awk '
/STARTOFREPORT/ { getline PATH; getline FILE; p = 1; next }
/ENDOFREPORT/ { p = 0 }
p { print > PATH "/" FILE }
' input_file
> cat /tmp/file1.txt
some
text
to
be
folowd
> cat /log/file2.txt
more
text
to
be
folowd
Hi,
I am reading two values from oracle to unix variable and spliting them using the read command as follows,
get_details=`sqlplus -s $sld_user/$sld_password@$sld_string<<EOF
whenever sqlerror exit 1
whenever oserror exit 1
set feedback off
set heading off
set pagesize... (0 Replies)
I have a file {filename} which contains 65000 records
I need to split into 6 smaller files roughly 11000 records each.
Can someone advise me of the Unix command to do so ?
Many thanks (2 Replies)
Hi Script Masters I have a strange requirement. Please help.
I am using C shell.
I have a file like the below in sorted order
22
23
25
34
37
45
67
342
456
476
543
677
789
Now I have to split the file in such a way that first 5 of 2 digit number should be saved as aaa.in and the... (8 Replies)
I have log file whose size is 4 GB , i would like to split it to 1 gb each ,Can any one tell me the syntax of csplit comand for that.
I am using Sun0S 5.8 (3 Replies)
Hi
I have a file which looks like this
#HEllo
#How....
#version 1.0.1
#Author aaaaa
ab.-.1.-.90.-.80.-..-.OK
cd.-.8.-.91.-.800.-.xy.-..-.
the separator is .-. (dot hyphen dot)
I want to display this as columns like
ab cd
1 8
90 91 (1 Reply)
Dear All,
I have a very large file which which i would like split into indvidual frames evrytime the line ends with "ENDMDL" and then name frame1.pdb frame2.pdb etc
can any one give me a few sugeestions? ideally i would like to have ENDMDL at the end of each frame or not pressent at all.
an... (4 Replies)
hi,
Am able to split an XML file by using follwing awk command,
awk 'NR==1{x=$0;next}/<\/Order>/{print y RS $0 RS "</Order>">f}/Order BillToKey/{f="file"++n".xml";y=x}{y=y RS $0}' filename.xml
but i need to insert a following tag in the begining of every file how to do so. The tag is as... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: mitnix
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
log
log(8) System Manager's Manual log(8)NAME
log - Records input and output from a program
SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/log <logfile> <command>
OPERANDS
The file in which to record the interaction being logged. The command to execute.
DESCRIPTION
The log program runs <command> and logs the input to and output from <command> to the <logfile> file. Input and output are logged until
<command> exits, the log program exits, and the exit status of <command> is returned.
The log program is used by the system installation procedure and the it(8) command to create the /var/adm/smlogs/install.log and
/var/adm/smlogs/it.log installation log files.
RESTRICTIONS
Because the log program is used in the installation standalone environment, program size was the greatest concern in its implementation.
The log program does not search for the PATH variable to locate <command> and error messages are terse.
The log program causes <command> to take standard input from and write standard output and standard error to UNIX pipes. Some commands
will not be able to operate in this environment; therefore, it is suggested that you use the script(1) command instead. UNIX shells will
not issue prompts when run from log unless the shell is started with an explicit interactive switch (-i for most shells). For example, log
foo.tmp /sbin/sh -i
In the previous example, foo.tmp is the name of <logfile>.
The log program intercepts end-of-file (usually Ctrl/d). Therefore programs which normally receive end-of-file as an exit command must
exit by some other means.
ERRORS
Log open error
Explanation:
The log program was unable to open <logfile>. Verify that the directory exists and that ownerships and permissions are set correctly.
Exec Error
Explanation:
The log program was unable to execute <command>. Verify that you specified a full pathname for <command> and that <command> is an exe-
cutable file.
Fork Error
Explanation:
The log program was unable to create one of the processes it requires to log data.
SEE ALSO
Commands: it(8), script(1)log(8)