Thank you,
$count variables calculates the length of the line and if its length is fewer than 500 it writes to NEWFILE or to REJFILE. How can I write this
Hi all,
I have a flat file of 1000 rows. I want to check the length of the 5th column. The one having the longest length , I want to set it as DEFINED PARAMETER.
So later I can check others with that particular number only.
Any ideas ?? (2 Replies)
Hi All,
Please advise . Welcome more suggestions.
For examples, I have 1000 file with prefix x??? In fact, I want to convert them to x???.txt with max 10 files at a time. As such, I will need to call another script to read from those 10 *txt files and sleep 5000 to convert the next 10 again.... (10 Replies)
Hi Gurus,
Thanks in advance...
I am new to writing shell scripting and help me out reading a flat file with fixed length.
I have a fixed length flat file with storename(lenth 6) , emailaddress(lenth 15), location(10). There is NO delimiters in that file.
Like the following str00001.txt... (2 Replies)
Hi,
This is my first post to this site. So kindly forgive if I am writing in a wrong section.
My query is that...
I want to modify the max username length size. I guess it is 32/64 on CentOS. Now I want to change it to 128. Is there any way to do that?
Thanks in advance!! :) (4 Replies)
Hey Any one...
Do u know any way I can modify the max username length in unix? I guess it is 32/64 characters by default. Suppose I want to increase it to 128.
i hav tried /etc/skel
but no use...
How can I do that? (2 Replies)
Hello
I've question on the requirement I am working on.
We are getting a fixed length file with "33" characters long. We are processing that file loading into DB.
Now some times we are getting a file with "35" characters long. In this case I have to remove two characters (in 22,23... (14 Replies)
I need a script that will run in unix to:
1) Read and input file with 1 column that contains for ex:
0123456789
1234567890
...etc
2) Checks the first column if it is:
a. Numeric from 0 - 9
b. if it is not less... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mrn6430
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
ldns_wire2rr
ldns(3) Library Functions Manual ldns(3)NAME
ldns_wire2rr, ldns_wire2pkt, ldns_wire2rdf, ldns_wire2dname-
SYNOPSIS
#include <stdint.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <ldns/ldns.h>
ldns_status ldns_wire2rr(ldns_rr **rr, const uint8_t *wire, size_t max, size_t *pos, ldns_pkt_section section);
ldns_wire2pkt();
ldns_status ldns_wire2rdf(ldns_rr *rr, const uint8_t *wire, size_t max, size_t *pos);
ldns_status ldns_wire2dname(ldns_rdf **dname, const uint8_t *wire, size_t max, size_t *pos);
DESCRIPTION
ldns_wire2rr() converts the data on the uint8_t bytearray (in wire format) to a DNS resource record. This function will initialize and
allocate memory space for the rr structure. The length of the wiredata of this rr is added to the *pos value.
rr: pointer to the structure to hold the rdata value
wire: pointer to the buffer with the data
max: the length of the data buffer (in bytes)
pos: the position of the rr in the buffer (ie. the number of bytes
from the start of the buffer)
section: the section in the packet the rr is meant for
Returns LDNS_STATUS_OK if everything succeeds, error otherwise
ldns_wire2pkt()
ldns_wire2rdf() converts the data on the uint8_t bytearray (in wire format) to DNS rdata fields, and adds them to the list of rdfs of the
given rr. This function will initialize and allocate memory space for the dname structures. The length of the wiredata of these
rdfs is added to the *pos value.
All rdfs belonging to the RR are read; the rr should have no rdfs yet. An error is returned if the format cannot be parsed.
rr: pointer to the ldns_rr structure to hold the rdata value
wire: pointer to the buffer with the data
max: the length of the data buffer (in bytes)
pos: the position of the rdf in the buffer (ie. the number of bytes
from the start of the buffer)
Returns LDNS_STATUS_OK if everything succeeds, error otherwise
ldns_wire2dname() converts the data on the uint8_t bytearray (in wire format) to a DNS dname rdata field. This function will initialize and
allocate memory space for the dname structure. The length of the wiredata of this rdf is added to the *pos value.
dname: pointer to the structure to hold the rdata value
wire: pointer to the buffer with the data
max: the length of the data buffer (in bytes)
pos: the position of the rdf in the buffer (ie. the number of bytes
from the start of the buffer)
Returns LDNS_STATUS_OK if everything succeeds, error otherwise
AUTHOR
The ldns team at NLnet Labs. Which consists out of Jelte Jansen and Miek Gieben.
REPORTING BUGS
Please report bugs to ldns-team@nlnetlabs.nl or in our bugzilla at http://www.nlnetlabs.nl/bugs/index.html
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2004 - 2006 NLnet Labs.
Licensed under the BSD License. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
SEE ALSO
ldns_rr2wire, ldns_pkt2wire, ldns_rdf2wire, ldns_dname2wire. And perldoc Net::DNS, RFC1034, RFC1035, RFC4033, RFC4034 and RFC4035.
REMARKS
This manpage was automaticly generated from the ldns source code by use of Doxygen and some perl.
30 May 2006 ldns(3)