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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting is it hard to extract particular lines & strings from the files?? Post 302257996 by radoulov on Thursday 13th of November 2008 02:25:28 PM
Old 11-13-2008
This is strange ...
This is the output on my Solaris 9 machine:

Code:
$ cat file
<log logid="845b16ce190811052359400116">
<category>Upstream</category>
<operation>Delete</operation>
<target>SUB</target>
<instance></instance>
<user>sogadm</user>
<context>sog</context>
<fullOperation>DELETE:SUB:9371068317:PREPAY,1EST,ALL;</fullOperation>
<starttime>20081105235940.030937</starttime>
<stoptime>20081106000012.105544</stoptime>
<fullResult>RESP:940120105;;</fullResult>
<status>FAILED</status>
</log>


<log logid="845b16ce190811052359400116">
<category>Upstream</category>
<operation>Create</operation>
<target>SUB</target>
<instance></instance>
<user>sogadm</user>
<context>sog</context>
<fullOperation>CREATE:SUB:9371068317:PREPAY,1EST,ALL;</fullOperation>
<starttime>20081105235940.030937</starttime>
<stoptime>20081106000012.105544</stoptime>
<fullResult>RESP:0;</fullResult>
<status>SUCCESSFUL</status>
</log>


<log logid="845b16ce190811060000120118">
<category>Upstream.CAI</category>
<operation>Get</operation>
<target>CSUB</target>
<instance></instance>
<user>sogadm</user>
<context>sog</context>
<fullOperation>GET:CSUB:71068319:POSTPAY,1EST,ALL;</fullOperation>
<starttime>20081106000012.310898</starttime>
<stoptime>20081106000045.118912</stoptime>
<fullResult>RESP:0;</fullResult>
<status>SUCCESSFUL</status>
</log>
..
..
$ perl -00nle'
>   print join "\n", /<fullOperation>(.*?):.*<fullResult>(.*?);/s
>   ' file
DELETE
RESP:940120105

CREATE
RESP:0

GET
RESP:0

Are you sure your <log> tags are separated by empty lines?
 

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CABEXTRACT(1)						      General Commands Manual						     CABEXTRACT(1)

NAME
cabextract - program to extract files from Microsoft cabinet (.cab) archives SYNOPSIS
cabextract [-ddir] [-f] [-Fpattern] [-h] [-l] [-L] [-p] [-q] [-s] [-t] [-v] cabinet files ... DESCRIPTION
cabextract is a program that un-archives files in the Microsoft cabinet file format (.cab) or any binary file which contains an embedded cabinet file (frequently found in .exe files). cabextract will extract all files from all cabinet files specified on the command line. To extract a multi-part cabinet consisting of several files, only the first cabinet file needs to be given as an argument to cabextract as it will automatically look for the remaining files. To prevent cabextract from extracting cabinet files you did not specify, use the -s option. OPTIONS
A summary of options is included below. -d dir Extracts all files into the directory dir. -f When testing or extracting cabinet files, corrupted MSZIP blocks will be ignored. A warning will be printed if a corrupted MSZIP block is encountered. -F pattern Only files with names that match the shell pattern pattern shall be listed, tested or extracted. On non-GNU systems, this match may be case-sensitive. -h Prints a page of help and exits. -l Lists the contents of the given cabinet files, rather than extracting them. -L When extracting cabinet files, makes each extracted file's name lowercase. -p Files shall be extracted to standard output. -q When extracting cabinet files, suppresses all messages except errors and warnings. -s When testing, listing or extracting cabinets which span multiple files, only cabinet files given on the command line shall be used. -t Tests the integrity of the cabinet. Files are decompressed, but not written to disk or standard output. If the file successfully decompresses, the MD5 checksum of the file is printed. -v If given alone on the command line, prints the version of cabextract and exits. Given with a list of cabinet files, it will list the contents of the cabinet files. AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Stuart Caie <kyzer@4u.net>, based on the one written by Eric Sharkey <sharkey@debian.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system. SEE ALSO
lcab(1) October 30, 2005 CABEXTRACT(1)
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