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 DEBIAN
bup-restore
bup-restore(1) General Commands Manual bup-restore(1)NAME
bup-restore - extract files from a backup set
SYNOPSIS
bup restore [--outdir=outdir] [-v] [-q]
DESCRIPTION
bup restore extracts files from a backup set (created with bup-save(1)) to the local filesystem.
The specified paths are of the form /branch/revision/path/to/file. The components of the path are as follows:
branch the name of the backup set to restore from; this corresponds to the --name (-n) option to bup save.
revision
the revision of the backup set to restore. The revision latest is always the most recent backup on the given branch. You can dis-
cover other revisions using bup ls /branch.
/path/to/file
the original absolute filesystem path to the file you want to restore. For example, /etc/passwd.
Note: if the /path/to/file is a directory, bup restore will restore that directory as well as recursively restoring all its contents.
If /path/to/file is a directory ending in a slash (ie. /path/to/dir/), bup restore will restore the children of that directory directly to
the current directory (or the --outdir). If the directory does not end in a slash, the children will be restored to a subdirectory of the
current directory. See the EXAMPLES section to see how this works.
OPTIONS -C, --outdir=outdir
create and change to directory outdir before extracting the files.
-v, --verbose
increase log output. Given once, prints every directory as it is restored; given twice, prints every file and directory.
-q, --quiet
don't show the progress meter. Normally, is stderr is a tty, a progress display is printed that shows the total number of files
restored.
EXAMPLE
Create a simple test backup set:
$ bup index -u /etc
$ bup save -n mybackup /etc/passwd /etc/profile
Restore just one file:
$ bup restore /mybackup/latest/etc/passwd
Restoring: 1, done.
$ ls -l passwd
-rw-r--r-- 1 apenwarr apenwarr 1478 2010-09-08 03:06 passwd
Restore the whole directory (no trailing slash):
$ bup restore -C test1 /mybackup/latest/etc
Restoring: 3, done.
$ find test1
test1
test1/etc
test1/etc/passwd
test1/etc/profile
Restore the whole directory (trailing slash):
$ bup restore -C test2 /mybackup/latest/etc/
Restoring: 2, done.
$ find test2
test2
test2/passwd
test2/profile
SEE ALSO bup-save(1), bup-ftp(1), bup-fuse(1), bup-web(1)BUP
Part of the bup(1) suite.
AUTHORS
Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@gmail.com>.
Bup unknown-bup-restore(1)