Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Want to replace characters
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Want to replace characters Post 302162501 by clx on Tuesday 29th of January 2008 06:38:30 AM
Old 01-29-2008
use ascii transfer mode while ftp'ng ur files...

for replacing.. sed 's/\^/o/g' file


Anchal.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Replace Characters...

In a file, How do I replace a set number of characters in each line? For example.... substitute the first 54 characters of each line with mv? Thanks! Lisa (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: lgardner17325
8 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

replace UTF-8 characters with tr

Hi, I try to get tr to replace multibytes characters by ascii equivalent. For example "Je vais à l'école" ---> 'Je vais a l'ecole" But my version of tr (5.97) doesn't seem to support multibyte sets. $ locale charmap; echo "Je vais à l'école" | tr éà ea UTF-8 Je vais aa l'aacole I try to... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ripat
2 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

replace characters in a file

Hi, I have a file in which i want to replace the charaters from position 3-5 with a particular string for the first line. For ex The file contains abcdefghij jkdsflsfkdk 908090900 i want to replace the characters 3-5 for the first line as 678 so, the file should look like ... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: dnat
7 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to replace characters with random characters

I've got a file (numbers.txt) filled with numbers and I want to replace each one of those numbers with a new random number between 0 and 9. This is my script so far: #!/bin/bash rand=$(($RANDOM % 9)) sed -i s//$rand/g numbers.txtThe problem that I have is that it replaces each number with just... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: hellocatfood
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

how to replace characters using tr

Hi, I have a file which includes some French Characters and I want to change them to other characters like À to &Agrave; Â to &Acirc; É to &Eacute; ..... ..... and so on. I am tyring to use tr command like tr ÀÂÉ &Agrave;&Acirc;&Eacute; < input file But it does not work. Only... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: naveed
2 Replies

6. Solaris

How to replace special characters in vi?

Hi , I want to replace the special characters in the file. For eg: cat abc 1234/4455/acb 234/k/lll/ 234`fs`fd I want to replace / and ` with the letter a and the output should like below. How to achieve this. 1234a4455aacb 234akallla 234afsafd (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: rogerben
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Replace special characters

I have a line ending with special character and 0 The special character is the field separator for this line in VI mode the file will look like below, but while cat the special character wont display i know the hexa code for the special character ^_ is \x1f and ascii code is \0037, ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: ratheeshjulk
0 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Replace special characters with Escape characters?

i need to replace the any special characters with escape characters like below. test!=123-> test\!\=123 !@#$%^&*()-= to be replaced by \!\@\#\$\%\^\&\*\(\)\-\= (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: laknar
8 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to replace all but the first 3 characters with sed?

This seems like it should be an easy problem, but for some reason I am struggling with the solution. I simply want to replace all characters after the first 3 characters with another character, preferably with sed. Thanks in advance. Like this, but producing the proper number of *'s: sed... (30 Replies)
Discussion started by: leolson
30 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Replace characters between $ and . with .

Hi - I have below in put to demo.txt /test/xyz/ibcdownload.jsp /test/xyz/pvxprogramtreeovermain.jsp /test/xyz/jtfrsrsr$HtmlTag.jsp /test/xyz/csdronumlov.jsp /test/xyz/iecvaluereset.jsp /test/xyz/ibecumpassignrole.jsp /test/xyz/ozfoffermarketmain.jsp output should be... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: oraclermanpt
4 Replies
tftp(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   tftp(1)

