If the pattern always consists of alphabetics, try something like
This replaces any non-alphabetics with newlines, so every word is on a separate line, and then, of course, it's okay that grep -c counts lines.
(Yes, the second non-option argument to tr is a literal line break between single quotes. If your tr understands some more readable notation, like maybe '\n' or '\012', then by all means use that instead.)
Hi,
I file that has all the status for one day (24hours). Now what I want to do is to count the occurence of a string in its output hourly like for example count occurance of successful or asynchronous clear destinon for every hour and redirect it to file. Please see sample file below. Please... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have two files viz,
rak1:
$ cat rak1
rak2:
$ cat rak2
sdiff rak1 rak2 returns:
I want the lines that got modified, changed, or deleted preceding with the section they are in.
I have done this so far: (1 Reply)
How to grep multiple string occurance in input file using single grep command? I have below input file with many IDP, RRBE messages. Out put should have count of each messages.
I have used below command but it is not working
grep -cH "(sent IDP Request)(Recv RRBCSM)" *.txt ... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to count the number of occurance of a specific value in a column and increment the variable in the second column accordingly. I have very little information about Unix. As an example,
21 1
32 1
32 2
45 1
56 1
56 2
56 3
73 1
82 1
Thanks,
Natasha (2 Replies)
We have a log file, the format is similar to this:
08/04/2011 05:03:08 Connection Success
08/04/2011 05:13:18 Connection Success
08/04/2011 05:23:28 Connection Fail
08/04/2011 05:33:38 Connection Success
08/04/2011 06:14:18 Connection Success
08/04/2011 06:24:28 Connection Fail
08/04/2011... (6 Replies)
Hello sed gurus. I am using ksh on Sun and have a file created by concatenating several other files. All files contain header rows. I just need to keep the first occurrence and remove all other header rows.
header for file
1111
2222
3333
header for file
1111
2222
3333
header for file... (8 Replies)
Anyone knows how to use AWK to achieve the following
Sun Feb 12 00:41:01-00:41:59 Success:2 Fail:2
Sun Feb 12 00:42:01-00:42:59 Success:1 Fail:2
Sun Feb 12 01:20:01-01:20:59 Success:1 Fail:2
Mon Feb 13 22:41:01-22:41:59 Success:1 Fail:1
log file:
Success
Success
Fail
Fail
... (9 Replies)
I am trying to search a file for a patterns ERR- in a file and return a count for each of the error reported
Input file is a free flowing file without any format
example of output
ERR-00001=5
....
ERR-01010=10
.....
ERR-99999=10 (4 Replies)
Hello every,
I am stuck in a problem. I have file like this. I want to add the fifth field of the match pattern line above the lines starting with "# @D". The delimiter is "|"
eg
>
# @D0.00016870300|0.05501020000|12876|12934|3||Qp||Pleistocene||"3 Qp Pleistocene"|Q
# @P... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have two files file1.txt and file2.txt. Please see the attachments.
In file2.txt (which actually is a diff output between two versions of file1.txt.), I extract the pattern corresponding to 1172c1172. Now ,In file1.txt I have to search for this pattern 1172c1172 and if found, I have to... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: saurabh kumar
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
fnmatch
FNMATCH(3) Linux Programmer's Manual FNMATCH(3)NAME
fnmatch - match filename or pathname
SYNOPSIS
#include <fnmatch.h>
int fnmatch(const char *pattern, const char *string, int flags);
DESCRIPTION
The fnmatch() function checks whether the string argument matches the pattern argument, which is a shell wildcard pattern.
The flags argument modifies the behaviour; it is the bitwise OR of zero or more of the following flags:
FNM_NOESCAPE
If this flag is set, treat backslash as an ordinary character, instead of an escape character.
FNM_PATHNAME
If this flag is set, match a slash in string only with a slash in pattern and not, for example, with a [] - sequence containing a
slash.
FNM_PERIOD
If this flag is set, a leading period in string has to be matched exactly by a period in pattern. A period is considered to be
leading if it is the first character in string, or if both FNM_PATHNAME is set and the period immediately follows a slash.
FNM_FILE_NAME
This is a GNU synonym for FNM_PATHNAME.
FNM_LEADING_DIR
If this flag (a GNU extension) is set, the pattern is considered to be matched if it matches an initial segment of string which is
followed by a slash. This flag is mainly for the internal use of glibc and is only implemented in certain cases.
FNM_CASEFOLD
If this flag (a GNU extension) is set, the pattern is matched case-insensitively.
RETURN VALUE
Zero if string matches pattern, FNM_NOMATCH if there is no match or another non-zero value if there is an error.
CONFORMING TO
ISO/IEC 9945-2: 1993 (POSIX.2). The FNM_FILE_NAME, FNM_LEADING_DIR, and FNM_CASEFOLD flags are GNU extensions.
SEE ALSO sh(1), glob(3), scandir(3), glob(7)GNU 2000-10-15 FNMATCH(3)