04-03-2008
Reply
Dear Unilover
I typed the commands you told me the result is :
geo@spiserver /home/geo/cdr/ItalyRel 5 > uname -a
echo "{$(sed 's=\(.*\) \(.*\)=if($4~/^\2/)print $0\" \1\"=' country-codes.txt)}" >awk_4
head awk_4
tail awk_4
awk -f awk_4 phonelines.txt >first_added
head first_added
tail first_added
echo "{$(sed 's=\(.*\) \(.*\)=if($5~/^\2/)print $0\" \1\"=' country-codes.txt)}" >awk_5
head awk_5
tail awk_5
awk -f awk_5 first_added
SunOS spiserver 5.8 Generic_108528-23 sun4u sparc SUNW,Sun-Fire-280R
Variable syntax
Same one variable Syntax ; Note that i am using Solaris 8 may be this cause problems!! but i don't think so
Anyway the first code you gave me before the faster code is working but i want to pipe the final result in a single which i can't do moreover the code is very slow
The most important that when i type the first command:
sed 's=\(.*\) \(.*\)=if($4~/^\2/)print $0\" \1\"=' country-codes.txt
it generates the if loops as you said but when i type this code alone:
awk "{$(sed 's=\(.*\) \(.*\)=if($4~/^\2/)print $0\" \1\"=' country-codes.txt)}" phonelines.txt
The result is variable sysntax
Please advise
6 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Dear all
I have group of input lines which look like this
These input lines is placed in a file named phonelines.txt and there is a script which match $4 and $5 with country codes placed in another file named country-codes.txt and its contents is :
Italy 39
Libyana 21892
Thuraya... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: zanetti321
12 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello folks,
I have list of ips like
1.1.1.1
2.2.2.2
3.3.3.3
4.4.4.4
whois 1.1.1.1 |grep -E 'country|Country'
it show country=US or whatever.
so i have number of ips in text file, how i can use above script to automate output like
1.1.1.1 US
2.2.2.2 CA
3.3.3.3 FR (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: learnbash
3 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi there,
I'm fairly new to bash scripting and already having some troubles. I'm making a script that can print some series of strings in colors based in the information of a file, for simplicity let's say it only does:
#!/bin/bash
printf "\eWhen you execute this in the command line it... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Arashi
1 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Here is my daily stupid question:
How can I tell a script to only execute if the other scripts exits successfully?
So "script A" executes and it executes successfully (0),then "script B" will run
or else
"script A "executes and it exits unsucessfully (1) then "script B" will read return... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: metallica1973
6 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Dear folks.
I have list of ip address from different country, i would like check from script this ip address belong to which country, please suggest any command, i have more than 200 ip address so i need to do it via script. Script will show me country code and its City if possible?
... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: learnbash
0 Replies
6. Forum Support Area for Unregistered Users & Account Problems
Hi, I'm come from Vietnam and want to join to Unix forum just because I like Unix programming and want to learning more.
My IP is allocate by DHCP server so it is dynamic.
Here is my desired username and my email:
Username: lucasdo
Email: rennersstar@gmail.com
Thank you very much for... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: lucasdo
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
isc-hmac-fixup
ISC-HMAC-FIXUP(8) BIND9 ISC-HMAC-FIXUP(8)
NAME
isc-hmac-fixup - fixes HMAC keys generated by older versions of BIND
SYNOPSIS
isc-hmac-fixup {algorithm} {secret}
DESCRIPTION
Versions of BIND 9 up to and including BIND 9.6 had a bug causing HMAC-SHA* TSIG keys which were longer than the digest length of the hash
algorithm (i.e., SHA1 keys longer than 160 bits, SHA256 keys longer than 256 bits, etc) to be used incorrectly, generating a message
authentication code that was incompatible with other DNS implementations.
This bug has been fixed in BIND 9.7. However, the fix may cause incompatibility between older and newer versions of BIND, when using long
keys. isc-hmac-fixup modifies those keys to restore compatibility.
To modify a key, run isc-hmac-fixup and specify the key's algorithm and secret on the command line. If the secret is longer than the digest
length of the algorithm (64 bytes for SHA1 through SHA256, or 128 bytes for SHA384 and SHA512), then a new secret will be generated
consisting of a hash digest of the old secret. (If the secret did not require conversion, then it will be printed without modification.)
SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
Secrets that have been converted by isc-hmac-fixup are shortened, but as this is how the HMAC protocol works in operation anyway, it does
not affect security. RFC 2104 notes, "Keys longer than [the digest length] are acceptable but the extra length would not significantly
increase the function strength."
SEE ALSO
BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual, RFC 2104.
AUTHOR
Internet Systems Consortium
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2010, 2013 Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC")
BIND9 January 5, 2010 ISC-HMAC-FIXUP(8)