hello there !
I am in my current working directory, and i want search a file in "dev" directory which is under root(/), but i donot want leave my current working directory.
is it possible to find file like that ?
let us say i am in /home/bin/user/malik/abid directory and i want find a file... (2 Replies)
Hello all!
I've been working for days on this and it is really bugging me!!
Here's my dilemma:
Say I have a very large text file which contains fields delimited my a ':' which logs various records. Each record is separated by a newline character, therefore I can search for lines with... (6 Replies)
what command can i use to search the files in a directory for a text. the output would list the files containing the text. ive tried this but it is not exactly what im looking to do: find . -name "*.xml" -exec agrep searchstring {} \; (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am looking for an answer for following senario:
I have a text file (base.txt) which consist list of files to be searched like:
base.txt
abc.txt
def.txt
fgh.txt
Now i am going to search all the listed files in another directory after reading them one by one, once i found the... (10 Replies)
Hi guys, I am a newbie here :wall:
I need a script that can search for a file in a directory and copy the contents of that file in a new file.
Please help me. :confused: Thanks in advance~ (6 Replies)
Hi,
I need help searching through a large text file. I need to find a certain string within the text, and copy each line until another string appears.
The file looks like this:
>scf15164843
ATTAAAGGNNNGGAATTTCCCCAA
ATTACCGGCTTTAAANNNTTACCC
>scf15154847
CCGGGNNNTTTAAACCCGNGNGCC... (2 Replies)
without using conventional file searching commands like find etc, is it possible to locate a file if i just know that the file that i'm searching for contains a particular text like "Hello world" or something? (5 Replies)
Hi Folks,
I am using the putty as I need to check the logs, My query is that I know the location of my logs ..that is
cd /var /logs/abc.log
so I can reach to this place and open the logs in putty, But what About if I do not the location only thing I know the name of the abc.log , and I have... (1 Reply)
I'm trying to get one specific number out of a text file, in order to use as part of an algorithm in a shell script. It will always come after a specific string and that string won't appear anywhere else in the file.
So I'm trying to search through the file for that one string, then grab the... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
My directory structure is like
Directory1
SubDirectory1
SubDirectory2
SubDirectory3
I have main directories and subdirectories underneath. I want to write a shell script where I will be passing file name as a parameter, Now I want to find all the files in Directory1... (19 Replies)
Discussion started by: John William
19 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
filechan
FILECHAN(8) System Manager's Manual FILECHAN(8)NAME
filechan - file-writing backend for InterNetNews
SYNOPSIS
filechan [ -d directory ] [ -f num_fields ] [ -m mapfile ] [ -p pidfile ]
DESCRIPTION
Filechan reads lines from standard input and copies certain fields in each line into files named by other fields within the line. Filechan
is intended to be called by innd(8) as a channel feed. (It is not a full exploder and does not accept commands; see newsfeeds(5) for a
description of the difference, and buffchan(8) for an exploder program.)
Filechan input is interpreted as a sequence of lines. Each line contains a fixed number of initial fields, followed by a variable number
of filename fields. All fields in a line are separated by whitespace. The default number of initial fields is one.
For each line of input, filechan writes the initial fields, separated by whitespace and followed by a newline, to each of the files named
in the filename fields. When writing to a file, filechan opens it in append mode and tries to lock it and change the ownership to the user
and group who owns the directory where the file is being written.
Because the time window in which a file is open is very small, complicated flushing and locking protocols are not needed; a mv(1) followed
by a sleep(1) for a couple of seconds is sufficient.
OPTIONS -f num_fields
The ``-f'' flag may be used to specify a different number of initial fields.
-d directory
By default, filechan writes its output into the directory <pathoutgoing in inn.conf>. The ``-d'' flag may be used to specify a
directory the program should change to before starting.
-p pidfile
If the ``-p'' flag is used, the program will write a line containing its process ID (in text) to the specified file.
-m mapfile
A map file may be specified by using the ``-m'' flag. Blank lines and lines starting with a number sign (``#'') are ignored. All
other lines should have two host names separated by a colon. The first field is the name that may appear in the input stream; the
second field names the file to be used when the name in the first field appears. For example, the following map file may be used to
map the short names used in the example below to the full domain names:
# This is a comment
uunet:news.uu.net
foo:foo.com
munnari:munnari.oz.au
EXAMPLES
If filechan is invoked with ``-f 2'' and given the following input:
news/software/b/132 <1643@munnari.oz.au> foo uunet
news/software/b/133 <102060@litchi.foo.com> uunet munnari
comp/sources/unix/2002 <999@news.foo.com> foo uunet munnari
Then the file foo will have these lines:
news/software/b/132 <1643@munnari.oz.au>
comp/sources/unix/2002 <999@news.foo.com>
the file munnari will have these lines:
news/software/b/133 <102060@litchi.foo.com>
comp/sources/unix/2002 <999@news.foo.com>
and the file uunet will have these lines:
news/software/b/132 <1643@munnari.oz.au>
news/software/b/133 <102060@litchi.foo.com>
comp/sources/unix/2002 <999@news.foo.com>
HISTORY
Written by Robert Elz <kre@munnari.oz.au>, flags added by Rich $alz <rsalz@uunet.uu.net>. This is revision 5909, dated 2002-12-03.
SEE ALSO buffchan(8), inn.conf(5), innd(8), newsfeeds(5).
FILECHAN(8)