I have a file ("modtest") in which I want to update the last date/time block in the lines beginning with a period. Here is a sample:
These lines have anywhere from 2 to 5 fields. The date/time block I want to update will either be the last or next-to-last field in the line.
The dateblock variable is mmddyy, two digits for hour, and EST or EDT.
When I run this command, the lines that have 5 fields and begin with a period are changed as follows, but the 4th field that I meant to update does not appear at all:
I have tried various things with sub and gsub, including a less-specific regular expression, and that didn't work either. I'm very new to awk, so trying to figure this out has been a good learning experience, but I'm hoping to "cut to the chase" now... Any help appreciated. Thanks!
Last edited by zaxxon; 10-23-2009 at 10:44 AM..
Reason: code tags also for data and logs please, ty.
Hi all
I want to do a simple substitution in awk but I am getting unexpected output. My function accepts a time and then prints out a validation message if the time is valid. However some times may include a : and i want to strip this out if it exists before i get to the validation. I have shown... (4 Replies)
Hello,
I read and search through this wonderful forum and tried different approaches but it seems I lack some knowledge and neurones ^^
Here is what I'm trying to achieve :
file1:
test filea 3495;
test fileb 4578;
test filec 7689;
test filey 9978;
test filez 12300;
file2:
test filea... (11 Replies)
Hello
does anyone know of an awk that will extract log file entries between a specific date and time range, eg:
awk '/15\/Dec\/2010:16:10:00/, /15\/Dec\/2010:16:15:00/' access_log
but one that works?
Or a free command line log file analysis tool/script?
I'd like to be able to view... (2 Replies)
Looking for some help and usually when I do a search this site comes up. Hopefully someone can give me a little direction as to how to use one of these two commands to achieve what I'm trying to do.
What am I trying to do?
I need to take the time value in epoch format returned from the... (5 Replies)
hey guys.
the following line is a line taken from apache's access_log
10.10.10.10 - jdoe "GET /images/down.gif HTTP/1.1" 304
I'm concerned about the field that has the date and time in it.
if assuming the delimiter in the file is a space, then the fourth field will always have the date... (5 Replies)
I'd like to convert a date string in the form of sun aug 19 09:03:10 EDT 2012, to unixtime timestamp using awk.
I tried
This is how each line of the file looks like, different date and time in this format
Sun Aug 19 08:33:45 EDT 2012, user1(108.6.217.236) all: test on the 17th
... (2 Replies)
Hi, I want to print the first column with original value and without any double quotes
The output should look like
<original column>|<column without quotes>
$ cat a.txt
"20121023","19301229712","100397"
"20121023","19361629712","100778"
"20121030A","19361630412","100838"... (3 Replies)
hi
i want to validate the date and time in filename
filename : mohan.moh.ccyymmdd.ccyymmdd.hhmmss.txt
mohan_moh.20151222.20151222.122442.txt
i want code that check that date given in filename 20151222 in this format ccyymmdd else it mark file is not valid used in my OS detail is AIX 6... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: MOHANP12
12 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
cut
CUT(1) General Commands Manual CUT(1)NAME
cut - select out columns of a file
SYNOPSIS
cut [ -b | -c] list [file...]
cut -f list [-d delim] [ -s]
OPTIONS -b Cut specified bytes
-c Select out specific characters
-d Change the column delimiter to delim
-f Select out specific fields that are separated by the
-i Runs of delimiters count as one
-s Suppres lines with no delimiter characters, when used
EXAMPLES
cut -f 2 file # Extract field 2
cut -c 1-2,5 file # Extract character columns 1, 2, and 5
cut -c 1-5,7- file # Extract all columns except 6
DESCRIPTION
[file...]" delimiter character ( see delim)" with the -f option. Lines with no delimiters are passwd through untouched"
Cut extracts one or more fields or columns from a file and writes them on standard output. If the -f flag is used, the fields are sepa-
rated by a delimiter character, normally a tab, but can be changed using the -d flag. If the -c flag is used, specific columns can be
specified. The list can be comma or BLANK separated. The -f and -c flags are mutually exclusive. Note: The POSIX1003.2 standard requires
the option -b to cut out specific bytes in a file. It is intended for systems with multi byte characters (e.g. kanji), since MINIX uses
only one byte characters, this option is equivalent to -c. For the same reason, the option -n has no effect and is not listed in this man-
ual page.
SEE ALSO sed(1), awk(9).
CUT(1)