Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Find the position of lines matching string Post 302491653 by homeboy on Friday 28th of January 2011 02:17:09 AM
Old 01-28-2011
if i understand your problem correctly,it can be solved by this,though this method is redundancess^_^
Code:
awk -v num=123455 'BEGIN{flag=0} {if($1 ~ /GS.*/) gs=NR;if($1 ~ "RMR*"+num){ print gs;flag=1} if(flag == 1 && $1 ~ /GE.*/){ print NR;exit}}' txt

 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Print lines with search string at specific position

Hi Folks, I have a file with all fields defined by byte position, but any field can be empty so I cannot print lines based on a search of specific columns. I need to print all lines of this file where the string of two characters at byte position 100-101 contains the number 27. Any ideas? ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: HealthyGuy
4 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

how to find substring position in a given string

Hello, I have a string like str = "14: Jan 29 13:27:12 : Processor----: : Start of splitting file " from this, i have to find the position or location number starting for "Processor". I have to extract date from this entire string. string which i will give will not have fixed length. ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: balareddy
2 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Extracting lines that match string at certain position

I have a fixed length file in the following format <date><product_code><other data> The file size is huge and I have to extract only the lines that match a certain product code which is of 2 bytes length. I cannot use normal grep since that may give undesirable results. When I search for prod... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: paruthiveeran
5 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

how to find a position and print some string in the next and same position

I need a script for... how to find a position of column data and print some string in the next line and same position position should find based on *HEADER8* in text for ex: ord123 abs 123 987HEADER89 test234 ord124 abc 124 987HEADER88 test235 ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: naveenkcl
1 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Find the position of a string and replace with another string

Hi, I have a file named "Test_2008_01_21" The file contains a string "manual" that occurs many times in the file How can i find the positions of the string "manual" in the file Ex: if the string " manual " occurs three times in the file. i want to replace the second occurance of string... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: bab123
6 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Perl XML, find matching condition and grep lines and put the lines somewhere else

Hi, my xml files looks something like this <Instance Name="New York"> <Description></Description> <Instance Name="A"> <Description></Description> <PropertyValue Key="false" Name="Building A" /> </Instance> <Instance Name="B"> ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: tententen
4 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Find the list of filenames that have the string 31 at 4th and 5th position

Hi, Can anyone let me know the command to know the list of filenames that have string 31 in their 4th and 5th positions inside the file: grep -l "31" main*.txt The above grep lists all the files which have 31 at any position but I want filenames having 31 at position 4 and position 5. (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: okkadu
8 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

To find nth position of character in string

Hi guyz i want to know nth position of character in string. For ex. var="UK,TK,HK,IND,AUS" now if we see 1st occurance of , is at 3 position, 2nd at 6,..4th at 13 position. 1st position we can find through INDEX, but what about 2nd,3rd and 4th or may be upto nth position. ? In oracle we had... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jonty Immortal
2 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

String pattern matching and position

I am not an expert with linux, but following various posts on this forum, I have been trying to write a script to match pattern of charters occurring together in a file. My file has approximately 200 million characters (upper and lower case), with about 50 characters per line. I have merged all... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: biowizz
5 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Find a string and its position in a line from another string

Hello guys, would you please help me with this? this is the line inside a file: first line Something Today YYDDPPSVXIPYYY0XXXOFFS00000000000? I'd like to find the position of string XXX from string PYYY In the example above XXX starts from 6th position from PYYY desired... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: netrom
4 Replies
AC(1)                                                         General Commands Manual                                                        AC(1)

