This be the latest in my problems sorting through router logs... I'm half way there on a problem, but I've hit the limitation of my knowledge
Got some router interface log files of type
router01:GigabitEthernet9/24 is up, line protocol is up (connected)
router01: 0 input errors, 0 CRC, 0... (7 Replies)
I have a file which has a list of titles and then 14 lines afterwards. I need to find the 1 through 14 lines which are greater than 15k and print the title and the line which matched.
Sample before:
ABC.CDE.NORTH.NET
1:18427
2:302
3:15559
4:105
5:5
6:2
7:2
8:2
9:4
10:2
11:17
12:2... (3 Replies)
Hi Guys and Gals,
I'm having some difficulty putting this check into a shell script. I would like to search a particular directory for a number of files. The logic I have is pretty simple:
Find file named *.txt that are newer than <this file> and count them
If the number of files is equal to... (4 Replies)
i have a file in following format
1 32 3
4 6 4
4 45 1
45 4 61
54 66 4
5 65 51
56 65 1
12 32 85
now here the total number of lines are 8(they vary each time)
Now i want to select only those lines in which the values... (6 Replies)
Hi Guys,
I have a little problem, was wondering if anyone had any experience with this?
I am using imagemagick to remove whitespace from images, however some images are corrupt and the server hangs and eventually crashes because imagemagick doesnt know what to do, even though I have set the... (4 Replies)
We have an access log where column 8 displays the time in seconds like below:
Tj8nQAoNgwsAABov9cIAAAFL - 10.13.131.80 - - (0) - "GET /aaaaa/bbbb/bbbb
where column 8 is printed (0). We are trying to find how many entries are there that has column 8 greater than 0.
Remember $8 is (0) and not... (5 Replies)
Hi
I want to find greater than and min value.
dategrep()
{
varlinenum=$1
varSESSTRANS_CL="$(egrep -n "<\/SESSTRANSFORMATIONINST>" tmpsess9580.txt | cut -d":" -f1)"
echo $varSESSTRANS_CL
}
dategrep 8
Output of the above command is:
I want to find out greater than 8 and... (9 Replies)
Hi,
i need to find one of the value from my file is in between two numbers, that is the value is greater than 34 and smaller than 50,
Ex: File.txt
col1 col2 col3 col4
1 Name1 93 w
2 Name2 94 a
3 Name3 32 b
4 Name4 45 x
5 Name5 50 y
6 Name6 49 z
here i need to find col3 values are... (7 Replies)
I have large config-files for an application. The lines have different structure, but some of them contains the parameter 'TIMEOUT=x', where x is an numeric value. I want to change the value for that specific paramater if the value is greater than a specific value (got that?). The timeout-parameter... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: useless
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
rcorder
RCORDER(8) BSD System Manager's Manual RCORDER(8)NAME
rcorder -- print a dependency ordering of interdependent files
SYNOPSIS
rcorder [-k keep] [-s skip] file ...
DESCRIPTION
The rcorder utility is designed to print out a dependency ordering of a set of interdependent files. Typically it is used to find an execu-
tion sequence for a set of shell scripts in which certain files must be executed before others.
Each file passed to rcorder must be annotated with special lines (which look like comments to the shell) which indicate the dependencies the
files have upon certain points in the sequence, known as ``conditions'', and which indicate, for each file, which ``conditions'' may be
expected to be filled by that file.
Within each file, a block containing a series of ``REQUIRE'', ``PROVIDE'', ``BEFORE'' and ``KEYWORD'' lines must appear. The format of the
lines is rigid. Each line must begin with a single '#', followed by a single space, followed by ``PROVIDE:'', ``REQUIRE:'', ``BEFORE:'', or
``KEYWORD:''. No deviation is permitted. Each dependency line is then followed by a series of conditions, separated by whitespace. Multi-
ple ``PROVIDE'', ``REQUIRE'', ``BEFORE'' and ``KEYWORD'' lines may appear, but all such lines must appear in a sequence without any interven-
ing lines, as once a line that does not follow the format is reached, parsing stops.
The options are as follows:
-k Add the specified keyword to the ``keep list''. If any -k option is given, only those files containing the matching keyword are
listed.
-s Add the specified keyword to the ``skip list''. If any -s option is given, files containing the matching keyword are not listed.
An example block follows:
# REQUIRE: networking syslog
# REQUIRE: usr
# PROVIDE: dns nscd
This block states that the file in which it appears depends upon the ``networking'', ``syslog'', and ``usr'' conditions, and provides the
``dns'' and ``nscd'' conditions.
A file may contain zero ``PROVIDE'' lines, in which case it provides no conditions, and may contain zero ``REQUIRE'' lines, in which case it
has no dependencies. There must be at least one file with no dependencies in the set of arguments passed to rcorder in order for it to find
a starting place in the dependency ordering.
DIAGNOSTICS
The rcorder utility may print one of the following error messages and exit with a non-zero status if it encounters an error while processing
the file list.
Requirement %s has no providers, aborting. No file has a ``PROVIDE'' line corresponding to a condition present in a ``REQUIRE'' line in
another file.
Circular dependency on provision %s, aborting. A set of files has a circular dependency which was detected while processing the stated con-
dition.
Circular dependency on file %s, aborting. A set of files has a circular dependency which was detected while processing the stated file.
SEE ALSO rc(8)HISTORY
The rcorder utility first appeared in NetBSD 1.5.
AUTHORS
Written by Perry E. Metzger <perry@piermont.com> and Matthew R. Green <mrg@eterna.com.au>.
BUGS
The ``REQUIRE'' keyword is misleading: It doesn't describe which daemons have to be running before a script will be started. It describes
which scripts must be placed before it in the dependency ordering. For example, if your script has a ``REQUIRE'' on ``named'', it means the
script must be placed after the ``named'' script in the dependency ordering, not necessarily that it requires named(8) to be started or
enabled.
BSD August 5, 2011 BSD