Hi all,
I need help in following scenario. I have a file with about 10,000 lines. There are several lines which have word "START" (all upper case) in them. I want to grep line with word "START" and then do the following
1. Print the line number having word "START"
2. Print the next 11 lines.
... (4 Replies)
Hi folks
I am not allowed to install GNU grep on AIX.
Here my code excerpt:
grep_fatal () {
/usr/sfw/bin/gegrep -B4 -A2 "FATAL|QUEUE|SIGHUP"
}
Howto the same on AIX based machine?
from manual GNU grep
‘--after-context=num’
Print num lines of trailing context after... (4 Replies)
I have several very large file that are extracts from Oracle tables. These files are formatted in XML type syntax with multiple entries like:
<ROW>
some information
more information
</ROW>
I want to grep for some words, then print all lines between <ROW> AND </ROW>. Can this be done with AWK?... (7 Replies)
Hi,
i would like to get the above and below lines of the grep pattern .
For ex :
file as below:
chk1- aaaa
1-Nov
chk2 -aaaa
##########
chk1-bbbbbb
1-Nov
chk2-bbbbbb
#########
my search pattern is date : 1-Nov
i need the o/p as below
chk1- aaaa
1-Nov (6 Replies)
Hi
I have this in my file
2011-04-18 15:32:11 system-alert-00012: UDP flood! From xxxxxx to yyyyyyyyyy, int ethernet0/2). Occurred 1 times.
2011-04-18 15:32:11 system-alert-00012: UDP flood! From xxxxxx to yyyyyyyyyy, int ethernet0/2). Occurred 1 times.
2011-04-18 15:32:11... (9 Replies)
Hi All,
I need to grep through a file for a string and print the next ten lines to a file separating the lines with a , and save it as a csv file to open it as a XL file. The 10 lines should be on a sigle row in xl.
Any suggesstions please.
Note; I dont have a GNU Grep to use -A flag.
... (6 Replies)
Hi all,
I am struck with the below requirement. I need to grep a particular pattern in a file and then print next n lines of it for further processing.
I have used the below code
grep -A 3 "pattern" filename
But it is throwing error as below.
grep: illegal option -- A
Can... (14 Replies)
I have been searching and trying to come up with an awk that will perform the following on a
converted text file (original is a pdf).
1. Since the first two lines are (begin with) text they are removed
2. if $1 is a number then all text is merged (combined) into one line until the next... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
logtop
LOGTOP(1) General Commands Manual LOGTOP(1)NAME
logtop - Realtime log line rate analyser
SYNOPSIS
logtop [OPTIONS]
DESCRIPTION
logtop is a System Administrator tool analyzing line rate on stdin.
It reads on stdin and print a constantly updated result
displaying, in columns:
Line number, count, frequency, and the actual line.
$ tail -f FILE | logtop
is the friendly version of:
$ watch 'tail FILE | sort | uniq -c | sort -gr'
OPTIONS -s, --size=K
Only keep K lines in memory, instead of 10000.
-q, --quiet
Do not display a live view of the data, only display a top at exit.
-l, --line-by-line=K
Print result line by line, in a machine friendly format, K is the number of result to print per line.
Line by line format is : [%d %f %s ]*
%d : Number of occurences
%f : Frequency of apparition
%s : String (Control chars replaced by dots.
-i, --interval=K
Interval between graphical updates, in seconds. Defaults to 1.
-h, --help
Show summary of options.
-v, --version
Show version of program.
EXAMPLES
Here are some logtop usage examples.
tail -f cache.log | grep -o "HIT|MISS" | logtop
Realtime hit / miss ratio on some caching software log file.
tail -f access.log | cut -d' ' -f1 | logtop -s 10000
Realtime most querying IPs on your server, as long as log lines in access.log starts with the client IP.
tail -f access.log | cut -d' ' -f7 | logtop -s 10000
Realtime most requested web pages in a NCSA like log file.
cat auth.log | grep -v "CRON" | grep -o ": .*" | logtop -q -s 100000
Display a one-shot simple analyse of your auth.log.
SEE ALSO watch(1)AUTHOR
logtop was written by Julien Palard.
This manual page was written by Julien Palard <julien@palard.fr>, for the Debian project (and may be used by others).
April 16, 2011 LOGTOP(1)