hey guys this is my first post here, heard a lot about these forums. Iam urgently in need of a command which would help me accomplish the following , for example a file has these contents:
211 61 2007-06-26 13:47:32
211 61 2007-06-26 09:53:43
211 61 2007-06-26 15:25:14
211 61 2007-06-26... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I want to use egrep to match this expression in my file. The expression begins with the word SCHEDULE and ends with PFTDGNIN. In between these 2 words there can be anything.
EX: Line1: SCHEDULE NWERRR#PFTDGNIN
Line2: FOLLOWS NWD@AAS#PFTDGNIN
So as a result of the egrep command... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I need help with using an awk or sed filter on the below line
ALTER TABLE "ACCOUNT" ADD CONSTRAINT "ACCOUNT_PK" PRIMARY KEY ("ACCT_ID") USING INDEX PCTFREE 10 INITRANS 2 MAXTRANS 255 STORAGE(INITIAL 65536 FREELISTS 1 FREELIST GROUPS 1) TABLESPACE "WMC_DATA" LOGGING ENABLE
Look for... (1 Reply)
I'm new to egrep. What pattern could I use to find all lines that match this pattern: <beginning of line><any amount of whitespace>sub<space>. I want it to return the entire line.
(I'm trying to generate a list of all Perl sub definitions in a list of Perl modules.)
Thanks for your help! (7 Replies)
Hi
I use arp to get the mac-addresses of my hosts.
# arp -a | grep 192.168.0.
e1000g0 192.168.0.1 255.255.255.255 o 00:00:00:00:00:01
e1000g0 192.168.0.11 255.255.255.255 o 00:00:00:00:00:02
e1000g0 192.168.0.2 255.255.255.255 ... (12 Replies)
Hi everyone
i want to write a script to grep multiple pattern from all the file from a dir.
for example I want to get all the record number from XML file who's last name is asd, smith, dfrt,gokul,and sinha.
I tried
egrep('sinha'|'gokul'|'asd')
but it is not working
also i tried saving... (2 Replies)
HI,
I have a piece of code which checks the return value for a pattern "Status: 0000" like this -
returnval=<<some op>>
echo $returnval | egrep "\bStatus:\s+"
if ; then
echo "Failed"
fi
Even on success or failure i get $? = 1 i.e. it never passes ? (16 Replies)
Hello,
I need to find all *.xml files that matched by pattern on Linux. I need to have written the file name on the screen and then change the pattern in the file just was found.
For instance.
I can start the script with arguments for keyword and for value, i.e
script.sh keyword... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I have a oracle code & want to exclude the comments present in the code. Below may be the pattern can be considered for eg.
-- ALTER TABLE
ALTER TABLE -- To create
In above sample, First line is full commented line as it starts with "--"
Wheras the second line is starting... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I need advice on a simiple pattern check,
Orginal Code
bpimagelist -backupid xxxxxxxxxxxxx | grep "FRAG " | egrep -i "C5|W5" | awk 'NR==1{print $2,$9}
1 MAC514
What i want is to find any media beinging with C5|W5. I have tried ^C5|^W5, but this does not work.
Removed... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Junes
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
time::parsedate
Time::ParseDate(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Time::ParseDate(3)NAME
Time::ParseDate -- date parsing both relative and absolute
SYNOPSIS
use Time::ParseDate;
$seconds_since_jan1_1970 = parsedate("12/11/94 2pm", NO_RELATIVE => 1)
$seconds_since_jan1_1970 = parsedate("12/11/94 2pm", %options)
OPTIONS
Date parsing can also use options. The options are as follows:
FUZZY -> it's okay not to parse the entire date string
NOW -> the "current" time for relative times (defaults to time())
ZONE -> local timezone (defaults to $ENV{TZ})
WHOLE -> the whole input string must be parsed
GMT -> input time is assumed to be GMT, not localtime
UK -> prefer UK style dates (dd/mm over mm/dd)
DATE_REQUIRED -> do not default the date
TIME_REQUIRED -> do not default the time
NO_RELATIVE -> input time is not relative to NOW
TIMEFIRST -> try parsing time before date [not default]
PREFER_PAST -> when year or day of week is ambigueous, assume past
PREFER_FUTURE -> when year or day of week is ambigueous, assume future
SUBSECOND -> parse fraction seconds
VALIDATE -> only accept normal values for HHMMSS, YYMMDD. Otherwise
days like -1 might give the last day of the previous month.
