Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: sed searching across lines
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting sed searching across lines Post 302090322 by miechu on Monday 25th of September 2006 05:04:39 AM
Old 09-25-2006
this is not exactly what i want... becouse i don't know how many lines error will have... all i know it beigns with:"errors is" and ends with ^$

#edited

and can you explain what your command does? as i understand it it will print out the maching line and the one follwing it... but why this strange syntax? why do you do some {} at the end? where is s/?

Last edited by miechu; 09-25-2006 at 06:13 AM..
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

lines searching >>

hi guys! I`ll really appreciate your help. The situation is: i have a log file, and i need to get the needed lines from it. linecount=$(cat -n http.log | grep ALERT | awk '{print $1}' | wc -l) lines=$(cat -n http.log | grep ALERT | awk '{print $1}') 1-string gets the number of found lines... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: neverhood
2 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Searching for lines ending with }

I'm trying to search for lines ending with "}" with the following command but am not getting any output. grep '\}$' myFile.txt I actually want to negate this (i.e. lines not ending with "}"), but I guess that should be easier once I find the command that finds it? (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: BootComp
11 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Searching for lines in a file?

What is the best way to display lines in a log file that begin with a certain string? Preferably I would like to 'print' them to a file. I guess I would use 'cat' for that? There are two types of line I would like to get at - each begins with a different two words. It would be something... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Sepia
8 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Sed - Pattern Searching

Hi, Please take a look at the below eg. I would like to search for abc() pattern first and then search for (xyz) in the next line. If I can find the pattern, then I should delete the 3 lines. I can only find the pattern and delete but I am unable to find two patterns and delete. Any... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: sreedevi
8 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Searching for lines in textfiles

Hello all, I've a problem. I've two logfiles and i need to find lines in the second file by using information from the first file. First I need to extract a searchpattern from the first file. Its like abc=searchpattern&cde=. All between abc= and &cde= is the pattern I need to find in the second... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Avarion
2 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Perl searching special words in lines

Hi , i am a new with perl, i want to made a script that find in file rows that start with specil words, as an example a line will start with" ............................................. specialword aaa=2 bbb=5 ............................................. and to put this in a new file... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: alinalin
3 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Insert tags in lines after searching for a word

Hi, I am new to Unix and this is my first post on this forum. I am trying to convert a file into an xml. In my input I want to search for any line that starts with a 'F' and make it a tag in the xml. See below for the input and output. Input : <Payment> <REFERENCE>78</REFERENCE> F123 : ... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: akashgov
7 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Searching inverted lines

Hi fellas, I have a file like this: A_B B_D C_D D_B E_F G_H B_A F_E In other words, I have member1_member2 and member2_member1 in the same file. In the exemple aforementioned I have A_B and B_A, B_D and D_B, E_F and F_E. So, I would like to know a sript that print the lines B_A, D_B... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: valente
3 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Add lines after searching for a pattern

Hi, I have 2 files like below. File A: apple mango File B: start abc def apple ghi end start cba fed (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: jayadanabalan
4 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Searching for pattern and remove the lines

Hi , I want to remove the specific pattern and remove those lines from file using shell script. i want to remove these lines <?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?> <row_set> </row_set> my input file has content like this. file name: sample.xml <?xml version='1.0'... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: nukala_2
4 Replies
RLFE(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   RLFE(1)

NAME
rlfe - "cook" input lines for other programs using readline SYNOPSIS
rlfe [-l filename] [-a] [-n appname] [-hv] [command [arguments ...]] DESCRIPTION
rlfe lets you use history and line-editing in any text oriented tool. This is especially useful with third-party proprietary tools that cannot be distributed linked against readline. It is not perfect but it works pretty well. OPTIONS
-a append to the logfile (default is to overwrite). -l filename log into file. -n appname set the readline application name. -h print usage string. -v print version information. SEE ALSO
readline(3) AUTHOR
Per Bothner PROBLEMS
/TODO When running mc -c under the Linux console, mc does not recognize mouse clicks, which mc does when not running under fep. Pasting selected text containing tabs is like hitting the tab character, which invokes readline completion. We don't want this. I don't know if this is fixable without integrating fep into a terminal emulator. Echo suppression is a kludge, but can only be avoided with better kernel support: We need a tty mode to disable "real" echoing, while still letting the inferior think its tty driver to doing echoing. Stevens's book claims SCR$ and BSD4.3+ have TIOCREMOTE. The latest readline may have some hooks we can use to avoid having to back up the prompt. Desirable readline feature: When in cooked no-echo mode (e.g. password), echo characters are they are types with '*', but remove them when done. A synchronous output while we're editing an input line should be inserted in the output view.PPbefore* the input line, so that the lines being edited (with the prompt) float at the end of the input. A "page mode" option to emulate more/less behavior: At each page of output, pause for a user command. This required parsing the output to keep track of line lengths. It also requires remembering the output, if we want an option to scroll back, which suggests that this should be integrated with a terminal emulator like xterm. RLFE(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:48 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy