I have a text file with rows of information (it is basically a ls command information(o/p from ls command))
I need to remove the lines ending with a .cnt extension and keep the lines ending with .zip extension, how to accomplish this.
I also only need the date,size and name of the file from every... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I would want to spool file for a database query, however by using crontab, the file is not spooled. Below shows my script:
ORACLE_HOME="/u01/oraprod/perpdb/10.1.0/db_1"
OUTFILE="/tmp/invalid.out"
FILE="$HOME/admin/scripts"
$ORACLE_HOME/bin/sqlplus -s "/as sysdba"... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I have several users to create on my test Oracle database taking the scripts from the Production Oracle database. I have a separate text file where I have user-id and passwords maintained. I need help in writing a shell script to go thru the user creation scripts and replace VALUES... (1 Reply)
I'm calling an embedded sql from my shell script file. This sql does simple task of spooling out the contents of the table (see below my sample code) into a spool file that I specify. So far so good, but the problem is that the output is also displayed on screen which I do NOT want.
How can I... (3 Replies)
Hi,
Im writing a script to run a bit of sql(via sqlplus) that pulls back some data and spools it to a file, I want the spool file to only display the data, with no sql command at the top and no reports at the bottom ie(# of records recieved).
I am currently doing it via a grep command but... (1 Reply)
Hi Friends,
Actually in an linux server , there was printer jobs files occupying more space in /var/spool/cups so i want a script for deleting the files once in two week since i need the latest two weeks files.
Thanks in advance..Waiting for the script. (2 Replies)
Hello All,
I'm trying to spool an oracle table data into a csv file on unix server but the complete record is not being extracted. The record is almost 1000 characters but only 100 characters are being extracted and rest of the data getting truncated.
I'm setting below options :
SET... (4 Replies)
SQL*Plus version : 11.2.0.4
OS : Oracle Linux 6.5
SQL*Plus is a client application to connect to oracle database. The log file for this tool is generated via spool command as shown below.
I am trying to append date ( $dateString ) to spool file as shown below.
$ cat test2.sh
#!/bin/bash... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: kraljic
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
dbfdump
DBFDUMP(1) User Contributed Perl Documentation DBFDUMP(1)NAME
dbfdump - Dump the record of the dbf file
FORMAT
dbfdump [options] files
where options are
--rs output record separator (default newline)
--fs output field separator (default colon)
--fields comma separated list of fields to print (default all)
--undef string to print for NULL values (default empty)
--memofile specifies unstandard name of attached memo file
--memosep separator for dBase III dbt's (default x1ax1a)
--nomemo do not try to read the memo (dbt/fpt) file
--info print info about the file and fields
with additional --SQL parameter, outputs the SQL create table
--version print version of the XBase library
--table output in nice table format (only available when
Data::ShowTable is installed, overrides rs and fs)
SYNOPSIS
dbfdump -fields id,msg table.dbf
dbfdump -fs=' : ' table
dbfdump --nomemo file.dbf
ssh user@host 'cat file.dbf.gz' | gunzip - | dbfdump -
DESCRIPTION
Dbfdump prints to standard output the content of dbf files listed. By default, it prints all fields, separated by colons, one record on a
line. The output record and column separators can be changed by switches on the command line. You can also ask only for some fields to be
printed.
The content of associated memo files (dbf, fpt) is printed for memo fields, unless you use the "--nomemo" option.
You can specify reading the standard input by putting dash (-) instead of file name.
AUTHOR
(c) 1998--1999 Jan Pazdziora, adelton@fi.muni.cz, http://www.fi.muni.cz/~adelton/ at Faculty of Informatics, Masaryk University in Brno,
Czech Republic
SEE ALSO perl(1); XBase(3)perl v5.12.1 2010-07-05 DBFDUMP(1)