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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting output words between sentences SED Post 302268951 by Christoph Spohr on Tuesday 16th of December 2008 03:14:26 PM
Old 12-16-2008
Hi,

choose one of two ways:

Code:
sed 's/.*OK: \[\([^]]*\).*/\1/' <<< \
"Thu Dec  4 08:28:57 2008 : Auth: Login OK: [vyce6220] (from client LINKSYS3 port 12 cli 001644fc4838)"

or much easier:

Code:
IFS="[]" && read 1 2 3 <<< \
"Thu Dec  4 08:28:57 2008 : Auth: Login OK: [vyce6220] (from client LINKSYS3 port 12 cli 001644fc4838)"
echo $2

HTH Chris
 

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fmt(1)							      General Commands Manual							    fmt(1)

NAME
fmt - format text SYNOPSIS
width] [file...] DESCRIPTION
The command is a simple text formatter that fills and joins lines to produce output lines of (up to) the number of characters specified in the width option. The default width is 72. concatenates the arguments. If none are given, formats text from the standard input. Blank lines are preserved in the output, as is the spacing between words. does not fill lines beginning with a period for compatibility with Nor does it fill lines starting with Indentation is preserved in the output and input lines with differing indentation are not joined (unless is used). can also be used as an in-line text filter for the command: reformats the text between the cursor location and the end of the paragraph. Options recognizes the following options: Crown margin mode. Preserve the indentation of the first two lines within a paragraph and align the left margin of each subsequent line with that of the second line. This is useful for tagged paragraphs. Split lines only. Do not join short lines to form longer ones. This prevents sample lines of code, and other such "formatted" text, from being unduly combined. Fill output lines to up to width columns. WARNINGS
The width option is acceptable for BSD compatibility, but it may go away in future releases. SEE ALSO
nroff(1), vi(1). fmt(1)
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