For the following code:
Two points to clarify:
1. Is the -v flag for declaring we're going to work with a variable?
2. Does the $LN stands for current line? If so, what's wrong with $0? Any difference between them?
Thanks
Hard to tell what you want - so I did this:
this is using AIX, different systems could handle this differently.
1) LN does not show to be a defined variable in my awk. (I even checked the gawk manual to see if it were there.) Why use $0 when just a simple print will default to the present line.
2) I was not sure if you wanted the current process ($$) or the parent process ($PPID} - ${PID}, was not defined in my version of AIX.
I have the following error:
ls -lt | awk 'BEGIN NR > 1 { print $2, $9 }'
Syntax Error The source line is 1.
The error context is
BEGIN >>> NR <<< > 1 { print $2, $9 }
awk: 0602-500 Quitting The source line is 1.
What I want to do is ls a directory, skip the first... (3 Replies)
Hello,
I have the following command that does 2 searches.
awk '{if ($0 ~ /STRING1/) {c++} }{if ( c == 2 ) {sub(/STRING1/,"NEWSTRING") } } { print }' FILE
How do I search up after the first search?
thanks (4 Replies)
i have a little awk script that I use looks this:
awk '{if (FNR==1){print FILENAME; print $0}else print $0}' file1...file2....fi... > bundled.
i have completely forgotten how to unbundle this. I have tried several different approaches and still can not remember how to unbundle the file bundled.... (2 Replies)
I am trying to read through a file, gather the states in that file and change it from an abbreviation to the ful text.
Can anyone provide some assistance.
Thanks!! (4 Replies)
How I can rid of the following presentation du -sk /u*/oradata/TEST/*.dbf |awk '{print total+=$1} 1.28003e+06
4.35109e+06
4.36134e+06
4.4535e+06
5.47752e+06
5.48777e+06
7.52554e+06
7.73036e+06
9.06158e+06
:confused: thank you (3 Replies)
Can anyone help with this this one liner:
nawk -v RS='' '$1=$1' InputFile
What I have in the file:
0.0013985457223116
-0.0002338180925628
0.0
0.0003709430584958
-0.0005763523138347
0.0
And the output I want:
0.0013985457223116 -0.0002338180925628 0.0
0.0003709430584958... (1 Reply)
I have a script problem that I am not able to solve due my very limited understanding of unix/awk.
This is the contents of test.sh
awk '{print $1}'
From the prompt if I enter:
./test.sh Hello World
I would expect to see "Hello" but all I get is a blank line. Only then if I enter "Hello... (2 Replies)
Use and complete the template provided. The entire template must be completed. If you don't, your post may be deleted!
1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data:
im using ls -l | xargs | awk '{what ever files here}'
im trying to get something that looks like this... (7 Replies)
Hi Experts,
I am trying to get system output to capture inside awk , but not working:
Please advise if this is possible :
I am trying something like this but not working, the output is coming wrong:
echo "" | awk '{d=system ("date") ; print "Current date is:" , d }'
Thanks, (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: rveri
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
dapptrace
dapptrace(1m) USER COMMANDS dapptrace(1m)NAME
dapptrace - trace user and library function usage. Uses DTrace.
SYNOPSIS
dapptrace [-acdeFlhoU] [-u lib] { -p PID | command }
DESCRIPTION
dapptrace prints details on user and library function calls. By default it traces user functions only, options can be used to trace library
activity.
Of particular interest is the elapsed times and on cpu times, which can identify both function calls that are slow to complete, and those
which are consuming CPU cycles.
Since this uses DTrace, only users with root privileges can run this command.
OPTIONS -a print all details
-b bufsize
dynamic variable buffer size. Increase this if you notice dynamic variable drop errors. The default is "4m" for 4 megabytes per CPU.
-c print function call counts
-d print relative timestamps, us
-e print elapsed times, us
-F print flow indentation
-l force printing of pid/lwpid per line
-o print on-cpu times, us
-p PID examine this PID
-u lib trace this library instead
-U trace all library and user functions
EXAMPLES
run and examine the "df -h" command,
# dapptrace df -h
examine PID 1871,
# dapptrace -p 1871
print using flow indents,
# dapptrace -Fp 1871
print elapsed and CPU times,
# dapptrace -eop 1871
FIELDS
PID/LWPID
Process ID / Lightweight Process ID
RELATIVE
relative timestamps to the start of the thread, us (microseconds)
ELAPSD elapsed time for this system call, us
CPU on-cpu time for this system call, us
CALL(args)
function call name, with some arguments in hexadecimal
DOCUMENTATION
See the DTraceToolkit for further documentation under the Docs directory. The DTraceToolkit docs may include full worked examples with ver-
bose descriptions explaining the output.
EXIT
dapptrace will run forever until Ctrl-C is hit, or if a command was executed dapptrace will finish when the command ends.
AUTHOR
Brendan Gregg [Sydney, Australia]
SEE ALSO dappprof(1M), dtrace(1M), apptrace(1)version 1.10 May 14, 2005 dapptrace(1m)