Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Better way to do this?
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Better way to do this? Post 302405543 by Franklin52 on Friday 19th of March 2010 05:44:10 AM
Old 03-19-2010
Try this:
Code:
awk '!/The following message/ && NF {
  sub("WAITING \(Being queued on farm\)","http://dte/dte30/faces/monitorPage/jobId=")
  print $0$1
}' results_Linux.out > tmp
mv tmp results_Linux.out

userID=`whoami`
datetime=`date`
cat results_Linux.out | mail -s "Linux Run Results for - [$userID] executed on - [$datetime]"  $EMAIL

 
datetime(3)						     Library Functions Manual						       datetime(3)

NAME
datetime - convert between TAI labels and seconds SYNTAX
#include <datetime.h> void datetime_tai(&dt,t); datetime_sec datetime_untai(&dt); struct datetime dt; datetime_sec t; DESCRIPTION
International Atomic Time, TAI, is the fundamental unit for time measurements. TAI has one label for every second of real time, without complications such as leap seconds. A struct datetime variable, such as dt, stores a TAI label. dt.year is the year number minus 1900; dt.mon is the month number, from 0 (January) through 11 (December); dt.mday is the day of the month, from 1 through 31; dt.hour is the hour, from 0 through 23; dt.min is the minute, from 0 through 59; dt.sec is the second, from 0 through 59; dt.wday is the day of the week, from 0 (Sunday) through 6 (Saturday); dt.yday is the day of the year, from 0 through 365. The datetime library supports more convenient TAI manipulation with the datetime_sec type. A datetime_sec value, such as t, is an integer referring to the tth second after the beginning of 1970 TAI. The first second of 1970 TAI was 0; the next second was 1; the last second of 1969 TAI was -1. The difference between two datetime_sec values is a number of real-time seconds. datetime_tai converts a datetime_sec to a TAI label. datetime_untai reads a TAI label (specifically dt.year, dt.mon, dt.mday, dt.hour, dt.min, and dt.sec) and returns a datetime_sec. SEE ALSO
now(3) datetime(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:00 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy