Hi there,
may someone easily help me on this :
I want to insert a text in a specific line number like :
linenumb2start=`cat memory_map.dld | nl -ba | egrep -i "label" | cut -f1`
line2insert=`expr $linenumb2start + 2`
and now I need to replace something like {} with {comment} at... (8 Replies)
Hello -
I am running Linux. I want to place a comment char at the beginning of a line in a file. For example:
testvar=`grep username /etc/people
sed -e 's/$testvar/#$testvar/g' /etc/people
I cannot get the above commands to put a comment at the beginning of the line.
Any... (3 Replies)
I want to replace this line : "test compare visible] true" and make it "#test compare visible] true".
How can I do it ? And it should be checked in many sub folder files also. (6 Replies)
Hi,
I would like to get rid of all comment in an xml file by grep or sed command:
The content seem like this:
<!-- ab cd
ef gh
ij kl -->
Anyone can help?
Thanks and Regards (3 Replies)
I'm trying to write a script to help automate some VERY tedious manual tasks.
I have groups of fairly large XML files (~3mb+) that I need to edit.
I need to look through the files and parse the XML looking for a certain flag contained in a field. If I find this flag (an integer value) I need... (4 Replies)
I am running a script remotely to do the following
1. Kill all processes by a user
2. Uninstall certain packages
3. FTP over a new file
4. Kill a ldap process that is not allowing my /devdsk/c0t0d0s7 slice to un-mount
5. Unmount /h
6. comment out the slice in vfstab
7. newfs the... (9 Replies)
I have a requirement where I want to add a comment '#' in my crontab, run a process, than remove the '#' I added.
Example cron
#5,10 * * * * ls -lt /tmp
10,5 * * * * ls -lt /var
I would like to be able use sed or awk to add a '#' at the begining of each
line. After the command... (4 Replies)
I need to comment the lines starting with pattern "exclude" or "exclude=". If the work exclude comes at any other part, ignore it. Also, ignore, excludes, excluded etc. Ie only comment the line starting with exclude.
File contents.
exclude
exclude=
hi I am excluded
excludes
excludes=
... (9 Replies)
I am trying to comment out the crontab entries using sed.
I want to comment it out for a particular environment say '/mypath/scripts/'.
Using the full path as pattern, it is working. but using variable it is not working. i have tried double quotes too. but no luck!
$ crontab -l
... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I need to comment out (insert # in the front of a line) a line that has entry Defaults requiretty using command-line as I need to do this on hundreds of servers.
From
Defaults requiretty
To
#Defaults requiretty
I tried something like below but no luck: Please advise,... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: prvnrk
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
rabbitmq-env.conf
RABBITMQ-ENV.CONF(5) RabbitMQ Server RABBITMQ-ENV.CONF(5)NAME
rabbitmq-env.conf - default settings for RabbitMQ AMQP server
DESCRIPTION
/etc/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-env.conf contains variable settings that override the defaults built in to the RabbitMQ startup scripts.
The file is interpreted by the system shell, and so should consist of a sequence of shell environment variable definitions. Normal shell
syntax is permitted (since the file is sourced using the shell "." operator), including line comments starting with "#".
In order of preference, the startup scripts get their values from the environment, from /etc/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-env.conf and finally from
the built-in default values. For example, for the RABBITMQ_NODENAME setting,
RABBITMQ_NODENAME
from the environment is checked first. If it is absent or equal to the empty string, then
NODENAME
from /etc/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-env.conf is checked. If it is also absent or set equal to the empty string then the default value from the
startup script is used.
The variable names in /etc/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-env.conf are always equal to the environment variable names, with the RABBITMQ_ prefix
removed: RABBITMQ_NODE_PORT from the environment becomes NODE_PORT in the /etc/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-env.conf file, etc.
# I am a complete /etc/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-env.conf file.
# Comment lines start with a hash character.
# This is a /bin/sh script file - use ordinary envt var syntax
NODENAME=hare
SEE ALSO rabbitmq-server(1)rabbitmqctl(1)EXAMPLES
# I am a complete /etc/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-env.conf file.
# Comment lines start with a hash character.
# This is a /bin/sh script file - use ordinary envt var syntax
NODENAME=hare
This is an example of a complete /etc/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-env.conf file that overrides the default Erlang node name from "rabbit" to "hare".
AUTHOR
The RabbitMQ Team <info@rabbitmq.com>
RabbitMQ Server 06/22/2012 RABBITMQ-ENV.CONF(5)