grep will return all lines that contain a searched-for string.
And I have seen some odd results when the lines are not delimited as usually expected with a line-feed at the end of each. So, that is a first thought - that your file is not correctly delimited. (see commands like dos2unix and unix2dos for more on this)
The next issues are capitalization and spacing. The grep command, without additional options, is an exact match. This relates to my comment on spacing as there might be two spaces between certain words, they words may be on separate lines, there could be tab characters between the words.
See the following example:
Code:
> cat file002
this is boring
but I am writing
so we can test
to see that I
am writing
> grep "I am writing" file002
but I am writing
Hi,
I need to extract information from a 4 GB file based on the following conditions:
1) Check for the presence of a set of account numbers
Each account number is present along with other information within
a PAGESTART and PAGEEND.
The file looks like this:
PAGESTART
ACCOUNT NO 123... (6 Replies)
I wanna grep for a pattern logs 1 2 & 3 within a folder containing 100 logs
grep "test" /folder/log1 /folder/log2 /folder/log3
The above command will work fine
but is there any command like
grep "test" /folder/log1, log2, log3 or something similar (4 Replies)
Net::SSH::Perl ...... how to print the output in a proper format
my $cmd = "ls -l";
my $ssh = Net::SSH::Perl->new($host);
$ssh->login($user, $pass);
my($stdout, $stderr, $exit) = $ssh->cmd("$cmd");
print $stdout;
the script works fine, but i am unable to see the output... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I'm working on unix with grep (GNU grep) 2.5.1. I'm going through some of the newer regex syntax using Regular Expression Reference - Advanced Syntax a guide.
ls -aLl /bin | grep "\(x\)"
Which works, just highlights 'x' where ever, when ever.
I'm trying to to get (?:) to work but... (4 Replies)
I'm new to Unix, and just had a quick question.
I'm writing a bash script, and I was wondering what proper programming etiquette was for piping. How many pipes is too many pipes?
OLDEST=$(find . -maxdepth 1 -type d -newermt 2012-07-01 ! -newermt
2012-07-30 | xargs ls -1td | tail -2)
echo... (1 Reply)
Hi Guys,
I need to grep below data in this format
backup_id
creation
expiration
policy
sched_label
backup_id = picoserver38_1212077050, version = 2
creation = 05/29/2008 18:04:10 (1212077050)
expiration = 06/29/2008 18:04:10 (1214755450)
retention_level = 3, fragment = 2, file_num = 1... (14 Replies)
What is the proper way to run two commands together?
For example, in the below I would like run a command in bold then pipe that output to awk to re-format it. Thank you :).
bedtools nuc -fi /home/cmccabe/Desktop/bed/hg19.fa -bed /home/cmccabe/Desktop/bed/xgen_baits.bed >... (3 Replies)
Dear Team
/app/Appln/logs/
echo Session used server are 'grep -i pid|grep -i session | cut -d'.' -f1 | awk '{print $9}' | sort | uniq'
Output -
lxserver01
lxserver02
lxserver03
When I grep session pid in logs server details I can see above distinct server details but I... (6 Replies)
I am trying to write a korn shell script (Z.ksh) that will execute three other korn shell scripts within it. The three korn shell scripts (A.ksh,B.ksh,C.ksh) each execute a series of .sas programs. A.ksh, B.ksh, and C.ksh must each wait until the last .sas program within them executes and finishes... (2 Replies)
I have a question to this command
find . -type f -name ".*txt" -exec grep "text" {}\.
The find command will locate a file name with the extension of txt once per round and find the word "text" in the content of the file or the find command will locate all the file names with the extension of... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: TestKing
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
zgrep
ZGREP(1) BSD General Commands Manual ZGREP(1)NAME
zgrep, zegrep, zfgrep -- print lines matching a pattern in gzip-compressed files
SYNOPSIS
zgrep [grep-flags] [--] pattern [files ...]
zegrep [grep-flags] [--] pattern [file ...]
zfgrep [grep-flags] [--] pattern [file ...]
DESCRIPTION
zgrep runs grep(1) on files or stdin, if no files argument is given, after decompressing them with zcat(1).
The grep-flags and pattern arguments are passed on to grep(1). If an -e flag is found in the grep-flags, zgrep will not look for a pattern
argument.
zegrep calls egrep(1), while zfgrep calls fgrep(1).
EXIT STATUS
In case of missing arguments or missing pattern, 1 will be returned, otherwise 0.
SEE ALSO egrep(1), fgrep(1), grep(1), gzip(1), zcat(1)AUTHORS
Thomas Klausner <wiz@NetBSD.org>
BSD December 28, 2003 BSD