I'm trying to extract all the lines between 2 strings (including the lines containing the strings)
To make the strings unique I need to include white space if possible. I'm not certain how to do that.
sed -n '/ string1 /,/string2/p' infile > outfile & (4 Replies)
input file
Desired csv output
gc_type, date/time, milli secs
af, Mar 17 13:09:04 2011, 144.596
af, Mar 20 00:37:37 2011, 144.242
af, ar 20 21:30:59 2011, 108.518
Hi All,
Any help in acheiving the above would be appreciated. I would like to parse through lines within one file and... (5 Replies)
Hi all,
Please go through my requirement.
I have a log file in the location /opt/WebSphere61/AppServer/profiles/EMQbatchprofile/logs/EMQbatch
This file contains the follwing pattern data
<af type="tenured" id="42" timestamp="May 14 13:44:13 2011" intervalms="955.624">
<minimum... (8 Replies)
Have two files and want to compare the content of file1 with file2. When matched remove the line.
awk 'NR==FNR {b; next} !(b in $0)' file1 file2file1
1. if match
2. removefile2
1. this line has to be removed if match
2. this line has a match, remove
3. this line has no match, no removingThe... (3 Replies)
I am trying to extract multiple strings from snmp-mib files like below.
-----
$ cat IF-MIB.mib
<snip>
linkDown NOTIFICATION-TYPE
OBJECTS { ifIndex, ifAdminStatus, ifOperStatus }
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
"A linkDown trap signifies that the SNMP entity, acting in... (5 Replies)
Hallo Everyone.
I have to admit I'm shell scripting illiterate . I need to find certain strings in several text files and replace each of the string by unique & corresponding text.
I prepared a csv file with 3 columns: <filename>;<old_pattern>;<new_pattern>
... (5 Replies)
Hello All Unix Users,
I am still new to Unix, however I am eager to learn it..
I have 2 files, some lines have some matching substrings, I would like to concatenate these lines into one lines, leaving other untouched. Here below is an example for that..
File 1 (fasta file):
>292183... (6 Replies)
Hi,
I need help to match patterns from between two different files and extract region of strings.
inputfile1.fa
>l-WR24-1:1
GCCGGCGTCGCGGTTGCTCGCGCTCTGGGCGCTGGCGGCTGTGGCTCTACCCGGCTCCGG
GGCGGAGGGCGACGGCGGGTGGTGAGCGGCCCGGGAGGGGCCGGGCGGTGGGGTCACGTG... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: bunny_merah19
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
nomarch
nomarch(1) Archive Extraction nomarch(1)NAME
nomarch - extract `.arc' archives
SYNOPSIS
nomarch [-hlptUv] [archive.arc] [match1 [match2 ... ]]
DESCRIPTION
nomarch lists, extracts, or tests `.arc' archives. (An alternate extension sometimes used was `.ark'; these work too.) This is a very out-
dated file format which should certainly not be used for anything new, but you may still need an extraction utility, and here it is. :-)
The default action is to extract all files in the specified archive; see OPTIONS below for how to do other things instead.
OPTIONS -h give terse usage help.
-l list files in archive. If verbose listings are enabled, it shows the filename, compression method, compressed/uncompressed size,
date/time, and CRC; but by default, it just shows the filename, uncompressed size, and date/time.
-p extract to standard output, rather than to separate files.
-t test files in archive (more precisely, check file CRCs).
-U use uppercase filenames; more precisely, preserve original case from archive.
-v give verbose output (when used with `-l').
archive.arc
the archive to operate on.
match1 etc.
optionally specify which archive members to list/extract/test. Those which match any of these filenames/wildcards are processed.
Wildcard operators supported are shell-like `*' and `?', but don't forget to quote arguments which use these (e.g. `nomarch foo.arc
'*.bar'').
EXTRACTING MULTIPLE ARCHIVES
nomarch follows the `unzip'-like practice of working on only one archive per run, with further `filenames' given on the command-line actu-
ally specifying files to extract (or whatever). The easiest way to work on multiple files with nomarch is simply to run it multiple times
using for; for example:
for i in *.arc; do nomarch $i; done
The above would extract all archives in the current directory.
USING THE PROGRAM FROM EMACS
Emacs's arc-mode facility lets you work with various kinds of archive file directly from the editor. Making it use nomarch for extracting
`.arc' files isn't too hard. Just add the following to your ~/.emacs file:
(setq archive-arc-extract '("nomarch" "-U"))
BUGS
The CRC used by the format is only 16-bit, so `-t' is a less-than-perfect test.
One compression method, obsolete even by `.arc' standards :-), isn't supported yet. This is partly because I've yet to find a single file
which uses it, despite testing an awful lot of files.
Subdirectories in Spark archives are extracted as the `.arc'-format files they really are, which may not be terribly convenient.
SEE ALSO tar(1), gzip(1), bzip2(1), lbrate(1)AUTHOR
Russell Marks (rus@svgalib.org).
Version 1.4 18th June, 2006 nomarch(1)