guys,
my requirment goes like this:
I have a file, and wish to filter out records where
1. The first letter is o or O
and
2. The next 4 following letter should not be ther
I do not wish to use pipe and wish to do it in one shot.
The best expression I came up with is:
grep ^*... (10 Replies)
When i do ls -ld RT_BP* i am getting the following list.
drwxrwx--- 2 user group 256 Oct 17 10:09 RT_BP809
drwxrwx--- 2user group 256 Oct 17 10:09 RT_BP809.O
drwxrwx--- 2 user group 256 Oct 17 10:09 RT_BP810
drwxrwx--- 2user group 256 Oct... (2 Replies)
Hi, guys. I have one question, hope somebody can give me a hand
I have a file called passwd, the contents of it arebelow:
***********************
...
goldsimj:x:5008:200:
goldsij2:x:5009:200:
whitej:x:5010:201:
brownj:x:5011:202:
goldsij3:x:5012:204:
greyp:x:5013:203:
...... (6 Replies)
please can someone tell me what the following regrex means
grep "^aa*$" <file>
I thought this would match any word beginning with aa and ending with $, but it doesnt.
Thanks in advance
Calypso (7 Replies)
I have the following code:
ls -al /bin | tr -s ' ' | grep 'x'
ls -al: Lists all the files in a given director such as /bin
tr -s ' ': removes additional spaces between characters so that there is only one space
grep 'x': match all "x" characters that are followed by a whitespace.
I was... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
How am I read a file, find the match regular expression and overwrite to the same files.
open DESTINATION_FILE, "<tmptravl.dat" or die "tmptravl.dat";
open NEW_DESTINATION_FILE, ">new_tmptravl.dat" or die "new_tmptravl.dat";
while (<DESTINATION_FILE>)
{
# print... (1 Reply)
i have a command line like this in csh script
grep -i "$argv$"
which i wanted to select the line ending with string provided as argument but it couldn't interpret the '$' (ending with)..
any help? (3 Replies)
Hi ,
I have few lines like
A20120101.ANU.ZIP
A20120401.ABC.ZIP
A20120105.KJK.ZIP
A20120809.JUG.ZIP
A20120101.MAT.ZIP
B20120301.ANU.XIP
I want to filter by
1. Files starting with A and Ending With Z ( ^A.*.ZIP$)
2. And either ANU, or KJK or MAT in the file name.
Hope my... (6 Replies)
I want to track only below:
I am using below, but it doesn't work: (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: proactiveaditya
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT V7
extract
EXTRACT(1) General Commands Manual EXTRACT(1)NAME
extract - determine meta-information about a file
SYNOPSIS
extract [ -bghLnvV ] [ -H hash-algorithm ] [ -i ] [ -l library ] [ -p type ] [ -x type ] file ...
DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents version 0.6.0 of the extract command.
extract tests each file specified in the argument list in an attempt to infer meta-information from it. Each file is subjected to the
meta-data extraction libraries from libextractor.
libextractor classifies meta-information (also referred to as keywords) into types. A list of all types can be obtained with the -L option.
OPTIONS -b Display the output in BiBTeX format.
-g Use grep-friendly output (all keywords on a single line for each file). Use the verbose option to print the filename first, fol-
lowed by the keywords. Use the verbose option twice to also display the keyword types. This option will not print keyword types
or non-textual metadata.
-h Print a brief summary of the options.
-i Run plugins in-process (for debugging). By default, each plugin is run in its own process.
-l libraries
Use the specified libraries to extract keywords. The general format of libraries is .I [[-]LIBRARYNAME[:[-]LIBRARYNAME]*] where
LIBRARYNAME is a libextractor compatible library and typically of the form .Ijpeg. The minus before the libraryname indicates that
this library should be removed from the existing list. To run only a few selected plugins, use -l in combination with -n.
-L Print a list of all known keyword types.
-n Do not use the default set of extractors (typically all standard extractors, currently mp3, ogg, jpg, gif, png, tiff, real, html,
pdf and mime-types), use only the extractors specified with the .B -l option.
-p type
Print only the keywords matching the specified type. By default, all keywords that are found and not removed as duplicates are
printed.
-v Print the version number and exit.
-V Be verbose. This option can be specified multiple times to increase verbosity further.
-x type
Exclude keywords of the specified type from the output. By default, all keywords that are found and not removed as duplicates are
printed.
SEE ALSO libextractor(3) - description of the libextractor library
EXAMPLES
$ extract test/test.jpg
comment - (C) 2001 by Christian Grothoff, using gimp 1.2 1
mimetype - image/jpeg
$ extract -V -x comment test/test.jpg
Keywords for file test/test.jpg:
mimetype - image/jpeg
$ extract -p comment test/test.jpg
comment - (C) 2001 by Christian Grothoff, using gimp 1.2 1
$ extract -nV -l png.so -p comment test/test.jpg test/test.png
Keywords for file test/test.jpg:
Keywords for file test/test.png:
comment - Testing keyword extraction
LEGAL NOTICE
libextractor and the extract tool are released under the GPL. libextractor is a GNU package.
BUGS
A couple of file-formats (on the order of 10^3) are not recognized...
AUTHORS
extract was originally written by Christian Grothoff <christian@grothoff.org> and Vidyut Samanta <vids@cs.ucla.edu>. Use <libextrac-
tor@gnu.org> to contact the current maintainer(s).
AVAILABILITY
You can obtain the original author's latest version from http://www.gnu.org/software/libextractor/
libextractor 0.6.0 Dec 20, 2009 EXTRACT(1)