NAME
ac - print statistics about users' connect time SYNOPSIS
ac [ -d | --daily-totals ] [ -y | --print-year ] [ -p | --individual-totals ] [ people ] [ -f | --file filename ] [ -a | --all-days ] [ --complain ] [ --reboots ] [ --supplants ] [ --timewarps ] [ --compatibility ] [ --tw-leniency num ] [ --tw-suspicious num ] [ -z | --print-zeros ] [ --debug ] [ -V | --version ] [ -h | --help ] DESCRIPTION
ac prints out a report of connect time (in hours) based on the logins/logouts in the current wtmp file. A total is also printed out. The accounting file wtmp is maintained by init(8) and login(1). Neither ac nor login creates the wtmp if it doesn't exist, no accounting is done. To begin accounting, create the file with a length of zero. NOTE: The wtmp file can get really big, really fast. You might want to trim it every once and a while. GNU ac works nearly the same u*x ac, though it's a little smarter in several ways. You should therefore expect differences in the output of GNU ac and the output of ac's on other systems. Use the command info accounting to get additional information. OPTIONS
-d, --daily-totals Print totals for each day rather than just one big total at the end. The output looks like this: Jul 3 total 1.17 Jul 4 total 2.10 Jul 5 total 8.23 Jul 6 total 2.10 Jul 7 total 0.30 -p, --individual-totals Print time totals for each user in addition to the usual everything-lumped-into-one value. It looks like: bob 8.06 goff 0.60 maley 7.37 root 0.12 total 16.15 people Print out the sum total of the connect time used by all of the users included in people. Note that people is a space separated list of valid user names; wildcards are not allowed. -f, --file filename Read from the file filename instead of the system's wtmp file. --complain When the wtmp file has a problem (a time-warp, missing record, or whatever), print out an appropriate error. --reboots Reboot records are NOT written at the time of a reboot, but when the system restarts; therefore, it is impossible to know exactly when the reboot occurred. Users may have been logged into the system at the time of the reboot, and many ac's automatically count the time between the login and the reboot record against the user (even though all of that time shouldn't be, perhaps, if the system is down for a long time, for instance). If you want to count this time, include the flag. *For vanilla ac compatibility, include this flag.* --supplants Sometimes, a logout record is not written for a specific terminal, so the time that the last user accrued cannot be calculated. If you want to include the time from the user's login to the next login on the terminal (though probably incorrect), include this you want to include the time from the user's login to the next login on the terminal (though probably incorrect), include this flag. *For vanilla ac compatibility, include this flag.* --timewarps Sometimes, entries in a wtmp file will suddenly jump back into the past without a clock change record occurring. It is impossible to know how long a user was logged in when this occurs. If you want to count the time between the login and the time warp against the user, include this flag. *For vanilla ac compatibility, include this flag.* --compatibility This is shorthand for typing out the three above options. -a, --all-days If we're printing daily totals, print a record for every day instead of skipping intervening days where there is no login activity. Without this flag, time accrued during those intervening days gets listed under the next day where there is login activity. --tw-leniency num Set the time warp leniency to num seconds. Records in wtmp files might be slightly out of order (most notably when two logins occur within a one-second period - the second one gets written first). By default, this value is set to 60. If the program notices this problem, time is not assigned to users unless the --timewarps flag is used. --tw-suspicious num Set the time warp suspicious value to num seconds. If two records in the wtmp file are farther than this number of seconds apart, there is a problem with the wtmp file (or your machine hasn't been used in a year). If the program notices this problem, time is not assigned to users unless the --timewarps flag is used. -y, --print-year Print year when displaying dates. -z, --print-zeros If a total for any category (save the grand total) is zero, print it. The default is to suppress printing. --debug Print verbose internal information. -V, --version Print the version number of ac to standard output and quit. -h, --help Prints the usage string and default locations of system files to standard output and exits. FILES
wtmp The system wide login record file. See wtmp(5) for further details. AUTHOR
The GNU accounting utilities were written by Noel Cragg <noel@gnu.ai.mit.edu>. The man page was adapted from the accounting texinfo page by Susan Kleinmann <sgk@sgk.tiac.net>. SEE ALSO
login(1), wtmp(5), init(8), sa(8) 2010 August 16 AC(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:44 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy