Hello,
I'm trying to move the last word of matching pattern to the begining of next line. Appreciate if anyone post the script.
From the below line I'm getting the last word, Note: this word also appears in many places in my file
#return the last word of line that contains ListenPort
sed... (4 Replies)
i have some 1000 files in my dir and i want to find top 100 files and move them to some other location:
below the 2 commands i used, but it is not working
ls -ltr | grep ^- | head -100 | xargs mv destination - _________>not working
ls -ltr | grep ^- | head -100 | xargs mv {}... (3 Replies)
say I want to insert "this is a test" as the first line into file A, besides
echo "this is a test" > /tmp/tmpfile
cat /tmp/tmpfile fileA >> /tmp/result,
is there any simple way I can do it? thanks (7 Replies)
Hi there
if I use `head -1` it gives me the top line .... is there a utility out there that will give me everything other than the top line ?
I know how to achieve this by taking the file out to another file etc, but id like to be able to do it without creating additional files
is this... (5 Replies)
hi,
My code is
#!/bin/sh
echo "\n\nPlease enter the month of the year(YYYYMM) : \c"
read date_rep
INPUT_L9_FILE=L9_Recharge_Description_EOM_$date_rep.csv
#This part is used to summarise Grand_Total, Balance_Total of file L9_Recharge_Description_EOM_${1}.csv.
awk -F"," '{if(NR!=1)... (5 Replies)
I have the following text format in a file which lists the question first and then 5 choices
after that the explanantion and finally the answer.
1.The amount of time it takes for most of a worker’s occupational knowledge and skills to become
obsolete has been declining because of the... (2 Replies)
So say I have the file:
john
london
24
male
========
jane
london
22
female
========
mike
23
========
Bob
how do i get the information i need on one line as such: (5 Replies)
Hello,
I'm new to this forum. I've been doing a lot of sed work lately and have found many useful tips on this forum. I've hit a roadblock in a project, though, and could really use some help.
I have a text file with many lines like the following, i.e., some lines begin with a single word... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have a following file and it has only one occurrence of line that says "Output view:". It could be in middle somewhere ( i don't know the exact location ). I want to move it as the first line of the file.
Input
AAA
BBBB
CCCC
Output view:
XXXX
YYYY
ZZZZ
Output should be:
Output... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: jakSun8
13 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
shtool-install
SHTOOL-INSTALL.TMP(1) GNU Portable Shell Tool SHTOOL-INSTALL.TMP(1)NAME
shtool-install - GNU shtool install(1) command
SYNOPSIS
shtool install [-v|--verbose] [-t|--trace] [-d|--mkdir] [-c|--copy] [-C|--compare-copy] [-s|--strip] [-m|--mode mode] [-o|--owner owner]
[-g|--group group] [-e|--exec sed-cmd] file [file ...] path
DESCRIPTION
This command installs a one or more files to a given target path providing all important options of the BSD install(1) command. The trick
is that the functionality is provided in a portable way.
OPTIONS
The following command line options are available.
-v, --verbose
Display some processing information.
-t, --trace
Enable the output of the essential shell commands which are executed.
-d, --mkdir
To maximize BSD compatiblity, the BSD "shtool "install -d"" usage is internally mapped to the "shtool "mkdir -f -p -m 755"" command.
-c, --copy
Copy the file to the target path. Default is to move.
-C, --compare-copy
Same as -c except if the destination file already exists and is identical to the source file, no installation is done and the target
remains untouched.
-s, --strip
This option strips program executables during the installation, see strip(1). Default is to install verbatim.
-m, --mode mode
The file mode applied to the target, see chmod(1). Setting mode to ""-"" skips this step and leaves the operating system default which
is usually based on umask(1). Some file modes require superuser privileges to be set. Default is 0755.
-o, --owner owner
The file owner name or id applied to the target, see chown(1). This option requires superuser privileges to execute. Default is to skip
this step and leave the operating system default which is usually based on the executing uid or the parent setuid directory.
-g, --group group
The file group name or id applied to the target, see chgrp(1). This option requires superuser privileges to execute to the fullest
extend, otherwise the choice of group is limited on most operating systems. Default is to skip this step and leave the operating
system default which is usually based on the executing gid or the parent setgid directory.
-e, --exec sed-cmd
This option can be used one or multiple times to apply one or more sed(1) commands to the file contents during installation.
EXAMPLE
# Makefile
install:
:
shtool install -c -s -m 4755 foo $(bindir)/
shtool install -c -m 644 foo.man $(mandir)/man1/foo.1
shtool install -c -m 644 -e "s/@p@/$prefix/g" foo.conf $(etcdir)/
HISTORY
The GNU shtool install command was originally written by Ralf S. Engelschall <rse@engelschall.com> in 1997 for GNU shtool. It was prompted
by portability issues in the installation procedures of OSSP libraries.
SEE ALSO shtool(1), umask(1), chmod(1), chown(1), chgrp(1), strip(1), sed(1).
18-Jul-2008 shtool 2.0.8 SHTOOL-INSTALL.TMP(1)