NAME
tftp - Provides the Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP) SYNOPSIS
Interactive form: tftp [remote_host] [port] Command-line form: tftp remote_host [port] -subcommand [args] DESCRIPTION
The tftp command transfers files between hosts using TFTP. Because TFTP is a minimal file transfer protocol, the tftp command does not pro- vide all of the features described under the ftp command. For example, tftp does not provide subcommands to list remote files or change directories at the remote host, and limited file access privileges are given to the remote TFTP server. Note that the tftp command is not available when your host is operating in controlled access (secure) mode. The remote host must have a tftpd server started by its inetd server and have an account defined that limits the access of tftpd. Use the tftpd command to set up the TFTP environment and the nobody account. The tftp command has two forms: interactive form and command line form. In the interactive form, tftp is issued alone or with a host argu- ment that specifies the default host to use for file transfers during this session. You can also specify a port for the tftp connection to use. When you enter the interactive form, the tftp> prompt appears. In the command line form, you specify command arguments on the com- mand line, and no prompt appears. The tftp command can overwrite a file, but prompts you before doing so. When transferring data to a remote host, the transferred data is placed in the directory specified by the remote_file argument. remote_file must be a fully specified filename, and the remote file must both exist and have write permission set for others. The tftp command attempts to write the data to the specified file. However, if the remote TFTP server does not have the appropriate privileges to write the remote file or if the file does not already exist, the transfer fails. SUBCOMMANDS
The tftp subcommands can be entered in either their interactive form or in their command line form. Displays help information. If a sub- command is specified, only information about that subcommand is displayed. Synonym for the mode ascii subcommand. Synonym for the mode binary subcommand. This subcommand is used in the interactive mode. The image mode is the same as mode binary, but is used on the command line. Sets the remote host, and optionally the port, for file transfers. Because the TFTP protocol does not maintain connections between transfers, the connect subcommand does not create a connection to host, but stores the settings for transfer operations. Because the remote host can be specified as part of the get or put subcommands, which overrides any host previously specified, the connect subcommand is not required. Transfers a file or set of files from the remote host to the local host. Each of the remote_file arguments can be speci- fied in one of the following two ways: As a file that exists on the remote host, if a default host was already specified. As host:file, where host is the remote host and file is the name of the file to copy to the local system. If this form of the argument is used, the host specified for the last transfer becomes the default host for subsequent transfers in this tftp session. In either case, remote_file must be a fully-specified filename. Toggles hash marks. Sets the transfer mode to ascii or binary. A transfer mode of ascii is the default. Sets mode to octet. Transfers a file or set of files from the local host onto the remote host. The remote_directory and remote_file arguments can be specified in one of the following two ways: As a file or directory that exists on the remote host, if a default host was already specified. As host:remote_file, where host is the remote host and remote_file is the name of the file or directory on the remote system. If this form of the argument is used, the host specified for the last transfer becomes the default host for subsequent transfers in this tftp session. In either of these cases, the remote filename or directory name must be a full pathname, even if the local and remote directories have the same name. If a remote directory is specified, the remote host is assumed to use UNIX pathname syntax. Exits tftp. An End-of-File also exits the program. Displays transfer rate information. Defines the retransmission time-out for each packet, in seconds. Shows the current status of tftp, including the current transfer mode (ascii or binary), connection status, time-out value, and so on. Sets the total transmission time-out to the number of seconds specified by value. Turns packet tracing on or off. Turns verbose mode, which displays additional information during file transfer, on or off. EXAMPLES
To enter tftp, check the current status, connect to host1, and transfer the file update from host1 to the local host, enter: $ tftp tftp> status Not connected. Mode: netascii Verbose: off Tracing: off Rexmt_interval: 5 seconds, Max-timeout: 25 seconds tftp> connect host1 tftp> get /u/alice/update update tftp> quit $ The get subcommand transfers the file update from the remote host to your local host. Note that the directory /u/alice on the remote host must have read permission set for others. To perform the same operation in command-line mode, enter: $ tftp host1 -status -get /u/alice/update update Connected to host1. Mode: netascii Verbose: off Tracing: off Rexmt_interval: 5 seconds, Max-timeout: 25 seconds To open a tftp connection to host1, set binary mode, transfer the file game.exe from the local host to host1, and rename the file in the process, enter: $ tftp host1 tftp> binary tftp> put game.exe /u/alice/tictactoe.exe The put subcommand transfers the file game.exe from your local host to the remote host as tictactoe.exe. Note that the directory /u/alice on the remote host must have write permission set for others. Also, the file tictactoe.exe must already exist on the server and have write permission set for others. To perform the same operation in command-line mode, enter: $ tftp host1 -binary -put game.exe /u/alice/tictactoe.exe To transfer two files from the local host to two remote hosts, enter: $ tftp tftp> put product.html pricelist.html host1:/u/alice/public_html tftp> put product.html pricelist.html host2:/public/documents The put subcommand transfers the files from your local host to the specified directory on each remote host. Again, the files and directories must already exist on the remote hosts and have write permissions set for others. When the file transfer is complete, the last host, host2, becomes the default host for subsequent transfers in this tftp session. To perform the same operation in command-line mode, enter: $ tftp host1 -put product.html pricelist.html /u/alice/public_html $ tftp host2 -put product.html pricelist.html /public/documents FILES
Defines the address of the local host, and specifies the names and addresses of remote hosts. Defines the sockets and protocols used for Internet services. SEE ALSO
Commands: ftp(1), ftpd(8), inetd(8), rcp(1), syslogd(8), tftpd(8) tftp(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:50 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy