I'd like to get only the first 5 lines of the ls -lt command, i tried to pass to head as a file ip but didnt work, is there any other way to do it.
I am trying to find the lates log files for the last 5 days.
what i tried
head -5 < ls -lt alog*
Thanks.
-d (1 Reply)
Is there a way to combine two lines onto a single line...append the following line onto the previous line?
I have the following file that contains some blank lines and some lines I would like to append to the previous line...
current file:
checking dsk c19t2d6
checking dsk c19t2d7
... (2 Replies)
I seem to have gotten myself in over my head on this one. I need help combining lines together.
I have a text file containing 24,000 lines (exactly why I need awk) due to bad formatting it has separated the lines (ideally it should be 12,000 lines total).
Example of file:
... (2 Replies)
Dear Experts
I am trying to find if it is possible to combine unix commands in awk program. For example if it is possible embed rm or ls or any unix command inside the awk program and while it is reading the file besides printing be able to do some unix commands. I am thinking may be just print... (2 Replies)
Hi
I am fairly new to shell scripting
i have some file with outout
1011
abc fyi
6.1.4.5
abr tio
70986
dfb hji
4.1.7
....some text
111114
i have to format this text to
1011 abc fyi 6.1.4.5 abr tio
70986 dfb hji 4.1.7 ....some text
111114 (3 Replies)
This is the problem actually:
This regex:
egrep "low debug.*\".*\"" $dbDir/alarmNotification.log
is looking for data between the two quotation marks:
".*\"
When I hate data like this:
low debug 2009/3/9 8:30:20.47 ICSNotificationAlarm Prodics01ics0003 IC... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I am using SunOS
I want to serch my previous command
from unix prompt
(like on AIX we can search by ESC -k)
how to get in SunOs
urgent help require. (10 Replies)
I am trying to come up with a good approach to taking a file and only printing 10 columns.
The input file has duplicate lines but only the 6th column has real value.
I just need to combine the lines and output 1 line per
example file:
1 2.0765 AA 10 0.6557 .....
1 2.0765 AA 10 0.6655 .....
2... (12 Replies)
Dear all,
I have a file like this:
imput
scaffold_0 1
scaffold_0 10000
scaffold_0 20000
scaffold_0 25000
scaffold_1 1
scaffold_1 10000
scaffold_1 20000
scaffold_1 23283
and I want the output like this:
scaffold_0 1 scaffold_0 10000
scaffold_0 10000 scaffold_0 20000... (6 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a file which has the following sample lines
--
<Member name="Canada"
Currency="CAD"
--
<Member name="UK"
Currency="GBP"
--
<Member name="Switzerland"
Currency="CHF"
--
<Member name="Germany"
Currency="EUR"
-- (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: dev.devil.1983
11 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
rhosts
rhosts(4) Kernel Interfaces Manual rhosts(4)NAME
rhosts, .rhosts - Specifies remote users that can use a local user account
SYNOPSIS
$HOME/.rhosts
DESCRIPTION
The .rhosts file contains a list of remote users who are not required to supply a login password when they execute the rcp, rlogin, and rsh
commands using a local user account.
The .rhosts file is a hidden file in your home directory. It must be owned by you or the root user and it must not be writable by group or
world, otherwise, it is not used. Moreover, although it is not required, it is sensible to set the permissions of the file to 600, so the
file is not readable by group or world.
Each entry in the file is of the following form: host [user]
where: The name of the remote host. If the remote host is in a different domain than the local host, the full domain name must be speci-
fied. The login name of the remote user. This field is optional. If this field is not specified, any user on the specified remote host is
exempt from providing a password, and is assumed to have the same username on both the local and remote hosts.
Optionally, an NIS netgroup name can be specified for the host name, user name, or both.
Entries in the .rhosts file are either positive or negative. Positive entries allow access; negative entries deny access. The following
entries are positive: hostname username +@netgroup
In addition, the plus sign (+) can be used in place of the hostname or username. In place of the hostname, it means any remote host. In
place of the username, it means any user.
The following entries are negative: -hostname -username -@netgroup
EXAMPLES
The following sample entries in the /u/chen/.rhosts file on host zeus allow users moshe and pierre at remote host venus and user robert at
the hosts specified in the NIS netgroup chicago to log in to user chen's home directory on host zeus: venus moshe venus pierre +@chicago
robert
FILES
Specifies remote users who can use a local user account.
RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: rcp(1), rlogin(1), rsh(1).
Functions: ruserok(3).
Files: hosts.equiv(4), netgroup(4).
Functions: rcmd(3). delim off
rhosts(4)