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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting How to get filename from the fullpath and how to grep multiple strings Post 302459089 by Shirisha on Sunday 3rd of October 2010 03:17:22 PM
Old 10-03-2010
How to get filename from the fullpath and how to grep multiple strings

Hi,

New to shell scripting....
I have log file content as below:

Quote:
/logs/S1/logfilename1.log.gz:01/20/2010 14:43:57 ERROR [128500] Exception is caught.
/logs/T15/logfilename2.log.gz:01/20/2010 14:43:57 ERROR [83D9H7] Exception is caught.
I have to count the number of occurences of ERROR or INFO Messages.
So, I cut 5 th column and uniquly sorted and redirected it to new.txt file.

But I want copy to S*/Filename and T*/Filename of respective ERROR or INFO messages,uniquly sorted to new.txt file.

I tried awk command ..but it failed to copy to new.txt file.

Once this is done I have to check for the occurences of ERROR string. So for that I searched for egrep and tried to use, but output is incorrect.
Final output i am looking for:

Quote:
S*/Filename,Exception is caught., 20
T*/Filename,Exception is caught. ,30
Do anybody have any idea???

Thanks in advance..

Last edited by Shirisha; 10-06-2010 at 03:17 PM..
 

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XML::SAX::Exception(3)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				    XML::SAX::Exception(3)

NAME
XML::SAX::Exception - Exception classes for XML::SAX SYNOPSIS
throw XML::SAX::Exception::NotSupported( Message => "The foo feature is not supported", ); DESCRIPTION
This module is the base class for all SAX Exceptions, those defined in the spec as well as those that one may create for one's own SAX errors. There are three subclasses included, corresponding to those of the SAX spec: XML::SAX::Exception::NotSupported XML::SAX::Exception::NotRecognized XML::SAX::Exception::Parse Use them wherever you want, and as much as possible when you encounter such errors. SAX is meant to use exceptions as much as possible to flag problems. CREATING NEW EXCEPTION CLASSES
All you need to do to create a new exception class is: @XML::SAX::Exception::MyException::ISA = ('XML::SAX::Exception') The given package doesn't need to exist, it'll behave correctly this way. If your exception refines an existing exception class, then you may also inherit from that instead of from the base class. THROWING EXCEPTIONS
This is as simple as exemplified in the SYNOPSIS. In fact, there's nothing more to know. All you have to do is: throw XML::SAX::Exception::MyException( Message => 'Something went wrong' ); and voila, you've thrown an exception which can be caught in an eval block. perl v5.16.3 2011-09-14 XML::SAX::Exception(3)
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