Hi there,
I hope someone can help me with this problem :
I have a directory (/var/www/file/imgprofil) which contains about 10000 JPG files. They have a naming convention thus :
prefix-date-key-suffix.jpg
they all have the prefix p-20050608-
then AAAA is a 4 letter code
the suffix is... (7 Replies)
Hello, my first post!
I'd appreciate help with this script, I'm new to this.
I have a media directory where I want to batch convert image file names from .img to .iso.
I've tried but get:
$ ./img2iso2.sh
./img2iso2.sh: line 13: syntax error: unexpected end of file :(
This is my... (10 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a status.txt file which contains following three files.
1.xml
2.xml
3.xml
Now i have written a shell script 1.sh which contains the following
cat status.txt | while read filename
do
echo $filename
case "$filename" in
xml)
echo "running 1.xml"
;;
... (3 Replies)
I searched the forum, but there was different type of rename.
Hello.
I have files in folder.
Like:
xxxxxxxx1.html
or
xxxxxxxx2.txt
or
xxxxxxxx3.tar.gz
and how to rename or change file extension case to
xxxxxxxx1.htm
or
xxxxxxx2.TXT
or (5 Replies)
Hi all,
i have a data array as followes.
ARRAY=DFSG345GGG
ARRAY=234FDFG090
ARRAY=VDFVGBGHH
so on..........
i need all english letters to be change to lower case. So i am expecting to see
ARRAY=dfsg345ggg
ARRAY=234fdfg090
ARRAY=vdfvgbghh
so on........
If i have to copy this data in... (8 Replies)
Is there a command that can switch a character variable from UPPER case to lower case?
like
foreach AC ( ABC BCD PLL QIO)
set ac `COMMAND($AC)`
...
end
Thanks a lot! (3 Replies)
I have a directory that contains several files, out of which some files are have an extra extension for example
file1.new.new.new
file2.new.new.new
file3.new.new.new
file4.new.new.new
i want to write a shell script that rename all such file with only single extension like
file1.new... (7 Replies)
Hi all,
I am trying to find a way to change first letter in a word from lower case to upper case. It should be done for each first word in text or in paragraph, and also for each word after punctuation like
. ; : ! ?I found the following command
sed -i 's/\s*./\U&\E/g' $@ filenamebut... (7 Replies)
Hi Guys,
i am trying to redirect a file wherein i need to change the extension of the file from .sh to .tmp, but getting an error
a=test.txt
sh test.txt > path/$(basename "$a" .sh).tmp
i need
test.tmp
---------- Post updated at 02:09 AM ---------- Previous update was at... (3 Replies)
In the bash below I am trying to create sub-directories inside a directory from files with specific .bam extensions. There may be more then one $RDIR ing the directory and the .bam file(s) are trimmed (removing the extension and IonCode_0000_) and the result is the folder name that is saved in... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT LINUX
deb
deb(5) Debian deb(5)NAME
deb - Debian binary package format
SYNOPSIS
filename.deb
DESCRIPTION
The .deb format is the Debian binary package file format. It is understood by dpkg 0.93.76 and later, and is generated by default by all
versions of dpkg since 1.2.0 and all i386/ELF versions since 1.1.1elf.
The format described here is used since Debian 0.93; details of the old format are described in deb-old(5).
FORMAT
The file is an ar archive with a magic value of !<arch>. The file names might contain a trailing slash.
The tar archives currently allowed are, the old-style (v7) format, the pre-POSIX ustar format, a subset of the GNU format (only the new
style long pathnames and long linknames, supported since dpkg 1.4.1.17), and the POSIX ustar format (long names supported since dpkg
1.15.0). Unrecognized tar typeflags are considered an error.
The first member is named debian-binary and contains a series of lines, separated by newlines. Currently only one line is present, the for-
mat version number, 2.0 at the time this manual page was written. Programs which read new-format archives should be prepared for the minor
number to be increased and new lines to be present, and should ignore these if this is the case.
If the major number has changed, an incompatible change has been made and the program should stop. If it has not, then the program should
be able to safely continue, unless it encounters an unexpected member in the archive (except at the end), as described below.
The second required member is named control.tar.gz. It is a gzipped tar archive containing the package control information, as a series of
plain files, of which the file control is mandatory and contains the core control information. The control tarball may optionally contain
an entry for `.', the current directory.
The third, last required member is named data.tar. It contains the filesystem as a tar archive, either not compressed (supported since
dpkg 1.10.24), or compressed with gzip (with .gz extension), xz (with .xz extension, supported since dpkg 1.15.6), bzip2 (with .bz2 exten-
sion, supported since dpkg 1.10.24) or lzma (with .lzma extension, supported since dpkg 1.13.25).
These members must occur in this exact order. Current implementations should ignore any additional members after data.tar. Further members
may be defined in the future, and (if possible) will be placed after these three. Any additional members that may need to be inserted
before data.tar and which should be safely ignored by older programs, will have names starting with an underscore, `_'.
Those new members which won't be able to be safely ignored will be inserted before data.tar with names starting with something other than
underscores, or will (more likely) cause the major version number to be increased.
SEE ALSO deb-old(5), dpkg-deb(1), deb-control(5).
Debian Project 2009-02-27 deb(5)