I'm trying to use the following command to do a batch find and replace in all commonly named files through a file hierarchy
find . -name 'file' |xargs perl -pi -e 's/find/replace/g'
which works fine except for a substitution involving parenthesis.
As a specific example I'm trying to sub... (3 Replies)
I have a text file with following content (3 lines)
filename : output.txt
first line:12/12/2008
second line:12/12/2008
third line:Y
I would like to know how we can replace 'Y' with 'N' in the 3rd line keeping 1st and 2nd lines same as what it was before.
I tried using cat output.txt... (4 Replies)
I am trying to write a shell script that will allow the typing of a value, then using that value to replace data in a text file.
I suspect I need sed.
The format of the file is:
Variable1:Value1
Variable2:Value2
The interaction would be something like:
Shell Prompt: "Please enter the... (9 Replies)
Hi,
I tried to adapt bartus's solution to my problem, without success. I want to replace all the occurences of this:
with:
, where something can contain an arbitrary number of balanced parens and brakets.
Any ideas ?
Best, (1 Reply)
Hi.
I would like to have experts help on below action.
I have text files in which page nubmers exists in form like
PAGE : 1
PAGE : 2
PAGE : 3 and so on there is other text too. I would like to know is it possible to check the last occurance of Page... (6 Replies)
I was looking at a script in my little book on bash and saw that one of the if statements had parentheses instead of brackets for the condition. I've been trying to find in my book where it talks about parentheses (because the examples on the if statement in an earlier chapter doesn't seem to... (3 Replies)
Can someone help me with a sed command:
There will be multiple occurences in a file that look like this:
MyFunction(12c34r5)
and I need to replace that with just the 12c34r5 for every occurrence. The text between the parentheses will be different on each occurrence, so I can't search for that.... (4 Replies)
This is my input file:
a|b|c(ef)|g|h(km)|p
My output file should look like:
a|b|ef|g|km|p
That is, pipe is the delimiter. The data within pipe must be displayed as it is but if it encounters any data within parentheses, then only the data within parentheses has to be displayed ( the data... (2 Replies)
How to remove first pair of parentheses and content in them from the beginning of the line?
Here's the list:
(ok)-test
(ok)-test-(ing)
(some)-test-(ing)-test
test-(ing)
Desired result:
test
test-(ing)
test-(ing)-test
test-(ing)
Here's what I already tried with GNU sed:
sed -e... (6 Replies)
Suppose I have this code :
int main () { int i = NULL; /* incorrect */ return 0; }
and I want to put the word between the two parentheses
like this :
int main (void) { int i = NULL; /* incorrect */ return 0; }
which command is used to do it in Linux ? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: steve120
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
ucblinks
ucblinks(1B) SunOS/BSD Compatibility Package Commands ucblinks(1B)NAME
ucblinks - adds /dev entries to give SunOS 4.x compatible names to SunOS 5.x devices
SYNOPSIS
/usr/ucb/ucblinks [-e rulebase] [-r rootdir]
DESCRIPTION
ucblinks creates symbolic links under the /dev directory for devices whose SunOS 5.x names differ from their SunOS 4.x names. Where possi-
ble, these symbolic links point to the device's SunOS 5.x name rather than to the actual /devices entry.
ucblinks does not remove unneeded compatibility links; these must be removed by hand.
ucblinks should be called each time the system is reconfiguration-booted, after any new SunOS 5.x links that are needed have been created,
since the reconfiguration may have resulted in more compatibility names being needed.
In releases prior to SunOS 5.4, ucblinks used a nawk rule-base to construct the SunOS 4.x compatible names. ucblinks no longer uses nawk
for the default operation, although nawk rule-bases can still be specifed with the -e option. The nawk rule-base equivalent to the SunOS
5.4 default operation can be found in /usr/ucblib/ucblinks.awk.
OPTIONS -e rulebase Specify rulebase as the file containing nawk(1) pattern-action statements.
-r rootdir Specify rootdir as the directory under which dev and devices will be found, rather than the standard root directory /.
FILES
/usr/ucblib/ucblinks.awk sample rule-base for compatibility links
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWscpu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO devlinks(1M), disks(1M), ports(1M), tapes(1M), attributes(5)SunOS 5.10 13 Apr 1994 ucblinks(1B)