Hi ,
i'm using special binary file (lotus notes) and modifying an hexadecimal address range with windows hex editor and it works fine !
The file is an AIX one and i'm forced to transfert (ftp) it before modifying it and re-transfert !
NOW i would do this directly under AIX !
I can... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
My main intension of is to convert the Hexstring stored in a char* into hex and then prefixing it with "0x" and suffix it with ','
This has to be done for all the hexstring char* is NULL.
Store the result prefixed with "0x" and suffixed with ',' in another char* and pass it to... (1 Reply)
I've used awk for some simple scripting, but having trouble figuring out how to search a couple of data files that have Name/Address/Zip Codes from another file that has list of only Zip Codes, and write out the lines that matched.
Zip code field in the data file is 27
I was thinking... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I am a bit stuck with displaying characters. I am having values like below in the proper displayable characters. which I would want to print the actual value on the right hand side. I dont want to create an array because I would have to create 255 different values. isnt there another way of... (17 Replies)
perl -pi -e 's/\x00/\x0d\x0a/g' `grep -l $'GS' filelist`
This isn't working :confused:, it's not pulling the files that contain the regex. Please help me rewrite this :wall:.
Ideally for this to work on 9K of 20K files in the directory, I've tried this but I don't know enough about awk... (7 Replies)
Hi everyone, I had a similar question a couple days ago but my problem has gotten significantly (to me anyway) more complex.
I have two files:
File 1:
0808 166 166 62 9 0
1000fights 1 1 2 1 0
100places2visit 2 2 2 2 0
10veronica91 167 167 3 1 0
11thgorgeous 346 346 3806 1461 122... (2 Replies)
Hi guys.
I'm trying to do a search on the fruit & brand inside Fruit.txt, and printing the result out in the following format:
, , $,
I am able to do this via the following code:
awk -F: -vOFS=", " -vt="$Fruit:$Brand" '$0~t{$3="$"$3;print}' Fruit.txt
However, I want to be able to... (5 Replies)
I have this below string in a variable
cutString=21222222222222222122222222222222
this string is nothing but hex values depicted as below
21:22:22:22:22:22:22:22:21:22:22:22:22:22:22:22
so what i want to achieve is swap the lower order with higher order values in the... (3 Replies)
Assume I have a file \usr\home\\somedir\myfile123.txt
and I want to replace all occurencies of the two (concatenated) hex values x'AD' x'A0' bytwo other (concatenated) hex values x'20' x'6E'
How can I achieve this with the gnu sed tool?
Additional question: Is there a way to let sed show... (1 Reply)
File lalo.txt contains: Á
I need to replace Á by A using sed command.
od -x lalo.txt
0000000 c10a
0000002
sed -e 's/\xc1\x0a/A/g' lalo.txt > lalo2.txt
Also tried:
sed -e 's/\xc3\x81/A/g' lalo.txt > lalo2.txt
Output file lalo2.txt still has Á
Unix version: SunOS 5.11 ... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: mrreds
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
perlio::gzip
gzip(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation gzip(3)NAME
PerlIO::gzip - Perl extension to provide a PerlIO layer to gzip/gunzip
SYNOPSIS
use PerlIO::gzip;
open FOO, "<:gzip", "file.gz" or die $!;
print while <FOO>; # And it will be uncompressed...
binmode FOO, ":gzip(none)" # Starts reading deflate stream from here on
DESCRIPTION
PerlIO::gzip provides a PerlIO layer that manipulates files in the format used by the "gzip" program. Compression and Decompression are
implemented, but not together. If you attempt to open a file for reading and writing the open will fail.
EXPORT
PerlIO::gzip exports no subroutines or symbols, just a perl layer "gzip"
LAYER ARGUMENTS
The "gzip" layer takes a comma separated list of arguments. 4 exclusive options choose the header checking mode:
gzip
The default. Expects a standard gzip file header for reading, writes a standard gzip file header.
none
Expects or writes no file header; assumes the file handle is immediately a deflate stream (eg as would be found inside a "zip" file)
auto
Potentially dangerous. If the first two bytes match the "gzip" header "x1fx8b" then a gzip header is assumed (and checked) else a
deflate stream is assumed. No different from gzip on writing.
autopop
Potentially dangerous. If the first two bytes match the "gzip" header "x1fx8b" then a gzip header is assumed (and checked) else the
layer is silently popped. This results in gzip files being transparently decompressed, other files being treated normally. Of course,
this has sides effects such as File::Copy becoming gunzip, and File::Compare comparing the uncompressed contents of files.
In autopop mode Opening a handle for writing (or reading and writing) will cause the gzip layer to automatically be popped.
Optionally you can add this flag:
lazy
For reading, defer header checking until the first read. For writing, don't write a header until the first buffer empty of compressed
data to disk. (and don't write anything at all if no data was written to the handle)
By default, gzip header checking is done before the "open" (or "binmode") returns, so if an error is detected in the gzip header the
"open" or "binmode" will fail. However, this will require reading some data, or writing a header. With lazy set on a file opened for
reading the check is deferred until the first read so the "open" should always succeed, but any problems with the header will cause an
error on read.
open FOO, "<:gzip(lazy)", "file.gz" or die $!; # Dangerous.
while (<FOO>) {
print;
} # Whoa. Bad. You're not distinguishing between errors and EOF.
If you're not careful you won't spot the errors - like the example above you'll think you got end of file.
lazy is ignored if you are in autopop mode.
AUTHOR
Nicholas Clark, <nwc10+perlio-gzip@colon.colondot.net>
SEE ALSO
perl, gzip, rfc 1952 <http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1952.txt> (the gzip file format specification), rfc 1951
<http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1951.txt> (DEFLATE compressed data format specification)
perl v5.18.2 2006-10-01 gzip(3)