DATE FORMATS RECOGNIZED
Absolute date formats
Dow, dd Mon yy
Dow, dd Mon yyyy
Dow, dd Mon
dd Mon yy
dd Mon yyyy
Month day{st,nd,rd,th}, year
Month day{st,nd,rd,th}
Mon dd yyyy
yyyy/mm/dd
yyyy-mm-dd (usually the best date specification syntax)
yyyy/mm
mm/dd/yy
mm/dd/yyyy
mm/yy
yy/mm (only if year > 12, or > 31 if UK)
yy/mm/dd (only if year > 12 and day < 32, or year > 31 if UK)
dd/mm/yy (only if UK, or an invalid mm/dd/yy or yy/mm/dd)
dd/mm/yyyy (only if UK, or an invalid mm/dd/yyyy)
dd/mm (only if UK, or an invalid mm/dd)
Relative date formats:
count "days"
count "weeks"
count "months"
count "years"
Dow "after next"
Dow "before last"
Dow (requires PREFER_PAST or PREFER_FUTURE)
"next" Dow
"tomorrow"
"today"
"yesterday"
"last" dow
"last week"
"now"
"now" "+" count units
"now" "-" count units
"+" count units
"-" count units
count units "ago"
Absolute time formats:
hh:mm:ss[.ddd]
hh:mm
hh:mm[AP]M
hh[AP]M
hhmmss[[AP]M]
"noon"
"midnight"
Relative time formats:
count "minutes" (count can be franctional "1.5" or "1 1/2")
count "seconds"
count "hours"
"+" count units
"+" count
"-" count units
"-" count
count units "ago"
Timezone formats:
[+-]dddd
GMT[+-]d+
[+-]dddd (TZN)
TZN
Special formats:
[ d]d/Mon/yyyy:hh:mm:ss [[+-]dddd]
yy/mm/dd.hh:mm
DESCRIPTION
This module recognizes the above date/time formats. Usually a date and a time are specified. There are numerous options for controlling
what is recognized and what is not.
The return code is always the time in seconds since January 1st, 1970 or undef if it was unable to parse the time.
If a timezone is specified it must be after the time. Year specifications can be tacked onto the end of absolute times.
If "parsedate()" is called from array context, then it will return two elements. On sucessful parses, it will return the seconds and what
remains of its input string. On unsucessful parses, it will return "undef" and an error string.
EXAMPLES
$seconds = parsedate("Mon Jan 2 04:24:27 1995");
$seconds = parsedate("Tue Apr 4 00:22:12 PDT 1995");
$seconds = parsedate("04.04.95 00:22", ZONE => PDT);
$seconds = parsedate("Jan 1 1999 11:23:34.578", SUBSECOND => 1);
$seconds = parsedate("122212 950404", ZONE => PDT, TIMEFIRST => 1);
$seconds = parsedate("+3 secs", NOW => 796978800);
$seconds = parsedate("2 months", NOW => 796720932);
$seconds = parsedate("last Tuesday");
$seconds = parsedate("Sunday before last");
($seconds, $remaining) = parsedate("today is the day");
($seconds, $error) = parsedate("today is", WHOLE=>1);
AUTHOR
David Muir Sharnoff <muir@idiom.com>.
LICENSE
Copyright (C) 1996-2006 David Muir Sharnoff. License hereby granted for anyone to use, modify or redistribute this module at their own
risk. Please feed useful changes back to muir@idiom.com.
perl v5.12.1 2006-08-15 Time::ParseDate(3)