Hi,
I want to list only the file names which do not contain a specific keyword or search string.
OS: Solaris
Also is there any way ; through the same script I can save the output of search to a CSV (comma seperated) so that the file can be used for inventory purpose.
Any assistance will... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I am writing a BASH shell script. I would like to count all the files in the CURRENT directory matching a specific pattern. Could someone suggest the best/simplest way to do this. I have thought of these solutions (for simplicity the pattern is all files starting with A):
ls -1 *A | wc -l... (5 Replies)
Hi,
i need to break a file into 2 files afetr matching a pattern
for ex. there is a fil, file .txt which contains
here i need to look for mat $ demon if it matches then i need to transfer the data into another file till the line in which a "d6s" comes,and i have to delete tat line... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have following files in my directory:
/TESTDONTDEL> ls -alt
total 14
drwxr-xr-x 2 oracle dba 1024 May 15 06:30 .
-rw-r--r-- 1 oracle dba 40 May 15 06:30 exception.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1 oracle dba 19 May 15 06:22 ful_1234_test1.txt
-rw-r--r-- 1... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I want to find all directories matching given pattern in current directory and zip those files.
I am trying to do somethign like this. But it is not working.
for FNAME in $(find . -type d | grep './\{2\}-\{2\}$');
do
zip -r MatchedFiles.zip $FNAME
rm -fr $FNAME
done
... (4 Replies)
Hi friends.. I have many dirs in my working directory. Every dir have thousands of files (.jsp, .java, .xml..., etc). So I am working with an script to find every file recursively within those directories and subdirectories ending with .jsp or .java which contains inside of it, the the pattern... (3 Replies)
I have one single shown below and I need to break each ST|850 & SE to separate file using unix script. Below example should create 3 files. We can use ST & SE to filter as these field names will remain same.
Please advice with the unix code.
ST|850
BEG|PO|1234
LIN|1|23
SE|4
ST|850... (3 Replies)
I need to search for two patterns in a file and find number of matching lines.
find . -type f | xargs grep "DROP TABLE" | wc -l
find . -type f | xargs grep "DROP SYNONYM" | wc -l
The above code works. However I am looking at finding a commnd that will simplify as on a singe command... (2 Replies)
Hello all,
this is my first and probably not my last question around here. I do hope you can help or at least point me in the right direction.
My question is as follows, I need to find files and possible folders which are not owner = AAA group = BBB with a said location and all sub folders ... (7 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to get a result out of this but fails please help. Have two files /tmp/1 & /tmp/hosts.
/tmp/1
IP=123.456.789.01
WAS_HOSTNAME=abcdefgh.was.tb.dsdc
/tmp/hosts
123.456.789.01
I want this result in /tmp/hosts if hostname is already there dont want duplicate entry.
... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: rajeshwebspere
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
cg
CG(1)CG(1)NAME
cg - Recursively grep for a pattern and store it.
SYNOPSIS
cg [ -l ] | [ [ -i ] pattern [ files ] ]
DESCRIPTION
cg does a search though text files (usually source code) recursively for a pattern, storing matches and displaying the output in a human-
readable fashion. It is intended to give some of the functionaly of AT&T's cscope(1) tool, with the advantages of simplicity and not being
language-specific. The script will colorize output if configured as such.
It is typically run with a Perl regular expression to search for. The search can be made case insensitive by using the -i option. A list
of files may also be specified with an additional argument after the pattern. Put the files pattern in quotes to make it be matched by
Perl rather than by the shell. Running the script with no arguments will recall the results of the previous search. After the search,
entries found can be edited using the vg(1) script. The -l option shows the last log made.
SOME EXAMPLES
cg - alone recalls the previous search results.
cg -i pattern - search the default list of files for all files matching the pattern (and case-insensitively).
cg pattern '*.c' - search recursively for pattern in all *.c files. This automatically converts '*' to '.*' and '.' to '.' for you and
does a Perl pattern match on all files in the tree.
cg pattern *.c - search through the shell-expanded list of *.c files, so not done recursively (in other words, only the files your shell
pass to the script as arguments).
cg -l - show the last log made.
COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS-i Do a case-insensitive search.
-l Show the last log made.
-p Toggle the default pager option. cg has a bulit-in pager function, which can be enabled or disabled by default (in .cgvgrc). If the
default is enabled, this option disables the pager; if the default is disabled, this option enables it.
-P Force the built-in pager to be disabled.
FILES
${HOME}/.cglast
Log file of the last search.
${HOME}/.cgvgrc
Per-user configuration file (if the defaults are not desireable).
${HOME}/.cgvg/*
Log files in $HOSTNAME.shell_pid form with the log of the last search.
SEE ALSO vg(1), perl(1), find(1), grep(1), cscope(1)AUTHOR
cg was written by Joshua Uziel <uzi@uzix.org>.
13 Mar 2002 CG(1)