Hi all,
I am looking for a coomand to search for the keywords in susequenct lines. Keyword1 in a line and Keyword2 in the very next line.
Once i found the combination ineed to print the lines with patterns and the line above and one below.
I am giving an example here: Keywords are :ERROR and Found Path
Input data :
Output expected:
Last edited by zaxxon; 08-10-2009 at 07:33 AM..
Reason: CODE tag optimization ;)
I have a file like this..
Maharastra Mumbai worli
Maharastra Mumbai navy
maharatra Pune
Maharastra Nagpur
Karnataka Bangalore
Karnataka Mysore
Karnataka Mangalore
Punjab Amritsar
punjab Jalandar
my expected outcome should be like this
Maharastra Mumbai worli
---------- ... (9 Replies)
Hi all,I am really new to Shell Scripting.I have the following doubt.
Let us assume the one sample file which contains the below data
HEADERCARMENTRACIE1555090414
PERIOD0905090501090531
DETAIL0645693037023073836
GROUNDAV 090501 01
GROUNDAV 090502 01
TRIP 0091282542 0905084101... (5 Replies)
I have my data something like this
I need to search for the keyword yyyy in the susequent lines and if it is present, delete the second line with keyword.
In other words, if a keywords is found in two subsequent lines delete the second line.
input data:
aaaa bbbbb cccc dddd
xxxx... (4 Replies)
Hi, I need to grep a pattern and fetch subsequent lines till end of the data-set.
E.g., i have a file like:
AA 1111 23 34
BB 45 56 78
CC 22 44
AA 2222 78 34 56
BB 22 56 67 68 23
CC 56 78
DD 33 55 77
AA 3333 46
BB 58 79
In above file i have 3-data sets where each set starts with... (6 Replies)
I've run into a problem getting exactly what I want out of awk - some folks may recognize this as an output from Amazon's ec2-describe-instances:
Given the following:
INSTANCE i-4960f321
BLOCKDEVICE Line2Var2
TAG instance i-4960f321 Name web1
TAG instance i-4960f321... (2 Replies)
Hi ,
I have been trying to write a perl script to do this job. But i am not able to achieve the desired result. Below is my code.
my $current_value=12345;
my @users=("bob","ben","tom","harry");
open DBLIST,"<","/var/tmp/DBinfo";
my @input = <DBLIST>;
foreach (@users)
{
my... (11 Replies)
Hi,
I have a requirement like, I have a list of pattens in a file say pattern.txt,
PHC111
PHC113
and in another file called master.lst i have entries like,
PHC111
a
b
PHC112
a
PHC113
b
c
PHC114
d
e (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: rbalaj16
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
path::class::file::stat
Path::Class::File::Stat(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Path::Class::File::Stat(3pm)NAME
Path::Class::File::Stat - cache and compare stat() calls on a Path::Class::File object
SYNOPSIS
use Path::Class::File::Stat;
my $file = Path::Class::File::Stat->new('path','to','file');
# $file has all the magic of Path::Class::File
# sometime later
if ($file->changed)
{
# do something provocative
}
DESCRIPTION
Path::Class::File::Stat is a simple extension of Path::Class::File. Path::Class::File::Stat is useful in long-running programs (as under
mod_perl) where you might have a file handle opened and want to check if the underlying file has changed.
METHODS
Path::Class::File::Stat extends Path::Class::File objects in the following ways.
use_md5
Calling this method will attempt to load Digest::MD5 and use that instead of stat() for creating file signatures. This is similar to how
File::Modified works.
changed
Returns the previously cached File::stat object if the file's device number and inode number have changed, or if the modification time or
size has changed.
Returns 0 (false) otherwise.
While File::Modified uses a MD5 signature of the stat() of a file to determine if the file has changed, changed() uses a simpler (and
probably more naive) algorithm. If you need a more sophisticated way of determining if a file has changed, use the restat() method and
compare the cached File::stat object it returns with the current File::stat object.
Example of your own changed() logic:
my $oldstat = $file->restat;
my $newstat = $file->stat;
# compare $oldstat and $newstat any way you like
Or just use File::Modified instead.
restat
Re-cache the File::stat object in the Path::Class::File::Stat object. Returns the previously cached File::stat object.
The changed() method calls this method internally if changed() is going to return true.
SEE ALSO
Path::Class, Path::Class::File, File::Signature, File::Modified
AUTHOR
Peter Karman, <karman@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2006 by Peter Karman
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.14.2 2012-01-28 Path::Class::File::Stat(3pm)