Thanks. But I still do not know how to resolve the problem.
The program is launched by following command,
prog file1 - file2 -
When I enter the command, it will process file1, and then read from stdin(-) until I enter Ctrl D. and then process file2, and then read from stdin(-) until Ctrl D.
I can embed the data from stdin into shell script. How do I do this in the script without any interactive input? Because there are two EOF, perhaps I also can not use here doc. Struglling for 2 days... Thanks.
Quote:
Originally Posted by cfajohnson
You cannot redirect from a command with <; the argument must be a file.
If your shell has process substitution, you can do:
Hi,
I am new to shell scripting and have a question. I would like to redirect the output of a command to multiple files, each file holding the exact same copy. From what I read from the bash manpage and from some searching it seems it cannot be done within the shell except setting up a loop. Is... (3 Replies)
I have a program that is reading strings into a vector from a file. Currently I am using this command:
a.out < file1
The program runs and prints the contents of the vector to the screen, like its supposed to. The problem is that it needs to read in 3 files to fill the vector. Is there anyway... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I needs to split *.txt files from single directory depends on the some mutltiple input values. i have wrote the code like below
for file in *.txt
do
grep -i -h "value1|value2" $file > $file;
done.
My requirment is more input values needs to be given in grep; let us say 50... (3 Replies)
How to redirect the output to multiple files without putting on console
I tried tee but it writes to STDOUT , which I do not want.
Test.sh
------------------
#!/bin/ksh
echo "Hello " tee -a file1 file2
----------------------------
$>./Test.sh
$>
Expected output:
-------------------... (2 Replies)
Hi everyone!!
I have a database table, which has file_name as one of its fields.
Example:
File_ID File_Name Directory Size
0001 UNO_1232 /apps/opt 234
0002 UNO_1234 /apps/opt 788
0003 UNO_1235 /apps/opt 897
0004 UNO_1236 /apps/opt 568
I have to... (3 Replies)
Hi,
i know how to
a) redirect stdout and stderr to one file,
b) and write to two files concurrently with same output using tee command
Now, i want to do both the above together.
I have a script and it should write both stdout and stderr in one file and also write the same content to... (8 Replies)
Hi,
I am new to script and I want find one string from multiple files in diff directories and put that out put to new file.
Like I have A,B & C directories and each has multiple files but one file is unic in all the directories like COMM.txt
Now I want write script to find the string... (8 Replies)
I came across the command string on https://www.unix.com/shell-programming-scripting/141885-awk-removing-data-before-after-pattern.html which was what I was looking for to be able to remove data before a certain pattern. However, outputting the result to a file seems to work on an individual basis... (4 Replies)
Hi!
I'm new in awk and I need some help.
I have a folder with a lot of files and I need that awk do something in each file and print a new file with the output. The input file name should be modified when I print the outpu files.
Thanks in advance for help!
:-)
ciao (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have many test*.ft1 files to which I want to read as input for a script called
pipe2txt.tcl and print the output in each separate file.
For example,
pipe2txt.tcl < test001.ft1 > test001.txt
How can I read many files in this maner?
thank you very much,
Best,
Pahuja (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Pahuja
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
plan9-read
CAT(1) General Commands Manual CAT(1)NAME
cat, read, nobs - catenate files
SYNOPSIS
cat [ file ... ]
read [ -m ] [ -n nline ] [ file ... ]
nobs [ file ... ]
DESCRIPTION
Cat reads each file in sequence and writes it on the standard output. Thus
cat file
prints a file and
cat file1 file2 >file3
concatenates the first two files and places the result on the third.
If no file is given, cat reads from the standard input. Output is buffered in blocks matching the input.
Read copies to standard output exactly one line from the named file, default standard input. It is useful in interactive rc(1) scripts.
The -m flag causes it to continue reading and writing multiple lines until end of file; -n causes it to read no more than nline lines.
Read always executes a single write for each line of input, which can be helpful when preparing input to programs that expect line-at-a-
time data. It never reads any more data from the input than it prints to the output.
Nobs copies the named files to standard output except that it removes all backspace characters and the characters that precede them. It is
useful to use as $PAGER with the Unix version of man(1) when run inside a win (see acme(1)) window.
SOURCE
/src/cmd/cat.c
/src/cmd/read.c
/bin/nobs
SEE ALSO cp(1)DIAGNOSTICS
Read exits with status eof on end of file or, in the -n case, if it doesn't read nlines lines.
BUGS
Beware of and which destroy input files before reading them.
CAT(1)