I am new to unix...
How to get all the saturdays of a specific year?
for a specific month, i tried as below..
cal 02 2006 | awk '{print $7}'
but it is not giving all saturdays....
can anyone help me with this?
Thanks in advance,
Sumi (9 Replies)
PLEASE EXPLANIN ME...
sed 's~\(.*\)\(<name>\)\(.*\)\(</name>\)\(.*\)~\2\3\4~'
this is the format
<start><name>123<\name><addr>BAC<\addr><loc>sfo<\loc></start> (1 Reply)
Hi,
I am trying to understand a script and found a line as follows:
tr '\211\233\240' '\040' < $IN_FILE | tr -cd '\11\12\15\40-\176' > $TEMP_FILE
Can any one explain the above line .. What are they trying to translate using the tr command.. I have not used tr command.. so feeling little bit... (2 Replies)
HI,
if I have a tarfile called pmapdata.tar that contains
tar -tvf pmapdata.tar
-rw-r--r-- 0/0 21 Oct 15 11:00 2009 /var/tmp/pmapdata/pmap4628.txt
-rw-r--r-- 0/0 21 Oct 14 20:00 2009 /var/tmp/pmapdata/pmap23752.txt
-rw-r--r-- 0/0 1625 Oct 13 20:00 2009... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I have a tar file and inside that tar file is a folder with additional tar.gz files. What I want to do is look inside the first tar file and then find the second tar file I'm looking for, look inside that tar.gz file to find a certain directory. I'm encountering issues by trying to... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I almost always use back quotes in scripts to assigin output of a command to a variable.
eg: file=`basename a/b/c/d/file`
year_mon=`date +%Y%m`
But the same can be achieved like:
file=$(basename a/b/c/d/file)
year_mon=$(date +%Y%m)
I would like to know if there is... (3 Replies)
My understanding is that "setserial" command is used to change the attributes of
serial device files (ttyS) managed by the linux serial driver(serial module).
My doubt is, using setserial command is it possible to change the attributes of other serial device files managed by a different driver... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I need to find the line by using grep command with the two occurence of word in the same line. I tried the below example it prints the word choice.
cat nohup.out
Dictionary utl is completed.
file is completed.
Dictionary file is completed.
grep 'Dictionary\|file'... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: arun888
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
bup-join
bup-join(1) General Commands Manual bup-join(1)NAME
bup-join - concatenate files from a bup repository
SYNOPSIS
bup join [-r host:path] [refs or hashes...]
DESCRIPTION
bup join is roughly the opposite operation to bup-split(1). You can use it to retrieve the contents of a file from a local or remote bup
repository.
The supplied list of refs or hashes can be in any format accepted by git(1), including branch names, commit ids, tree ids, or blob ids.
If no refs or hashes are given on the command line, bup join reads them from stdin instead.
OPTIONS -r, --remote=host:path
Retrieves objects from the given remote repository instead of the local one. path may be blank, in which case the default remote
repository is used. The connection to the remote server is made with SSH. If you'd like to specify which port, user or private key
to use for the SSH connection, we recommend you use the ~/.ssh/config file.
EXAMPLE
# split and then rejoin a file using its tree id
TREE=$(tar -cvf - /etc | bup split -t)
bup join $TREE | tar -tf -
# make two backups, then get the second-most-recent.
# mybackup~1 is git(1) notation for the second most
# recent commit on the branch named mybackup.
tar -cvf - /etc | bup split -n mybackup
tar -cvf - /etc | bup split -n mybackup
bup join mybackup~1 | tar -tf -
SEE ALSO bup-split(1), bup-save(1), ssh_config(5)BUP
Part of the bup(1) suite.
AUTHORS
Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@gmail.com>.
Bup unknown-bup-join(1)