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Full Discussion: Help me in finding logic
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Help me in finding logic Post 302304584 by senthilkumar_ak on Monday 6th of April 2009 08:54:06 PM
Old 04-06-2009
great reply pen.

I also thought a way after using my little brain. Could you please check this, i am working in both way to find out what is minimal resource usage scripts.

tail -n 2000 $TRACE | awk '
/TimeOutException/ { printf ("%s%s", "'"`email "TimeOutException" "$2"`"'")}

In our log file we get the time stamp at the second position.

and the function is

email()
{
echo "$1 occured at $2" | mail -s "Error!! $SERVER is thrown $1 - [$MYDATE]@[$MYTIME]" $mailid
}

waiting for your reply.

thanks
senthilkumar
 

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Filter::Boolean(3)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					Filter::Boolean(3)

NAME
Log::Log4perl::Filter::Boolean - Special filter to combine the results of others SYNOPSIS
log4perl.logger = WARN, AppWarn, AppError log4perl.filter.Match1 = sub { /let this through/ } log4perl.filter.Match2 = sub { /and that, too/ } log4perl.filter.MyBoolean = Log::Log4perl::Filter::Boolean log4perl.filter.MyBoolean.logic = Match1 || Match2 log4perl.appender.Screen = Log::Dispatch::Screen log4perl.appender.Screen.Filter = MyBoolean log4perl.appender.Screen.layout = Log::Log4perl::Layout::SimpleLayout DESCRIPTION
Sometimes, it's useful to combine the output of various filters to arrive at a log/no log decision. While Log4j, Log4perl's mother ship, chose to implement this feature as a filter chain, similar to Linux' IP chains, Log4perl tries a different approach. Typically, filter results will not need to be passed along in chains but combined in a programmatic manner using boolean logic. "Log if this filter says 'yes' and that filter says 'no'" is a fairly common requirement but hard to implement as a chain. "Log::Log4perl::Filter::Boolean" is a special predefined custom filter for Log4perl which combines the results of other custom filters in arbitrary ways, using boolean expressions: log4perl.logger = WARN, AppWarn, AppError log4perl.filter.Match1 = sub { /let this through/ } log4perl.filter.Match2 = sub { /and that, too/ } log4perl.filter.MyBoolean = Log::Log4perl::Filter::Boolean log4perl.filter.MyBoolean.logic = Match1 || Match2 log4perl.appender.Screen = Log::Dispatch::Screen log4perl.appender.Screen.Filter = MyBoolean log4perl.appender.Screen.layout = Log::Log4perl::Layout::SimpleLayout "Log::Log4perl::Filter::Boolean"'s boolean expressions allow for combining different appenders by name using AND (&& or &), OR (|| or |) and NOT (!) as logical expressions. Parentheses are used for grouping. Precedence follows standard Perl. Here's a bunch of examples: Match1 && !Match2 # Match1 and not Match2 !(Match1 || Match2) # Neither Match1 nor Match2 (Match1 && Match2) || Match3 # Both Match1 and Match2 or Match3 SEE ALSO
Log::Log4perl::Filter, Log::Log4perl::Filter::LevelMatch, Log::Log4perl::Filter::LevelRange, Log::Log4perl::Filter::StringRange COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2002-2009 by Mike Schilli <m@perlmeister.com> and Kevin Goess <cpan@goess.org>. This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.12.1 2010-02-07 Filter::Boolean(3)
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