerated file. In our
example, the autogenerated t/TEST will include:
%Apache::TestConfig::Argv = qw(apxs /path/to/apxs);
which is going to be used by the "Apache::Test" runtime.
The other frequently used options are: "-httpd", telling where to find the httpd (usually when the "-apxs" option is not used),
"-libmodperl" to use a specific mod_perl shared object (if your mod_perl is built as DSO), "-maxclients" to change the default number of
the configured "MaxClients" directive, "-port" to start the server on a specific port, etc. To get the complete list of available
configuration options and their purpose and syntax, run:
% perl -MApache::TestConfig -le 'Apache::TestConfig::usage()'
You may wish to document some of these in your application's README file, especially the "-apxs" and "-httpd" options.
"generate_script"
Apache::TestMM::generate_script('t/TEST');
"generate_script()" accepts the name of the script to generate and will look for a template with the same name and suffix .PL. So in our
example it'll look for t/TEST.PL. The autogenerated script t/TEST will include the contents of t/TEST.PL, and special directives, including
any configuration options passed via "filter_args()" called from Makefile.PL, special fixup code, etc.
perl v5.18.2 2015-06-18 Apache::TestMM(3)