I do a lot of command line scripting to capture data from files or other command output. I've checked in a number of Unix and scripting books but for the life of me I can't find out how to asign field data from nawk output into variables that I can manipulate later. For example, reading a two... (6 Replies)
Hello friends,
I doing the follwing script , but found problem to store it to a shell variable.
#! /bin/sh
for temp in `find ./dat/vector/ -name '*.file'`
do
echo $temp
nawk -v temp=$temp 'BEGIN{ split(temp, a,"\/"); print a}'
done
output:
./dat/vector/drf_all_002.file... (6 Replies)
Hi
I have the following output
Message man amm (9196) is calling
Hello & Alert man amtrr (9197) is stopped
Find amfi (19198) is cancelled
Engine Item aea (19203) is notified
Engine Item2 aea2 ... (8 Replies)
Hi,
I have a string in log file from that i need to pick the username.
the string is like this--
pid 2172 tid 3124: 160: 10110847: userName :
pid 2172 tid 3124: 160: 10110847: userName :
pid 2172 tid 3124: 160: 10110847: userName :
pid 2172 tid 3124: 160: 10110847: userName :
pid... (5 Replies)
I have searched and the answers I have found thus far have led me to this point, so I feel I am just about there.
I am trying to convert a column of hexadecimal to decimal values so that I can filter out via grep just the data I want. I was able to pull my original 3 character hex value and... (10 Replies)
Legends,
I have 2 files f1 and f2. when i use nawk to compare the difference(subtraction) from 4th column of the file, it truncates the output.
can you please help to resolve this.
subtraction is (4th col of f1 - 4th col of f2). but it gives only below lines out of 116. I want to print all... (7 Replies)
Below script perfectly works, giving below mail output. BUT, I want to make the script mail only if there are any D-Defined/T-Transition/B-Broken State WPARs and also to copy the output generated during monitoring to a temporary log file, which gets cleaned up every week. Need suggestions.
... (4 Replies)
I need a Korn shell script which does the folllowing:-
If there is one "|" (pipe) delimited file so, the script should check the 5th field to be blank or not. if it is a blank tht entire line of the file should be redirected to another file. if the 5th field is not blank it should pass that.
... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
I am working on nawk script, has the small function which prints the output on the screen.Am trying to print/append the same output in a file.
Basically nawk script should print the output on the console/screen and as well it should write/append the same result to a file.
script :... (3 Replies)
Hi
I have this command, which counts number of lines in a specific file and then prints it on screen.nawk 'NF{c++}END{print "Number of GPS coordinates in file: "c}' $filename
I would like to have the output put into a variable, but can't seem to find the correct argument for it.
How do I... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: bulleteyedk
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
diff3
diff3(1) General Commands Manual diff3(1)Name
diff3 - 3-way differential file comparison
Syntax
diff3 [-ex3] file1 file2 file3
Description
The command compares three versions of a file, and publishes the ranges of text that disagree, flagged with the following codes:
==== all three files differ
====1 file1 is different
====2 file2 is different
====3 file3 is different
The type of change needed to convert a given range of a given file to some other is indicated in one of these ways:
f : n1 a Text is to be appended after line number n1 in file f, where f = 1, 2, or 3.
f : n1 , n2 c
Text is to be changed in the range line n1 to line n2. If n1 = n2, the range may be abbreviated to n1.
The original contents of the range follows immediately after a c indication. When the contents of two files are identical, the contents of
the lower-numbered file is suppressed.
Options-3 Produces an editor script containing the changes between file1 and file2 that are to be incorporated into file3.
-e Produces an editor script containing the changes between file2 and file3 that are to be incorporated into file1.
-x Produces an editor script containing the changes among all three files.
Examples
Under the -e option, publishes a script for the editor that incorporates into file1 all changes between file2 and file3 - that is, the
changes that would normally be flagged ==== and ====3. Option -x (-3) produces a script to incorporate only changes flagged ==== (====3).
The following command applies the resulting script to `file1':
(cat script; echo '1,$p') | ed - file1
Restrictions
Text lines that consist of a single `.' defeat -e.
Files
/tmp/d3?????
/usr/lib/diff3
See Alsocmp(1), comm(1), diff(1), dffmk(1), join(1), sccsdiff(1), uniq(1)diff3(1)