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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting assigning nawk output to shell variable Post 302147839 by user_prady on Wednesday 28th of November 2007 08:13:35 PM
Old 11-28-2007
Bug assigning nawk output to shell variable

Hello friends,

I doing the follwing script , but found problem to store it to a shell variable.

Code:
#! /bin/sh

for temp in `find ./dat/vector/ -name '*.file'` 
do
   echo $temp 
   nawk -v temp=$temp 'BEGIN{  split(temp, a,"\/"); print a[4]}'
done

output:
./dat/vector/drf_all_002.file
drf_all_002.file
......
......

It shows me all the file ending with .file under ./dat/vector directory.
But I want to store the value of ( in this case ) a[4] to a shell variable fname and also the base name of the file ie, drf in this case to a separate shell variable called basename..

If any other idea with sed or with any other command most welcome..

Objective is to find all the file with extension .file and then store only the file name to a shell variable
and the base name of the file to another shell variable.

Code:
#! /bin/sh

for temp in `find ./dat/vector/ -name '*.file'` 
do
   echo $temp 
   fname = `nawk -v temp=$temp 'BEGIN{  split(temp, a,"\/"); print a[4]}' `
done

I tried with the above code but getting error..

Thanks & Regards,
User_prady

Last edited by user_prady; 11-28-2007 at 09:21 PM..
 

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IO::AtomicFile(3)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					 IO::AtomicFile(3)

NAME
IO::AtomicFile - write a file which is updated atomically SYNOPSIS
use IO::AtomicFile; ### Write a temp file, and have it install itself when closed: my $FH = IO::AtomicFile->open("bar.dat", "w"); print $FH "Hello! "; $FH->close || die "couldn't install atomic file: $!"; ### Write a temp file, but delete it before it gets installed: my $FH = IO::AtomicFile->open("bar.dat", "w"); print $FH "Hello! "; $FH->delete; ### Write a temp file, but neither install it nor delete it: my $FH = IO::AtomicFile->open("bar.dat", "w"); print $FH "Hello! "; $FH->detach; DESCRIPTION
This module is intended for people who need to update files reliably in the face of unexpected program termination. For example, you generally don't want to be halfway in the middle of writing /etc/passwd and have your program terminate! Even the act of writing a single scalar to a filehandle is not atomic. But this module gives you true atomic updates, via rename(). When you open a file /foo/bar.dat via this module, you are actually opening a temporary file /foo/bar.dat..TMP, and writing your output there. The act of closing this file (either explicitly via close(), or implicitly via the destruction of the object) will cause rename() to be called... therefore, from the point of view of the outside world, the file's contents are updated in a single time quantum. To ensure that problems do not go undetected, the "close" method done by the destructor will raise a fatal exception if the rename() fails. The explicit close() just returns undef. You can also decide at any point to trash the file you've been building. AUTHOR
Primary Maintainer David F. Skoll (dfs@roaringpenguin.com). Original Author Eryq (eryq@zeegee.com). President, ZeeGee Software Inc (http://www.zeegee.com). REVISION
$Revision: 1.2 $ perl v5.18.2 2005-02-10 IO::AtomicFile(3)
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