Hi folks. I've tried to research this, but haven't found a good answer (could be my harried state).
At any rate, I have records that end with
two commas, a number, two commas
this could be anywhere from
,,01,,
to
,,09875953,,
I need to remove the last two fields (the number... (3 Replies)
I am writing a shell script on SunOS cosuaah01 5.9 Generic_118558-11 sun4u sparc SUNW,Sun-Fire-V440
machine. The shell script in.sh looks like this:
install_top=`pwd`
fl2=/d01/applptch/ptchora/iAS/Apache/Apache/cgi-bin/cxtool/display_report.pl
echo $fl2
mv $fl2 $fl2.old
sed 5c\... (6 Replies)
Collegues
I am dealing with raw text files which is extracted from web pages.
I have to find sentances which contains more than 99 words and have to put a "." after the 99th or 98 th word .
Is there any possiblity to it in sed or awk
With regards
Jaganadh.H (5 Replies)
Hello,
I need to use sed to replace a word in file.
My command is this:
sed "s/word_to_replace/'"${INPUT}"'/1 filename
and because INPUT="~@#$%^&*()-_=+{}\|;:<>,./?"
and / is also the delimiter so I'm keep on getting error message
sed: command garbled: ...
any suggestions about how I... (10 Replies)
Hi all,
Actually i want to delete the .ps extension from package1.ps string by using sed.
Can any body tell me that how shell i do it?????????
It is very urgent. Can anybody help me. I am trying to do this in the following way.
ps_file="package1.ps"
echo $ps_file
sed s/.ps//g $ps_file... (9 Replies)
Hi
Im running this command on AIX in ksh.
My input file samp1 contains
1
2
123
12345
When I execute the following sed i dont get a matching pattern
sed -n '/{1}/p' samp1
Can anyone help me with this simple thing (3 Replies)
Hello,
I have a file with the follwoing pattern:
Input file:
===========
tcp://xxx:123
8179 YY
1798 YY
tcp://abc:2345
not found
tcp://swt:4945
7356 QQ
tcp://pqr:456
8178 PP
9485 PP
4485 PP (8 Replies)
HI all,
i have a line in a file it cantains
one;two_1_10;two_2_10;two_3_10;three~
now i need to get the output as
one;two_1_abc_10;two_2_abc_10;two_3_abc_10;three~ ( 1 should be replaced with 1_abc for two__10 , and one more thing the number of occurances of two_value_10 will be... (1 Reply)
sort.sh
------
ls -lSr|cat -n/*gives the detailed description o files with a serial number concatenated*/
i=0
n=10
j=$n
if
then
while
do
(sh -C sub.sh $i $j)&
((i++))
((j--))
done
fi
if
then
while
do
(sh -C sub.sh $i $j)& (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: dishak
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
lsdiff
LSDIFF(1)LSDIFF(1)NAME
lsdiff - show which files are modified by a patch
SYNOPSIS
lsdiff [-n] [-p n] [--strip=n] [--addprefix=PREFIX] [-s]
[-i PATTERN] [-x PATTERN] [-v] [file...]
lsdiff {--help | --version | --filter ... | --grep ...}
DESCRIPTION
List the files modified by a patch.
You can use both unified and context format diffs with this program.
OPTIONS -n Display the line number that each patch begins at. If verbose output is requested, each hunk of each patch is listed as well.
For each file that is modified, a line is generated containing the line number of the beginning of the patch, followed by a Tab
character, followed by the name of the file that is modified. If -v is given, following each of these lines will be one line for
each hunk, consisting of a Tab character, the line number that the hunk begins at, another Tab character, the string ``Hunk #'', and
the hunk number (starting at 1).
-p n When matching, ignore the first n components of the pathname.
--strip=n
Remove the first n components of the pathname before displaying it.
--addprefix=PREFIX
Prefix the pathname with PREFIX before displaying it.
-s Show file additions, modifications and removals. A file addition is indicated by a ``+'', a removal by a ``-'', and a modification
by a ``!''.
-i PATTERN
Include only files matching PATTERN.
-x PATTERN
Exclude files matching PATTERN.
-v Verbose output.
--help Display a short usage message.
--version
Display the version number of lsdiff.
--filter
Behave like filterdiff(1) instead.
--grep Behave like grepdiff(1) instead.
SEE ALSO filterdiff(1), grepdiff(1)EXAMPLES
To sort the order of touched files in a patch, you can use:
lsdiff patch | sort -u |
xargs -rn1 filterdiff patch -i
To show only added files in a patch:
lsdiff -s patch | grep '^+' |
cut -c2- | xargs -rn1 filterdiff patch -i
To show the headers of all file hunks:
lsdiff -n patch | (while read n file
do sed -ne "$n,$(($n+1))p" patch
done)
AUTHOR
Tim Waugh <twaugh@redhat.com>.
patchutils 13 May 2002 LSDIFF(1)