Im calculating file sizes with below AWK script. I do this before some spesific files are transferred. I run the script it works but after several running it stuck with a limit of 2147483647 (2 Gbytes -1 byte) and cant exceed this. Something is wrong and I can't proceed, would appreciate any help.
i find .gz, .tar or .rar files which are older than 1 day under a main directory and execute "ls -l" and calculate sizes but i also print 6th and 7th columns too into same file just for info.Then using 3rd colums i calculate the all sizes as a total sum.
The output of script is like below (sum of bytes above file) :
---------- Post updated at 05:12 PM ---------- Previous update was at 03:41 PM ----------
I'm afraid my system does not support 64 bits of aritmethic operations
Please advise, is my system unsufficient for such aritmethic operations and should i upgrade the solaris version to 64-Bit exec SPARC?
I have been using x=ls -la "$f" | awk '{print $5}'
This allows me to the size of all the files in $f and echo $x later .
The only problem is instead of protecting the file size format of ls -la which is right to left, it rearranges it and reads it left to right.
Cyborg was kind... (1 Reply)
Hallo all,
I have a script which creates an output ... see below:
root@a7germ:/tmp/pax > cat 20061117.txt
523.047
521.273
521.034
517.367
516.553
517.793
513.114
513.940
I would like to use awk to calculate the (a)total sum of the numbers (b) The average of the numbers.
Please... (4 Replies)
Hello!
I need to write partitioning script wich would work in rescue mode. It will prepare partitions and unpack linux on it. However I need to calculate whole size of the disk and create:
/dev/sda1 --> One big partition (minus (2*size of memory) for swap)
/dev/sda2 --> Swap partition... (1 Reply)
I have a list of coordinate data, sampled below.
54555209 784672723
I want it as:
545552.09 7846727.23
Below is my script:
BEGIN {FS= " "; OFS= ","} {print $1*.01,$2*.01}
This is my outcome:
5.5e7 7.8e8
How do I tell awk that I want to keep all the digits instead of outputting... (1 Reply)
My code is
awk '{
out=split(FILENAME,a,"/")
sub(/\./,"_",a)
sub(/\-/,"_",a)
NEWSTRING="main_"a"_"a"(" # The word we want to insert
gsub(/main\(/,NEWSTRING); # the word to be replaced
print "Main becomes ",NEWSTRING")","in file ",FILENAME >> "/home/ds2/test/NEW2.txt" ... (4 Replies)
hi there again,
i need to do a simple division with my data with a number of rows. i think i wanted to have a simple output like this one:
col1 col2 col3
val1 val2 val1/val2
valn valm valn/valm
any suggestion is very much appreciated. thanks much. (2 Replies)
I am trying to run the awk below. My question is when I split the input, then run anotherawk to perform a calculation using that splitas the input there are no issues. When I try to combine them the output is not correct, is the split not working or did I do it wrong? Thank you :).
input
... (8 Replies)
In the below awk, I am trying to calculate percent for a given id. It is very close the problem is when the # being used in the calculation is zero. I am not sure how to code this condition into the awk as it happens frequently. The portion in italics was an attempt but that lead to an error. Thank... (13 Replies)
i have a file say test with the below mentioned details
Folder Name Total space Space used
/test/test1 500.1GB 112.0 GB
/test/test2 3.2 TB 5TB
/test/test3 3TB 100GB
i need to calculate percentage of each row based on total space and space used and copy... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: venkitesh
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT X11R4
gzexe
GZEXE(1) General Commands Manual GZEXE(1)NAME
gzexe - compress executable files in place
SYNOPSIS
gzexe name ...
DESCRIPTION
The gzexe utility allows you to compress executables in place and have them automatically uncompress and execute when you run them (at a
penalty in performance). For example if you execute ``gzexe /usr/bin/gdb'' it will create the following two files:
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 1026675 Jun 7 13:53 /usr/bin/gdb
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 2304524 May 30 13:02 /usr/bin/gdb~
/usr/bin/gdb~ is the original file and /usr/bin/gdb is the self-uncompressing executable file. You can remove /usr/bin/gdb~ once you are
sure that /usr/bin/gdb works properly.
This utility is most useful on systems with very small disks.
OPTIONS -d Decompress the given executables instead of compressing them.
SEE ALSO gzip(1), znew(1), zmore(1), zcmp(1), zforce(1)CAVEATS
The compressed executable is a shell script. This may create some security holes. In particular, the compressed executable relies on the
PATH environment variable to find gzip and some standard utilities (basename, chmod, ln, mkdir, mktemp, rm, sleep, and tail).
BUGS
gzexe attempts to retain the original file attributes on the compressed executable, but you may have to fix them manually in some cases,
using chmod or chown.
GZEXE(1)