Please help!
Input pattern, where ... could be any number of lines
struct A {
Blah1
Blah2
Blah3
...
} B;
output pattern
struct AB {
Blah1
Blah2
Blah3
...
};
I need help in extracting everything between { and }
if it would have been on a single line { \(.*\)} should have worked. (15 Replies)
hey gents,
I'm working on something that will use snmpwalk to query the devices on my network and retreive the device name, device IP, device model and device serial. I'm using Nmap for the enumeration and sed to clean up the results for use by snmpwalk. Once i get all the data organized I'm... (8 Replies)
Hi,
I'm trying to delete multiple lines following a line that matches a pattern.
The pattern will appear several times in a file. So when i encounter that pattern in a line, i have to delete that line plus the next 4 lines.
Something similar to what grep does
grep -A5 'pattern' filename.... (1 Reply)
Hi there!
I am really enjoying working with sed. I am trying to come up with a sed command to replace some occurrences (not all) in the same line, for instance:
I have a command which the output will be:
200.300.400.5 0A 0B 0C 01 02 03
being that the last 6 strings are actually one... (7 Replies)
Hello, im writing a script that validates a URL (the parameter) using http://validator.w3.org
first it downloads the site (the output line I want is stored in the h2 field of the site's html.
wget http://validator.w3.org/check?url=$1 2> /dev/null
sed -n '/<h2/p' check?uri=$1 | sed 's/... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I am have one file with a line
group=project_live
I need to replace it with line
group=project_live_support
before I execute some application related script.
The potentianl problem is when I replace this with sed using command
sed... (2 Replies)
Would appear to me to be a farily simple question but having search all the threads I can't find the answer .. I just want sed to output the single line in a file that contains two string anywhere on the line..
e.g. currently using this command
sed -n -e'/str1/p' -e '/str2/p' < file
and... (3 Replies)
here is what i want to achieve.. i have a file with below contents
cat fileName
blah blah blah
.
.DROP this
REJECT that
.
--sport 7800 -j REJECT --reject-with icmp-port-unreachable
--dport 7800 -j REJECT --reject-with icmp-port-unreachable
.
.
.
more blah blah blah
--dport 3306... (14 Replies)
All, I appreciate any help you can offer here as this is well beyond my grasp of awk/sed...
I have an input file similar to:
&LOG
&LOG Part: "@DB/TC10000021855/--F"
&LOG
&LOG
&LOG Part: "@DB/TC10000021852/--F"
&LOG Cloning_Action: RETAIN
&LOG Part: "@DB/TCCP000010713/--A"
&LOG
&LOG... (5 Replies)
Hello
I am trying to write sed code where it will look through the text for lines with specific expression "Started by user" and when found, will also add the following line, and also lines with another expression "Finished:"
sed -n '/Started by user/, +1p, /Finished:/'... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: dlesny
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
ln
LN(1) General Commands Manual LN(1)NAME
ln - make links
SYNOPSIS
ln [ -s ] sourcename [ targetname ]
ln [ -s ] sourcename1 sourcename2 [ sourcename3 ... ] targetdirectory
DESCRIPTION
A link is a directory entry referring to a file; the same file (together with its size, all its protection information, etc.) may have
several links to it. There are two kinds of links: hard links and symbolic links.
By default ln makes hard links. A hard link to a file is indistinguishable from the original directory entry; any changes to a file are
effective independent of the name used to reference the file. Hard links may not span file systems and may not refer to directories.
The -s option causes ln to create symbolic links. A symbolic link contains the name of the file to which it is linked. The referenced
file is used when an open(2) operation is performed on the link. A stat(2) on a symbolic link will return the linked-to file; an lstat(2)
must be done to obtain information about the link. The readlink(2) call may be used to read the contents of a symbolic link. Symbolic
links may span file systems and may refer to directories.
Given one or two arguments, ln creates a link to an existing file sourcename. If targetname is given, the link has that name; targetname
may also be a directory in which to place the link; otherwise it is placed in the current directory. If only the directory is specified,
the link will be made to the last component of sourcename.
Given more than two arguments, ln makes links in targetdirectory to all the named source files. The links made will have the same name as
the files being linked to.
SEE ALSO rm(1), cp(1), mv(1), link(2), readlink(2), stat(2), symlink(2)4th Berkeley Distribution April 10, 1986 LN(1)