Hello. First time poster here. I have a huge file of IP numbers. I am trying to output only the class b of the IPs and rank them by most common and output the total # of duplicate class b's before the class b. An example is below:
12.107.1.1
12.107.9.54
12.108.3.89
12.109.109.4
12.109.6.3
... (2 Replies)
I am trying to write a housekeeping bash script. Part of it involves searching all of my attached storage media for photographs and moving them into a single directory. The problem occurs when files have duplicate names, obviously a file called 001.jpg will get overwritten with another file... (6 Replies)
Dear All,
I have one file which looks like :
account1:passwd1
account2:passwd2
account3:passwd3
account1:passwd4
account5:passwd5
account6:passwd6
you can see there're two records for account1. and is there any shell command which can find out : account1 is the duplicate record in... (3 Replies)
Hi,
Need to find a duplicate records on the first column,
ANU4501710430989 0000000W20389390
ANU4501710430989 0000000W67065483
ANU4501130050520 0000000W80838713
ANU4501210170685 0000000W69246611... (3 Replies)
Hi, here comes another newbie question:
How to find the number of non-duplicate names recursively?
For example, my files are stored in the folders like:
If I do
find . -depth -name "*.txt" | wc -l
This will gives out a result "4". One .txt file named "1.txt" in folder "1",
and... (2 Replies)
Hi Unix gurus,
Maybe it is too much to ask for but please take a moment and help me out. A very humble request to you gurus. I'm new to Unix and I have started learning Unix. I have this project which is way to advanced for me.
File format: CSV file
File has four columns with no header... (8 Replies)
Hi,
In a file, I have to mark duplicate records as 'D' and the latest record alone as 'C'.
In the below file, I have to identify if duplicate records are there or not based on Man_ID, Man_DT, Ship_ID and I have to mark the record with latest Ship_DT as "C" and other as "D" (I have to create... (7 Replies)
hello all
in my bash script I have a file and I only want to keep the lines that appear twice in the file.Is there a way to do this?
thanks in advance! (4 Replies)
I am writing a bash script to find out all the files in a directory which are empty. I am running into multiple issues. I will really appreciate if someone can please help me.
#!/bin/bash
DATE=$(date +%m%d%y)
TIME=$(date +%H%M)
DIR="/home/statsetl/input/civil/test"
... (1 Reply)
Ultimately, I'm looking to create a script that allows me to plug in a usb drive with lots of jpegs on it & copy them over to a folder on my hard drive. So in the process of copying I am looking to hash check them, record dupes to a file, copy only 1 of the identical files (if it doesn't exsist... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: JonaQuinn
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT X11R4
libbash
LIBBASH(7) libbash Manual LIBBASH(7)NAME
libbash -- A bash shared libraries package.
DESCRIPTION
libbash is a package that enables bash dynamic-like shared libraries. Actually its a tool for managing bash scripts whose functions you may
want to load and use in scripts of your own.
It contains a 'dynamic loader' for the shared libraries ( ldbash(1)), a configuration tool (ldbashconfig(8)), and some libraries.
Using ldbash(1) you are able to load loadable bash libraries, such as getopts(1) and hashstash(1). A bash shared library that can be loaded
using
ldbash(1) must answer 4 requirments:
1. It must be installed in $LIBBASH_PREFIX/lib/bash (default is /usr/lib/bash).
2. It must contain a line that begins with '#EXPORT='. That line will contain (after the '=') a list of functions that the library
exports. I.e. all the function that will be usable after loading that library will be listed in that line.
3. It must contain a line that begins with '#REQUIRE='. That line will contain (after the '=') a list of bash libraries that are
required for our library. I.e. every bash library that is in use in our bash library must be listed there.
4. The library must be listed (For more information, see ldbashconfig(8)).
Basic guidelines for writing library of your own:
1. Be aware, that your library will be actually sourced. So, basically, it should contain (i.e define) only functions.
2. Try to declare all variables intended for internal use as local.
3. Global variables and functions that are intended for internal use (i.e are not defined in '#EXPORT=') should begin with:
__<library_name>_
For example, internal function myfoosort of hashstash library should be named as
__hashstash_myfoosort
This helps to avoid conflicts in global name space when using libraries that come from different vendors.
4. See html manual for full version of this guide.
AUTHORS
Hai Zaar <haizaar@haizaar.com>
Gil Ran <ril@ran4.net>
SEE ALSO ldbash(1), ldbashconfig(8), getopts(1), hashstash(1)colors(1)messages(1)urlcoding(1)locks(1)Linux Epoch Linux