root@isau02:/data/tmp/testfeld> cat infile
eins
zwei
drei
root@isau02:/data/tmp/testfeld> alias yo="awk 'NR == 2 {print}' \$1 > newfile"
root@isau02:/data/tmp/testfeld> yo ./infile
root@isau02:/data/tmp/testfeld> cat newfile
zwei
For the output file having the line numbers in it's name, I have no good short idea atm. Maybe someone else comes up with it or you try a bit too
We just recently moved from a DG-UX (Unix V) to HP 9000 servers running POSIX. I used the c-shell in the DG-UX system mainly because the bourne-shell did not support aliasing. Now in the default posix-shell of HP aliasing is supported. The main difference seams to be that in a c-shell you can pass... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I'm trying to define an alias with an embeded awk command:
alias kpipe='kill `psme| grep "ifw -r" | grep -v "grep ifw -r"| awk '{print $2}'`'
The problem is that the awk command (awk '{print $2}') contains two ' ..' quotes. So bash assumes that the first awk quote corresponds to... (5 Replies)
Good morning
I would like kindly to ask you to help me with creation of alias with awk command.
alias a="awk {print $1 "| " $2 "| " $3 "| " $4 "| " $5 "| " $6 "| " $7 "| " $8 "| " $13 "| " }"
there is some error but I don't find it please explain me what is error and how can be avoid... (1 Reply)
Good morning
I would like kindly to ask you to help me with creation of alias with awk command.
alias a="awk {print $1 "| " $2 "| " $3 "| " $4 "| " $5 "| " $6 "| " $7 "| " $8 "| " $13 "| " }"
there is some error but I don't find it please explain me what is error and how can be avoid... (5 Replies)
I'd like to define an alias to awk's begin statement since I use awk with different delimiters all the time and it is tiresome to type awk '{OFS="\t";FS="\t"}{BLAH BLAH}' every time. The problem is that bash won't let me make an alias with an open quote, which is necessary for the BEGIN alias to... (3 Replies)
Is there a way to preform check if the parameters that was send with the command awk -f `file_name.awk` `input_file` before even it gets to the BEGIN section (i have tested a try to check in the BEGIN it doesn't let ,you must make it on the section that after the BEGIN) and then decide if the... (1 Reply)
Hi to all,
I'm facing some problems when adding an alias like:
#alias list="ls -al | awk '{ print $1, $2, $3, $4, (($5/1048576))"\t", $6, $7, $8, $9 }'"
and when I enter:
#list
I get:
Syntax Error The source line is 1.
The error context is
{ print >>> , <<<
awk:... (3 Replies)
I am trying to turn this into an alias with no luck. I would then like to put the alias into my bashrc file. I know awk is very picky about quotes. I have tried every version of quotes, single quotes, double quotes, and backslashes that I can think of.
VAR=$(xrandr | awk '$2=="connected"{s=$1}... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am running the following df command to display df in GB. I am not able to use df -h on this server as that option is not available.
df -k /tmp | awk 'NR==1 {CNV=1024*1024;GBYTES="GBytes";FMT="%-35s %-10s %-10s %-10s %10s %-s\n"; printf FMT, $1, GBYTES, $3, $4, $5, $6; next} {printf... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: newbie_01
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
e2tools
E2TOOLS(7) Miscellaneous Information Manual E2TOOLS(7)NAME
e2tools - utilities to manipulate files in an ext2/ext3 filesystem
DESCRIPTION
E2tools is a simple set of GPL'ed utilities to read, write, and manipulate files in an ext2/ext3 filesystem. These utilities access a
filesystem directly using the ext2fs library. I wrote these tools in order to copy files into a linux filesystem on a machine that does not
have ext2 support. Of course, they can also be used on a linux machine to read/write to disk images or floppies without having to mount
them or have root access.
Supported functionality:
e2cp copy files
e2mv move files
e2rm remove files
e2mkdir
create directory
e2ln create hard links
e2ls list files/directories
e2tail output the last part of a file
In general, to specify a directory or file on an ext2 filesystem for the e2tools utilities, use the following form:
filesystem:directory_path
The filesystem can be an unmounted partition or a regular file that's been formatted to contain an ext2 filesystem. In general, if a com-
mand takes multiple file names on the command line, if the first one contains an ext2 file specification, the rest of the files are assumed
to be on the same filesystem until another one is explicitly stated:
/tmp/boot.img:/tmp/file1
/tmp/file2
/tmp/file3
/tmp/boot2.img:/tmp/file4
Files 1-3 are on /tmp/boot.img and the last file is on /tmp/boot2.img
SEE ALSO e2cp(1), e2ln(1), e2ls(1), e2mkdir(1), e2mv(1), e2rm(1), e2tail(1).
AUTHOR
The e2tools were written by Keith Sheffield <sheff@pobox.com>.
This manual page was written by Lucas Wall <lwall@debian.org>, for the Debian project (but may be used by others).
March 2, 2005 E2TOOLS(7)