Hi,
Suppose I have a file as below and I just want the field Invoice Number from this file , How can I do it.
/home/arbor>cat PH0034090202314800030IM-001
0Yp825XMilperra NSW 1891 189110H14V1Sp2871Yp300X Customer Service : 0000-368-81118H6.5V0Sp3130Yp50X ... (7 Replies)
I just had a filesystem / file corruption issue on my HSP's server due to disk capacity limits and fileswapping. I discovered that certain files got corrupted when fileswapping was not successful and they ended up with a string of control characters, or what I believe to be nulls, in them.
Does... (4 Replies)
One of my outout is like this as shown below. How can I grep only the lines after the line "Affected files ...". No of lines after the line "Affected files ..." may vary.
$ cat file_A
Change 149133 by csaha@test_depo_csaha on 2006/02/08 01:40:57 *pending*
This is to test change #... (5 Replies)
i have a ksh script :
#!/bin/ksh
TZ=`date +%Z`+24 ;a=`date +%Y-%m-%d`
b=`date +"%H:%M:%S"`
cd /ednadtu3/u01/pipe/logs
for i in Archiver1.log
do
cat $i | grep $a | grep $b >> /ednadtu3/u01/pipe/naveed/Insert_Date.txt
done... (4 Replies)
I have this line
BTSRTRGRP-448-1-1 10.162.141.118/255.255.255.254 -
I need to print only the IPADDRESS and not the subnet mask. If i use cut -c30-43 I get the ipaddress, where as in some cases if the last octet is of single digit (10.162.141.8/255.255.255.254) it... (2 Replies)
I know you could use the grep "something" -A200 flag to get all the lines past your pattern. Is there a way to get all the lines in between two patterns? The -a flag will not work since all lines in between the two patterns don't have a constant number. (4 Replies)
Hi,
i have to find a string in a file and positin of the string in the file would come in some particular interval.
let's say file is 1-1000 lines and string is in from 200-300line.
could any one suggest me how to get make the grep search for the string in that particular portion of the... (4 Replies)
Hi
When I run this command:
lsuser -a auditclasses ALL
I got:
user1 auditclasses=general,objects,cron,files,rbac,audit,lvm,aixpert
user2 auditclasses=general,objects,cron,files,rbac,audit,lvm,aixpert
user3 auditclasses=general,objects,cron,files,rbac,audit,lvm,aixpert
user4... (7 Replies)
Ommit the numbers or any characters only at 7th or 8th columns after the dot (.) . Since the group column has 1 and 2 spaces.
Thanks
-rw-r--r--. 1 user1 domain users 619 2017-04-13 16:16:50.284598383 +0000 aa
drwxr-xr-x. 2 root root 6 2017-05-08... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: invinzin21
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
lpr-cups
lpr(1) Easy Software Products lpr(1)NAME
lpr - print files
SYNOPSIS
lpr [ -E ] [ -P destination ] [ -# num-copies [ -l ] [ -o option ] [ -p] [ -r ] [ -C/J/T title ] [ file(s) ]
DESCRIPTION
lpr submits files for printing. Files named on the command line are sent to the named printer (or the system default destination if no des-
tination is specified). If no files are listed on the command-line lpr reads the print file from the standard input.
OPTIONS
The following options are recognized by lpr:
-E
Forces encryption when connecting to the server.
-P destination
Prints files to the named printer.
-# copies
Sets the number of copies to print from 1 to 100.
-C name
Sets the job name.
-J name
Sets the job name.
-T name
Sets the job name.
-l
Specifies that the print file is already formatted for the destination and should be sent without filtering. This option is equivalent
to "-oraw".
-o option
Sets a job option.
-p
Specifies that the print file should be formatted with a shaded header with the date, time, job name, and page number. This option is
equivalent to "-oprettyprint" and is only useful when printing text files.
-r
Specifies that the named print files should be deleted after printing them.
COMPATIBILITY
The "c", "d", "f", "g", "i", "m", "n", "t", "v", and "w" options are not supported by CUPS and will produce a warning message if used.
SEE ALSO cancel(1), lp(1), lpstat(1), CUPS Software Users Manual, http://localhost:631/documentation.html
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 1993-2002 by Easy Software Products, All Rights Reserved.
23 January 2001 Common UNIX Printing System lpr(1)