Hi,
I need a shell script which can provide details from error logs like this
Aug 23 21:19:41 red mountd: authenticated mount request from bl0110.bang.m
pc.local:651 for /disk1/jobs (/disk1)
Aug 23 08:49:52 red dhcpd: DHCPDISCOVER from 00:25:90:2b:cd:7c via eth0: unknown client
Aug 24... (2 Replies)
Hi,
Greetings.
We need to make a regexp based rule engine.
The rules would be applied to any file specified and the data not matching should be logged.
Would awk be the right scripting language.
Regards,
Dikesh Shah. (2 Replies)
I'm pretty new to scripting and didn't see an example of this issue yet. I am trying to count and print the total number of times each value is found within a file. Here is a short example of my starting file.
value 3
value 3
value 3
value 3
value 4
value 6
value 6
value 6
value 6... (3 Replies)
Hi,
Please help me on issue described below,
I have 4 machine setup, M1 -> M2 -> M3 | M4. And A laptop that can be reachable through both M3 and M4.
M2 has 2 NIC conected to M3 and M4. Now I want to divide the flow coming from M1 for laptop.
At M2, I have done following,... (1 Reply)
Dear All,
I have two sets of files. File 1 can be any number between 1 and 20 followed by a frequency of that number in a give documents... the lines in the file will be dependent to the analysed document. e.g.
file1
1,5
4,1
then I have file two which is basicall same numbers but with... (2 Replies)
I have
FILE 1 (This file has all master columns/headers)
A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|STATUS
FILE 2
A|C|F|I|OFF_STATUS
3|4|5|4|Y
6|7|8|5|Y
Below command give me all headers of FILE 2 into array2.txt file
paste <(head -1 FILE2.txt | tr '|' '\n')>array2.txt
So I would like to compare... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: jmadhams
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
wildmat
WILDMAT(3) Library Functions Manual WILDMAT(3)NAME
wildmat - perform shell-style wildcard matching
SYNOPSIS
int
wildmat(text, pattern)
char *text;
char *pattern;
DESCRIPTION
Wildmat is part of libinn (3). Wildmat compares the text against the pattern and returns non-zero if the pattern matches the text. The
pattern is interpreted according to rules similar to shell filename wildcards, and not as a full regular expression such as those handled
by the grep(1) family of programs or the regex(3) or regexp(3) set of routines.
The pattern is interpreted as follows:
x Turns off the special meaning of x and matches it directly; this is used mostly before a question mark or asterisk, and is not spe-
cial inside square brackets.
? Matches any single character.
* Matches any sequence of zero or more characters.
[x...y]
Matches any single character specified by the set x...y. A minus sign may be used to indicate a range of characters. That is,
[0-5abc] is a shorthand for [012345abc]. More than one range may appear inside a character set; [0-9a-zA-Z._] matches almost all of
the legal characters for a host name. The close bracket, ], may be used if it is the first character in the set. The minus sign,
-, may be used if it is either the first or last character in the set.
[^x...y]
This matches any character not in the set x...y, which is interpreted as described above. For example, [^]-] matches any character
other than a close bracket or minus sign.
HISTORY
Written by Rich $alz <rsalz@uunet.uu.net> in 1986, and posted to Usenet several times since then, most notably in comp.sources.misc in
March, 1991.
Lars Mathiesen <thorinn@diku.dk> enhanced the multi-asterisk failure mode in early 1991.
Rich and Lars increased the efficiency of star patterns and reposted it to comp.sources.misc in April, 1991.
Robert Elz <kre@munnari.oz.au> added minus sign and close bracket handling in June, 1991.
This is revision 1.10, dated 1992/04/03.
SEE ALSO grep(1), regex(3), regexp(3).
WILDMAT(3)