I've been trying to execute a perl script that contains the following line within backticks:
It takes normally 2 minutes to execute this command from the bash shell by hand.
I noticed that when i run this command from crontab.. it's much more faster... within 10 seconds the file is created... i'm trying to solve this issue.. do you have any clues??
Hi,
A datafile containing lines such as below needs to be split:
500000000000932491683600000000000000000000000000016800000GS0000000000932491683600*HOME
I need to get the 2-5, 11-20, and 35-40 characters and I can do it via cut command.
cut -c 2-5 file > temp1.txt
cut -c 11-20 file >... (9 Replies)
I'm sorting files from a source directory by size into 4 categories then copying them into 4 corresponding folders, just wondering if there's a faster/better/more_elegant way to do this:
find /home/user/sourcefiles -type f -size -400000k -exec /bin/cp -uv {} /home/user/medfiles/ \;
find... (0 Replies)
we have 30 GB files on our filesystem which we need to copy daily to 25 location on the same machine (but different filesystem).
cp is taking 20 min to do the copy and we have 5 different thread doing the copy.
so in all its taking around 2 hr and we need to reduce it.
Is there any... (9 Replies)
Hi,
I have a script below for extracting xml from a file.
for i in *.txt
do
echo $i
awk '/<.*/ , /.*<\/.*>/' "$i" | tr -d '\n'
echo -ne '\n'
done
.
I read about using multi threading to speed up the script.
I do not know much about it but read it on this forum.
Is it a... (21 Replies)
awk "/May 23, 2012 /,0" /var/tmp/datafile
the above command pulls out information in the datafile. the information it pulls is from the date specified to the end of the file.
now, how can i make this faster if the datafile is huge? even if it wasn't huge, i feel there's a better/faster way to... (8 Replies)
Hello guys,
I'm cleaning out big XML files (we're talking about 1GB at least), most of them contain words written in a non-latin alphabet.
The command I'm using is so slow it's not even funny:
cat $1 | sed -e :a -e 's/<*>//g;/</N;//ba;s/</ /g;s/>/... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have a large number of input files with two columns of numbers.
For example:
83 1453
99 3255
99 8482
99 7372
83 175
I only wish to retain lines where the numbers fullfil two requirements. E.g:
=83
1000<=<=2000
To do this I use the following... (10 Replies)
Good evening
Im new at unix shell scripting and im planning to script a shell that removes headers for about 120 files in a directory and each file contains about 200000
lines in average.
i know i will loop files to process each one and ive found in this great forum different solutions... (5 Replies)
I have the below command which is referring a large file and it is taking 3 hours to run. Can something be done to make this command faster.
awk -F ',' '{OFS=","}{ if ($13 == "9999") print $1,$2,$3,$4,$5,$6,$7,$8,$9,$10,$11,$12 }' ${NLAP_TEMP}/hist1.out|sort -T ${NLAP_TEMP} |uniq>... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: Peu Mukherjee
13 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
time
time(1) General Commands Manual time(1)Name
time - time a command
Syntax
time command
/bin/time command
Description
The command lets the specified command execute and then outputs the amount of elapsed real time, the time spent in the operating system,
and the time spent in execution of the command. Times are reported in seconds and are written to standard error.
If you are using any shell except the C shell, you can give the command as shown on the first line of the Syntax section. If you are using
the C shell, you must use the command's full pathname as shown on the second line of the Syntax section. If you do not use the full path-
name, will execute its own built-in command that supplies additional information and uses a different output format.
The command can be used to cause a command to be timed no matter how much CPU time it takes. For example:
% /bin/time cp /etc/rc /usr/bill/rc
0.1 real 0.0 user 0.0 sys
% /bin/time nroff sample1 > sample1.nroff
3.6 real 2.4 user 1.2 sys
This example indicates that the command used negligible amounts of user and system time and had an elapsed time of 1/10 second (0.1). The
command used 2.4 seconds of user time and 1.2 seconds of system time, and required 3.6 seconds of elapsed time.
Restrictions
Times are measured to an accuracy of 1/10 second. Thus, the sum of the user and system times can be larger than the elapsed time.
See Alsocsh(1)time(1)