Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting reading a file inside awk and processing line by line Post 302327703 by vgersh99 on Monday 22nd of June 2009 11:05:30 AM
Old 06-22-2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by Anteus
hi thanks
what does this regex mean..?
$0 ~ /^[#].*/
Just as the comment line says:
line starting (^) with '#' followed by any character (.) repeated 0 or more times (*)
Quote:
Originally Posted by Anteus
$0 is the associative array of the awk. so wont it be containing the ouput of the psg command.?
no, because we're inside the 'while' loop reading the file containing your process names to be kill-ed.
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Reading a file line by line and processing for each line

Hi, I am a beginner in shell scripting. I have written the following script, which is supposed to process the while loop for each line in the sid_home.txt file. But I'm getting the 'end of file' unexpected for the last line. The file sid_home.txt gets generated as expected, but the script... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: sagarparadkar
6 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk, perl Script for processing a single line text file

I need a script to process a huge single line text file: The sample of the text is: "forward_inline_item": "Inline", "options_region_Australia": "Australia", "server_event_err_msg": "There was an error attempting to save", "Token": "Yes", "family": "Family","pwd_login_tab": "Enter Your... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: hmsadiq
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

[Solved] Problem in reading a file line by line till it reaches a white line

So, I want to read line-by-line a text file with unknown number of files.... So: a=1 b=1 while ; do b=`sed -n '$ap' test` a=`expr $a + 1` $here do something with b etc done the problem is that sed does not seem to recognise the $a, even when trying sed -n ' $a p' So, I cannot read... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: hakermania
3 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Parsing file, reading each line to variable, evaluating date/time stamp of each line

So, the beginning of my script will cat & grep a file with the output directed to a new file. The data I have in this file needs to be parsed, read and evaluated. Basically, I need to identify the latest date/time stamp and then calculate whether or not it is within 15 minutes of the current... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: hynesward
1 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

[awk] line by line processing the same file

Hey, not too good at this, so I only managed a clumsy and SLOW solution to my problem that needs a drastic speed up. Any ideas how I write the following in awk only? Code is supposed to do... For every line read column values $6, $7, $8 and do a calculation with the same column values of every... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: origamisven
6 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Reading text file, comparing a value in a line, and placing only part of the line in a variable?

I need some help. I would like to read in a text file. Take a variable such as ROW-D-01, compare it to what's in one line in the text file such as PROD/VM/ROW-D-01 and only input PROD/VM into a variable without the /ROW-D-01. Is this possible? any help is appreciated. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: xChristopher
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Comparison of fields then increment a counter reading line by line in a file

Hi, i have a scenario were i should compare a few fields from each line then increment a variable based on that. Example file 989878|8999|Y|0|Y|N|V 989878|8999|Y|0|N|N|V 989878|8999|Y|2344|Y|N|V i have 3 conditions to check and increment a variable on every line condition 1 if ( $3... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: selvankj
4 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Reading line by line from live log file using while loop and considering only those lines start from

Hi, I want to read a live log file line by line and considering those line which start from time stamp; Below code I am using, which read line but throws an exception when comparing line that does not contain error code tail -F /logs/COMMON-ERROR.log | while read myline; do... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ketanraut
2 Replies

9. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Reading a file line by line and print required lines based on pattern

Hi All, i want to write a shell script read below file line by line and want to exclude the lines which contains empty value for MOUNTPOINT field. i am using centos 7 Operating system. want to read below file. # cat /tmp/d5 NAME="/dev/sda" TYPE="disk" SIZE="60G" OWNER="root"... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: balu1234
4 Replies
ACHECK-RULES.5(5)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					 ACHECK-RULES.5(5)

NAME
set.rules - Rules set for acheck DESCRIPTION
Rules set files contain rules to be check by acheck. Lines beginning with a number sign (`#') and empty lines will be ignored. Spaces at the beginning and the end of a line will also be ignored as well as tabulators. If you need spaces at the end or the beginning of a value you can use apostrophes (`"'). A comment starts with the number sign, there can be any number of spaces and/or tab stops in front of the #. Long lines can be broken into multiple lines ending with a backslash (`'). Some possible examples: # this line is ignored field value field value # this is a comment field "value ending with space " field value continuing on the next line You have to escape number signs with a backslash to use it in a value and use apostrophes if a value ends with a backslash. Rule sets are made of lists of rules. Theses lists can be repeated a number of times, until or while a condition happens. A rule detects an error if the corresponding test succeeds and none of its validation tests does. Each rule can then produce some fixes, a warning or an error, and provide hints to help the operator to correct the error. Parts of the text can be set as comments and so no rule and no spell check will be performed on them. RULE FILE SYNTAX
SYNTAX RULES
list A list starts at a `list' statement, and stops at the first `end_list' or at the end of the file. Mandatory fields: type type until, perform the list until the current line matches `test' while, perform the lint while the current line matches `test' loop, perform the list `test' times test regex / number A regex for `until' and `while' lists. The number of times the list must be performed for `loop', or `0' for infinite loop. Optional fields: name name Use this to give the list a name. spell yes / no Set it to `yes' (default) or `no', if you want or don't want spelling to be checked in the lines matching this list. This value will be inherited by the nested lists. Sub-rules: list [name] rule [name] comment [name] Followed by the name of the sub-rule or its definition for an anonymous sub-rule. rule A rule starts at a `rule' statement, and stops at the first `end_rule' or at the beginning of a comment or a list. Mandatory fields: type type fix, rule provides fixes and hints thought a menu autofix, rule fixes the mistake with no interaction warning, rule issues a warning error, rule issues an error nop, special rule that do nothing, no other field is required regex regex The regex to be match to found this error. Patterns can be captures and then used in the `fix' expression. fix expr Provides a correction for the rule, this field can be repeated to provides more than one choice. Only the first one will be used for `autofix' rules. `warning' and `error' do not provides fixes. The captured patterns can be used here with variables `$1', `$2', and so on. hint text Provides some explanations, this will be used as reviewer comments in review mode. Optional fields: name name Use this to give the rule a name. valid [name] Provides a validation test, it can be named or anonymous. For anonymous validation, the test definition must follow. This field can be repeated more than once, if any of the validation test succeed, the rule does not apply. valid A validation test starts at a `valid' statement, and stops at the first `end_valid' or at the beginning of a rule, a comment, a list or another validation test. Mandatory field: pre regex in regex> post regex Try the regex before, in or after the match of the regex rule. At least one of these test must be provided. If all tests are success- ful, the rule won't apply. Optional field: name name Use this to give the validation test a name. comment A comment starts at a `comment' statement, and stops at the first `end_comment' or at the beginning of a rule, a comment or a list. Comments are just skipped, no other rule and no spelling are performed on them. Mandatory field: skip regex A regex matching the text of the comment. Do not use `start' and `stop' with this. start regex stop regex Regexs defining the beginning and the end of the comment, all the text between will be considered as comment. Do not use `skip' with this. Optional fields: name name Use this to give the comment a name. start_offset stop_offset Defines where the comment really starts or end. Values are `s' for the place the match starts, `s+<n>' for n characters after the match starts, `e' for the place the match ends, or `e-<n>' for n characters before the match ends. Defaults are `s' for `start' matches and `e' for `stop' matches. SEE ALSO
acheck(1), acheck(5) AUTHOR
Nicolas Bertolissio <nico.bertol@free.fr> perl v5.8.4 2003-07-20 ACHECK-RULES.5(5)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:27 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy