12-29-2010
thank you, rohon
It works perfectly.
Thank you,
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello Friends,
i used awk to sum up total size of files under a directory (with the help of examples, threads here).
ls -l | awk '/^-/ {total += $5} END {printf "%15.0f\n",total}' >> total.txt
After each execution of the script total result is appended into a text file:
7010
7794
8890 ... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: EAGL€
7 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have a txt file as follows
Code:
Oct 1 file1 4144
Oct 1 file23 5170
Oct 2 file5 3434
Oct 21 file56 2343
I need to add a new column by marking the right log file from current directory. For example populate like this. Please not in the second columt for "1" it has... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: gubbu
2 Replies
3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Is there anyway to use awk to add a first column to my data that automatically goes from 1 to n , where n is the numbers of my rows?:confused: (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: cosmologist
4 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello everyone,
I have a file with the following structure:
abc xyz 111 222
agf hjhf 787 799
tht yah 878 898
... ... ... ...
... ... ... ...
... ... ... ...
I want to add a column (with a fixed value of 1000) at the end such that it becomes:
abc xyz 111 222 1000
agf hjhf 787... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: ad23
5 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
test.txt contains below values
1
2
3
4
5
Desired output:
'TT.1',
'TT.2',
'TT.3',
'TT.4',
'TT.5'
Last value should not contain the comma after the value. Below is the script which i have tried. I'm using Linux.
#!/bin/bash
for i in $test.txt (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: venkatesht
4 Replies
6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi ,
Can any one please tell me, how can we add the file name as column using sed.
right now we are using the below awk command for adding the file name as column but when we are calling this script from datastage it is deleting the file data..very weird raised a support ticket with datastage.... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mora
2 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
75
103
131
133
138
183
197
221
232
234
248
256
286
342
368
389
463
499
524
538 (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: chrisjorg
5 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi everyone!
I sometimes need to do some simple arithmetics, like adding a number to a certain column of a file. So I wrote a small function in the .bashrc file, which looks like this
shifter()
{
COL=$1
VAL=$2
FILE=$3
cp $FILE $FILE.shifted
awk 'NF==4 {$(( $COL )) = $(( $COL ))... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: radudownload
6 Replies
9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello
Im new treat me nicely, I have a headache :)
I have a script that seemed to work now it doesnt anyway, the last part is adding counts of unique items in a csv file eg
05492U34 38
05492U34 47
two columns, (many different values like this in file)
i want... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: aniquebmx
7 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
I need the use sed or AWK using cat the file
Node1
TDEV RW 1035788
TDEV RW 1035788
Server1
TDEV RW 69053
Server2
TDEV RW 69053
TDEV RW 103579
Server3
TDEV RW 69053
server4
RDF1+TDEV RW 69053
RDF1+TDEV RW 517894
RDF1+TDEV RW 621473
server6
TDEV RW 34526
TDEV RW 34526 (22 Replies)
Discussion started by: ranjancom2000
22 Replies
cvmkfile(1) cvmkfile(1)
NAME
cvmkfile - Create a pre-allocated file
SYNOPSIS
cvmkfile [-k <key>] [-p] [-s] [-w] [-z] <size>[k|m|g] <filename>
DESCRIPTION
cvmkfile can be used to pre-allocate a file on the Xsan volume. This
is useful and preferable when preparing a file for use in a real-time
or streaming environment as the entire file is represented in only one
file system extent. Additionally, a file can be placed onto a specific
storage pool by specifying the <key> value, which is used as the affin-
ity locator. See cvfs_config(4) for more details about affinities.
USAGE
The -k <key> optionally tells the file system where to place the data
file. If an Affinity Key is specified, the file is placed on storage
pools that are specified to support this key. If there is no storage
pool with the key specified, then the file is placed in non-exclusive
data pools. If there are no non-exclusive data pools, then ENOSPC (no
space) is returned.
The -p option forces the allocation and any subsequent expansions to be
fitted "perfectly" as multiples of the InodeExpandMin configuration
parameter. The allocation extent will always line up on and be a per-
fect multiple of the blocks specified in InodeExpandMin.
The -s option forces the allocation to line up on the beginning block
modulus of the storage pool. This can help performance in situations
where the I/O size perfectly spans the width of the storage pool's
disks.
The -w option sets the file size to be equal to <size>. Without this
option the blocks are allocated but the size is set to zero. NOTE:
Unless the -z option is used, the new file will contain undefined data.
Using the -w option is not recommended unless absolutely needed.
The -z option causes the file to be physically zeroed out. This can
take a significant amount of time.
The <size> argument specifies the number of bytes, kilobytes(k),
megabytes(m) or gigabytes(g) to allocate for the file. There is no
guarantee that all requested space will be allocated. If there is
insufficient contiguous available space to satisfy the requested amount
then a "best effort" will be performed. In this case a success value
is returned even though not all of the requested amount is allocated to
the file. Even though the allocation may not be fully satisfied, if
the -w option is specified then the file size will still reflect the
requested <size> value.
EXAMPLES
Make a file of one gigabyte with zero length. Allocate it on a storage
pool that favors the media type 6100_n8.
rock # cvmkfile -k 6100_n8 1g foobar
SEE ALSO
cvfs_config(4), cvmkdir(1)
Xsan File System December 2005 cvmkfile(1)