03-25-2010
You use a script/program with a regex parser.
Why are you using awk?
If I had to do this, I would use PHP or Perl.
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gotst(1) Scotch user's manual gotst(1)
NAME
gomtst - compute statistics on sparse matrix orderings
SYNOPSIS
gotst [options] [gfile] [ofile] [lfile]
DESCRIPTION
The gotst program computes, in a sequential way, statistics on a sparse matrix ordering, such as fill-in, operation count, and separator
tree parameters: minimum, maximum, average height and variance of its leaves.
Source graph file gfile can only be a centralized graph file. File ofile represents the ordering of the symmetric sparse matrix the pattern
of which is represented by gfile. The resulting statistics are stored in file lfile. When file names are not specified, data is read from
standard input and written to standard output. Standard streams can also be explicitly represented by a dash '-'.
When the proper libraries have been included at compile time, gtst can directly handle compressed graphs, both as input and output. A
stream is treated as compressed whenever its name is postfixed with a compressed file extension, such as in 'brol.grf.bz2' or '-.gz'. The
compression formats which can be supported are the bzip2 format ('.bz2'), the gzip format ('.gz'), and the lzma format ('.lzma', on input
only).
Since gotst performs sequentially the symbolic factorization of matrix gfile in order to compute fill-in and operation count numbers, this
program can take a long time or even run out of memory, when applied to very large graphs.
OPTIONS
-h Display some help.
-V Display program version and copyright.
EXAMPLE
Display statistics on ordering brol.ord of graph brol.grf:
$ gotst brol.grf brol.ord
SEE ALSO
gord(1), gtst(1), dgord(1).
Scotch user's manual.
AUTHOR
Francois Pellegrini <francois.pellegrini@labri.fr>
February 14, 2011 gotst(1)