There are these ksh files and config files that are written and updated on a daily basis.
All I want to do is write a script that finds both these types of files and archive them on a daily basis, to help in restoring in times of system outages and so on. Particulary I'm interested in .ksh ,... (9 Replies)
Hello All,
I have a file which is having below type of data,
Jul 19 2011 | 123456
Jul 19 2011 | 123456
Jul 20 2011 | 123456
Jul 20 2011 | 123456
Here I wanted to grep for date pattern as below, so that it should only grep "Jul 20" OR "Jul ... (9 Replies)
Hi,
I would like to use find to search for multiple types. For example search for symlink and regular file but not directories, sockets etc.... Something like:
find . -type l,f -name "stuff"
But of course it does not work.
Is there any way to avoid an if statement and to do it faster?
... (0 Replies)
I have a script in tcsh and I want to have a find option to which I can pass a file search pattern I want using the command:
/home/chrisd/tatsh/trunk/hstmy/bin/tcsh/raytrac.tcsh -f=*rc*
The set command seems to fail when user does not supply a search pattern (if user just supplies -f, a... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I am new here but I have a scripting question that I can't seem to figure out with the "find" cmd.
What I am trying to do is to only have to run a single find cmd parsing the directories and output the different file types to induvidual files and I have been running into problems.... (3 Replies)
I have a sample file with following output:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
User: admin
Set-Cookie: AMBARISESSIONID=y3v3648yqcno32nq478kw7ar;Path=/;HttpOnly
Expires: Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 GMT
Content-Type: text/plain
Vary: Accept-Encoding, User-Agent
Content-Length: 6057
Server:... (4 Replies)
Hi,
How can I use find command to search string/pattern in a file recursively?
What I tried:
find . -type f -exec cat {} | grep "make" \;
Output:
grep: find: ;: No such file or directory
missing argument to `-exec'
And this:
find . -type f -exec cat {} \; -exec grep "make" {} \;... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: cola
12 Replies
LEARN ABOUT LINUX
instr
INSTR(3) MBK UTILITY FUNCTIONS INSTR(3)NAME
instr - find an occurence of a string in a string, starting at a specified character.
ORIGIN
This software belongs to the ALLIANCE CAD SYSTEM developed by the ASIM team at LIP6 laboratory of Universite Pierre et Marie CURIE, in
Paris, France.
Web : http://asim.lip6.fr/recherche/alliance/
E-mail : alliance-users@asim.lip6.fr
SYNOPSYS
#include "mut.h"
char *instr(s, find, from)
char *s, *find, from;
PARAMETERS
s Pointer to the string to be searched for the pattern
find Pointer to the string to be found, the pattern
from Character to be searched backwards before searching for the pattern
DESCRIPTION
instr searches the first occurence of the string find in the string s, starting its search at the last occurence of the from character in
the string s.
If either s or find is NULL, the function returns NULL. If from is (char)0, the pattern is searched from the begining of s.
This quite exotic behaviour is useful to search the occurence of a name in a string resulting from a flatten, when only a terminal object
name is to be taken into account.
RETURN VALUES
instr return NULL either if the pattern find is not present in the searched string s, or if one at least of these two string are NULL. If
the pattern is found, a value different from NULL is returned.
EXAMPLE
#include "mut.h"
/* check for the pattern 'ck' anywhere in the string */
#define contains_ck(name)instr(name, "ck", ' ')
/* check for the pattern 'ck' in the signal name, not instance ones */
#define isclock(ptsig) instr(getsigname(ptsig), "ck", SEPAR)
SEE ALSO mbk(1), isvdd(3), isvss(3).
BUG REPORT
This tool is under development at the ASIM department of the LIP6 laboratory.
We need your feedback to improve documentation and tools.
ASIM /LIP6 October 1, 1997 INSTR(3)