my guess:
\| is used in sed (gnu) as alternation. therefore
seem to say "blank" or "blank" (or null?) substitute with \|, hence the result.
if really want to search for a "|", use the open square brackets
Wouldn't the alternation operator require atleast two operands ?
Hi there,
first of all, here is my conf of a uname -a
Linux SAMBA 2.4.18-4GB #1 Wed Mar 27 13:57:05 UTC 2002 i686 unknown
on a fedora machine.
Here is my problem: every once in a while, the line containing root disappears in the /etc/passwd, disabling all logging on my server. Any one have... (0 Replies)
Can some-one give me a view to this :
I have a directory in an unix server, having permissions r-xr-xr-x .This directory is basically a source directory.
Now there is another directory basically the destination directory which has all the permissions.
Note:I log in as not the owner,but user... (5 Replies)
As you are probably aware, $# indicates the number of parameters passed into a korn shell script. But this appears to hang around for
sunsequent runs...????
A simple script:-
#!/usr/bin/ksh
echo "#parameters $#"
echo "\$1 $1"
echo "\$2 $2"
I run the script with 0 parameters (all fine)
#... (7 Replies)
Hi all,
I want to do a very simple thing with sed. I want to print out the line number of a disk I have defined in /etc/exports, so I do:
It's all good, but here's the problem. When I define md0 in a variable, I get nothing from sed:
Why is that? can anybody please help?
Thanks (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I got a strange problem here. I have a perl script which is fetching data from a database table and writing a file with that data.
If i run that script from linux command line, the file it creates is a normal ascii text file without any binary character in it.But... (9 Replies)
Hi all,
I am using HP-UX and I have just noticed that when I log into the network it seems to save the previous windows that were subsequently closed on previous occasions. Does anyone know when I log in, it seems to display these previous windows, e.g. nedit windows open again?
Does... (1 Reply)
Hello,
I was trying to identify lines who has a word of the following pattern "xyyx" (where x, and ys are different characters).
I was trying the following grep -
egrep '(\S)()\2\1'
This pattern do catches the wanted pattern, but it also catches "GGGG" or "CCCC" patterns. I was trying to... (5 Replies)
Hi all,
I'm having this scenario which for the moment I cannot resolve. :(
I wrote a script to make a dump/export of the oracle database. and then put this entry on crontab to be executed daily for example.
The script is like below:
cat /home/oracle/scripts/db_backup.sh
#!/bin/ksh
... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: enux
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
fixnt
fixnt(1) Debian fixnt(1)NAME
fixnt - Filter for the Windows NT postscript printer driver.
SYNOPSIS
fixnt < BADFILE.ps > GOODFILE.ps
DESCRIPTION
The Windows NT postscript driver has a tendency to make broken postscript files, that are incompatible with psutils. fixnt is a filter
that fixes these problems, allowing the use of psnup(1).
The filter takes the broken postscript file on stdin, and outputs a fixed postscript file on stdout. It has no other form for invocation
and takes no options on the command-line.
OPTIONS
fixnt takes no options.
BUGS
fixnt does not check for NTPSOct94. For a workaround, use a sed(1) command to replace 'NTPSOct94' with 'NTPSOct95', like so:
sed 's/NTPSOct94/NTPSOct95/g'
This is particularly important for Windows NT 3.5 users.
AUTHOR
fixnt was written by Holger Bauer <Holger.Bauer@topmail.de>, Michael Rath <rath@itsm.uni-stuttgart.de>, and Akim Demaille
<demaille@inf.enst.fr>.
REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs to the Authors, but avoid sending large postscript files.
Patches are always welcome; send to <bauer@itsm.uni-stuttgart.de>.
SEE ALSO psnup(1), sed(1)a2ps February 2003 fixnt(1)