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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting awk to extract incorrect fixed length records Post 302345778 by methyl on Thursday 20th of August 2009 08:02:38 AM
Old 08-20-2009
awk to extract incorrect fixed length records

I have a number of unix text files containing fixed-length records (normal unix linefeed terminator) where I need to find odd records which are an incorrect length.
The data is not validated and records can contain odd backslash characters and control characters which makes them awkward to process in shell. Files are unlikely to exceed 1000 records, so efficiency is not important. Each file has a different fixed length record size.

I am looking for an awk program which can read the length of the first record of a file, then output only those records which are of a different length to the first record. The program does not need to cater for the first record being wrong.

This post works beautifully, but you need to know the length of the record in advance.

https://www.unix.com/shell-programmin...th-record.html
 

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RECNO(3)						     Linux Programmer's Manual							  RECNO(3)

NAME
recno - record number database access method SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/types.h> #include <db.h> DESCRIPTION
The routine dbopen(3) is the library interface to database files. One of the supported file formats is record number files. The general description of the database access methods is in dbopen(3), this manual page describes only the recno specific information. The record number data structure is either variable or fixed-length records stored in a flat-file format, accessed by the logical record number. The existence of record number five implies the existence of records one through four, and the deletion of record number one causes record number five to be renumbered to record number four, as well as the cursor, if positioned after record number one, to shift down one record. The recno access method specific data structure provided to dbopen(3) is defined in the <db.h> include file as follows: typedef struct { unsigned long flags; unsigned int cachesize; unsigned int psize; int lorder; size_t reclen; unsigned char bval; char *bfname; } RECNOINFO; The elements of this structure are defined as follows: flags The flag value is specified by or'ing any of the following values: R_FIXEDLEN The records are fixed-length, not byte delimited. The structure element reclen specifies the length of the record, and the structure element bval is used as the pad character. Any records, inserted into the database, that are less than reclen bytes long are automatically padded. R_NOKEY In the interface specified by dbopen(3), the sequential record retrieval fills in both the caller's key and data structures. If the R_NOKEY flag is specified, the cursor routines are not required to fill in the key structure. This permits applica- tions to retrieve records at the end of files without reading all of the intervening records. R_SNAPSHOT This flag requires that a snapshot of the file be taken when dbopen(3) is called, instead of permitting any unmodified records to be read from the original file. cachesize A suggested maximum size, in bytes, of the memory cache. This value is only advisory, and the access method will allocate more mem- ory rather than fail. If cachesize is 0 (no size is specified) a default cache is used. psize The recno access method stores the in-memory copies of its records in a btree. This value is the size (in bytes) of the pages used for nodes in that tree. If psize is 0 (no page size is specified) a page size is chosen based on the underlying file system I/O block size. See btree(3) for more information. lorder The byte order for integers in the stored database metadata. The number should represent the order as an integer; for example, big endian order would be the number 4,321. If lorder is 0 (no order is specified) the current host order is used. reclen The length of a fixed-length record. bval The delimiting byte to be used to mark the end of a record for variable-length records, and the pad character for fixed-length records. If no value is specified, newlines (" ") are used to mark the end of variable-length records and fixed-length records are padded with spaces. bfname The recno access method stores the in-memory copies of its records in a btree. If bfname is non-NULL, it specifies the name of the btree file, as if specified as the filename for a dbopen(3) of a btree file. The data part of the key/data pair used by the recno access method is the same as other access methods. The key is different. The data field of the key should be a pointer to a memory location of type recno_t, as defined in th <db.h> include file. This type is normally the largest unsigned integral type available to the implementation. The size field of the key should be the size of that type. Because there can be no metadata associated with the underlying recno access method files, any changes made to the default values (e.g., fixed record length or byte separator value) must be explicitly specified each time the file is opened. In the interface specified by dbopen(3), using the put interface to create a new record will cause the creation of multiple, empty records if the record number is more than one greater than the largest record currently in the database. ERRORS
The recno access method routines may fail and set errno for any of the errors specified for the library routine dbopen(3) or the following: EINVAL An attempt was made to add a record to a fixed-length database that was too large to fit. BUGS
Only big and little endian byte order is supported. SEE ALSO
btree(3), dbopen(3), hash(3), mpool(3) Document Processing in a Relational Database System, Michael Stonebraker, Heidi Stettner, Joseph Kalash, Antonin Guttman, Nadene Lynn, Mem- orandum No. UCB/ERL M82/32, May 1982. COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.27 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. 4.4 Berkeley Distribution 1994-08-18 RECNO(3)
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