how to parse the command line argument to look for '@' sign and the following with '.'.
In my shell script one of the argument passed is email address. I want to parse this email address to look for correct format.
rmjoe123@hotmail.com has '@' sign and followed by a '.'
to be more... (1 Reply)
how to parse the command line argument to look for '@' sign and the following with '.'.
In my shell script one of the argument passed is email address. I want to parse this email address to look for correct format.
rmjoe123@hotmail.com has '@' sign and followed by a '.'
to be more... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
Iam a beginer in shell scripting.
i need a script that can parse the arguments and store them in variables.
ex: ./myScript -v v1 -h v2 -c v3......
can someone suggest me...?
tnx in adv. (1 Reply)
I tried using the following options to parse the *.sh files in a dir
(the name can contain spaces). But each of them breaks:
FILESSH=$(ls /mysh/*.sh)
echo "$FILESSH" | while read FILE ; do --- do something --; done
This does not break for any whitespaces in filenames
for FILE in... (1 Reply)
i wanna passing an argument which read in a file or a set of files if the files are given in the command line, otherwise use STDIN if no file argument.
i got something like that, but it is not really working.
so can anyone help me? which one is better to use for and how? Use perl.
Thank you
... (0 Replies)
Hello all, I am relatively new to linux and bash scripting. I have what seems to be a simple question but I'm having trouble finding the answer.
The question is what is the difference between the variables $@ and $*. I've seen them both used in the same context, and I've tried a number of... (4 Replies)
in bash:
LIST=`cat $1`
for i in $LIST
do
...
done
how will i do this in perl ?
$1 is my first arguement. I'm a newbie in perl and will appreciate much your help guys ... (4 Replies)
Gooday
I have an argument string that contains 15 arguments.
The first 14 arguments are easy to handle because they are separated by spaces
ARG14=`echo ${ARGSTRING} | awk '{print $14}'`
The last argument is a text that may be empty or contain spaces. So any ideas on how I get the last... (23 Replies)
Hi guys,
I have created a csh script which allows user to pass input argument with the script like:
cluster_on_lev3.csh -t <value> -p <value>
Example:
cluster_on_lev3.csh -t 2.3 -p 0.05
Now I want to create an error code where if user passes input argument without spaces , the code... (16 Replies)
Hi everyone,
I'm trying to write my first ever shell script, the OS is Raspbian. The code I have written must be executed whenever a certain database has been modified. The database resides on a Windows server to which I have a mount point, and I have no control over the Windows server at all so... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: gjws
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
abrt-action-analyze-java
ABRT-ACTION-ANALYZ(1) ABRT Manual ABRT-ACTION-ANALYZ(1)NAME
abrt-action-analyze-java - Calculate and save UUID & DUPHASH and determine the level of usability for reporting of a Java stack trace.
SYNOPSIS
abrt-action-analyze-java [-v] [-d DIR] [-o] [-f FILE]
DESCRIPTION
The tool reads the file named backtrace from a problem data directory, processes it and generates a universally unique identifier (UUID).
Then it saves this data as new element uuid. It also checks whether the stack trace contains a remote address in any of its frames and if
so it creates not-reportable element whose contents explains why the stack trace should not be reported into a bug tracking system.
Integration with ABRT events
abrt-action-analyze-java can be used to generate the UUID & DUPHAS of a newly saved Java stack trace.
EVENT=post-create analyzer=Java abrt-action-analyze-java
OPTIONS -d DIR
Path to a problem directory. The tool reads the backtrace from stdin when neither this option nor -f is provided.
-f FILE
Path to a stack trace. The tool reads the backtrace from stdin when neither this option nor -d is provided.
-o
Print the result to stdout.
-v
Be more verbose. Can be given multiple times.
AUTHORS
o ABRT team
abrt-java-connector 01/19/2014 ABRT-ACTION-ANALYZ(1)