07-25-2002
Alternative to head or tail:
if you dont like viewing 200 lines at a time using head or tail, then you can just download an editor for your WinX PC (EditPlus Pro at
http://www.editplus.com/ ). Use it to grab your log file (EditPlus has an FTP feature built in) and view your file. EditPlus is great for huge files like this.
8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
hi,
i have a very big file that holding data, how could i pick line by line from this file.
the following process can illustrate better:
file
-------------------
123444444 |
122314567 |-----------data
146689000 |
c=123444444 ---------- c is variable
process c ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: omran
3 Replies
2. Solaris
Hi,
I am using Sun Solaris 5.9 OS. I have found a file called wtmpx having a size of 5.0 GB. I want to clear this file using :>/var/adm/wtmpx. My query is, would it cause any problem to the running live system.
Could anyone suggest the best method to clear the file without causing problem to... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Vijayakumarpc
6 Replies
3. Filesystems, Disks and Memory
If a file size increases in Linux/UNIX to say in GB's then will there be a decrease in write speed.
I mean will it take more time to write to a large file then to a small one??
Please clarify?
Thanks in advance (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: anilgurwara
2 Replies
4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I have a 5000 line config.log file with several "maybe" errors. Any reccomendations on finding solvable problems? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: NeedLotsofHelp
2 Replies
5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hello,
i have a very big file that has more then 80 MBytes (100MBytes). So with my CVS Application I cannot commit this file (too Big) because it must have < 80 MBytes.
How can I split this file into two others files, i think the AIX Unix command :
split -b can do that, buit how is the right... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: steiner
2 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
I have a big file (about 6 millions rows) and I have to delete same occurrences, stored in a small file (about 9000 rews). I have tried this:
while read line
do
grep -v $line big_file > ok_file.tmp
mv ok_file.tmp big_file
done < small_file
It works, but is very slow.
How... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tibbeche
2 Replies
7. Emergency UNIX and Linux Support
We got data that was supposed to be CSV, but was sent in a huge XML file.
I've downloaded xmlstarlet, but I'm darned if I can get it to operate the "sel" feature to look down a path and get any sort of value. I see pieces of what should be paths, but they seem to have extraneous characters, and... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: gmark99
7 Replies
8. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers
Hello Friends,
I have a big file that is transferred to my UNIX system and it seems it has CR as the line delimiter
When I run
file <filename>
<filename>: ASCII text, with CR line terminators
How do I convert the file to one with LF as terminators so that my code that runs on UNIX can... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: mehimadri12
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
vwright
VWRIGHT(1) General Commands Manual VWRIGHT(1)
NAME
vwright - normalize a RADIANCE view, shift it to the right
SYNOPSIS
vwright [ view options ] distance
vwright [ view options ] name
DESCRIPTION
In the first form, vwright shifts a RADIANCE view the specified distance to the right, putting out a complete set of view parameters in a
single line on the standard output. This utility is most often used to compute a right-eyed view from a left-eye view for stereo imaging.
If no options are specified on the command line, vwright reads a view from its standard input.
The distance given is in world coordinate units. A negative value indicates a shift to the left rather than the right.
The second form substitutes a name prefix in place of the shift distance, and produces constant assignments on the standard output suitable
for passing directly to rcalc(1). For a given prefix N, the constant names are as follows:
Nt: view type ('v'==1,'l'==2,'a'==3,'h'==4,'c'==5,'s'==6)
Npx: view point x value
Npy: view point y value
Npz: view point z value
Ndx: view direction x value (normalized)
Ndy: view direction y value (normalized)
Ndz: view direction z value (normalized)
Nd: view focal distance
Nux: view up vector x value (normalized)
Nuy: view up vector y value (normalized)
Nuz: view up vector z value (normalized)
Nh: view horizontal size
Nv: view vertical size
Ns: view shift
Nl: view lift
No: view fore clipping distance
Na: view aft clipping distance
Nhx: derived horizontal image vector x value (normalized)
Nhy: derived horizontal image vector y value (normalized)
Nhz: derived horizontal image vector z value (normalized)
Nhn: derived horizontal image vector multiplier
Nvx: derived vertical image vector x value (normalized)
Nvy: derived vertical image vector y value (normalized)
Nvz: derived vertical image vector z value (normalized)
Nvn: derived vertical image vector multiplier
EXAMPLES
To start rpict(1) on a view .06 meters left of the view in the file "right.vf":
rpict `vwright -.06 < right.vf` scene.oct > right.hdr &
To move the rad(1) view named "left" 2.5 inches to the right and render from there:
rad -v "right `rad -n -s -V -v left examp.rif | vwright 2.5`" examp.rif &
To pass a view to rcalc for conversion to some other view:
rcalc -n -e `vwright orig < orig.vf` -f viewmod.cal -o view.fmt > new.vf
AUTHOR
Greg Ward
SEE ALSO
pdfblur(1), rad(1), rcalc(1), rpict(1), rvu(1)
RADIANCE
8/29/96 VWRIGHT(1)