Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Script for Logfile Inserting into the Database Post 302515931 by ahamed101 on Thursday 21st of April 2011 08:14:43 AM
Old 04-21-2011
You can do the job similar way using cronjob.
Set up the second script to run as cronjob as per the required time interval and do the job of inserting the data into the sql database through this script.

what is that you need help for?

regards,
Ahamed
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

perl script to filter logfile

i was wondering if anyone can help me, how could i write in perl a a script that would look through a log file and print onscreen the contents of the log file excluding lines that contain '192.168.1.' and entries that contain directory paths that arent in the directory /usr/local/httpd/htdocs/ i... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: norsk hedensk
4 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Script to manipulate logfile text

Hi guys, I was wandering if a Shell guru could give me some advice on tackling a problem. I have used a mixture of grep, cut and awk to get data from a log file in the following format: 14/11/08 10:39: Checking currenly : Enabled 14/11/08 10:39: Records allocated : 221... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: rosspaddock
11 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Attaching a logfile to the Script

Hello guys. I've recently written a basic utilities script just for home use. and i want to attach a logfile to it that will record all the commands that where executed in that script. Then just so i can add the d%b%y% and make each logfile unique and i can look back in each logfile to see what i... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: matt02
9 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Logfile rotation script.

I'm trying to find or create a Perl script that: Checks for and creates these files: notes notes.1 notes.2 notes.3 notes.4 The first represents the current log file and the others are older versions. Each time the script runs it would check for the existence of notes.3 and, if it exists,... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: HardyV2
3 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Logfile monitor script

Hi, I'm trying to write a logfile monitor script that reads the logfile and then emails out once there is an error with SQL in. Here is my attempt below which does not work. I'm not much of a scripter as you can probably see but some pointers in the right direction would be much appreciated. ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: elmesy
3 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

on manual script need to add logfile

hi all, 1.I am new to linux shell scripting. 2.i had an rman.sh script which will take backup all database using CATALOG DATABASE. 3.While executing that script my catalog DB gets shutdown. 4.The rman.sh script are executed manually. 5.so i need log for rman.sh .And also it is very useful... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jp_linux
1 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Logfile monitoring with logfile replacement

Bonjour, I've wrote a script to monitor a logfile in realtime. It is working almost perfeclty except for two things. The script use the following technique : tail -fn0 $logfile | \ while read line ; do ... some stuff done First one, I'd like a way to end the monitoring script if a... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Warluck
3 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Inserting values into database from an excel

Hi, I have a requirement where I have an excel sheet with the below values COL1 COL2 COL3 Germany URGENT NORMAL I want to cut the values of this excel in such a way that I get the values and pass it to an insert statement update tbfin set... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: venkidhadha
2 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Inserting script variables into database

I have a script working out ink percentages #!/bin/bash currentcyan=$'iso.3.6.1.2.1.43.11.1.1.9.1.1 = INTEGER: 990' currentmagenta=$'iso.3.6.1.2.1.43.11.1.1.9.1.2 = INTEGER: 972' currentyellow=$'iso.3.6.1.2.1.43.11.1.1.9.1.3 = INTEGER: 972' currentblack=$'iso.3.6.1.2.1.43.11.1.1.9.1.4 =... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: leshy93
1 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Inserting values to database

hi , I'm new to Unix shell scripting. I need help to insert read csv which has two columns -emp no and logged date. csv file is a large file so i want to keep the insertion query in a separate .sql file. csv file looks this: empno | loggeddate ___________________ 5666 ,... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: preema
5 Replies
ns_sched(3aolserver)					    AOLserver Built-In Commands 				      ns_sched(3aolserver)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
ns_after, ns_cancel, ns_pause, ns_resume, ns_schedule_daily, ns_schedule_proc, ns_schedule_weekly, ns_unschedule_proc - commands SYNOPSIS
ns_after seconds {script | procname ?args?} ns_cancel id ns_pause id ns_resume id ns_schedule_daily ?-thread? ?-once? hour minute {script | procname ?args?} ns_schedule_proc ?-thread? ?-once? interval {script | procname ?args?} ns_schedule_weekly ?-thread? ?-once? day hour minute {script | procname ?args?} ns_unschedule_proc id _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
ns_after run the specified script or procedure after the specified number of seconds ns_after returns an id which can be used with the ns_pause, ns_cancel and ns_resume apis. ns_cancel stops the scheduled running of the id returned by an ns_after returns 1 if unscheduled 0 if the script of procedure couldn't be unscheduled ns_pause pauses the scheduled running of the id returned by an ns_after returns 1 if paused, 0 if the script of procedure couldn't be paused ns_resume resumes the scheduled running of the id returned by an ns_after returns 1 if resumed, 0 if the script of procedure couldn't be resumed ns_schedule_daily ns_schedule_daily runs the specified Tcl script or procedure (procname) once a day at the time specified by hour and minute. The hour can be from 0 to 23, and the minute can be from 0 to 59. Specify -thread if you want a thread created to run the procedure. This will allow the scheduler to continue with other scheduled procedures. Specifying -thread is appropriate in situations where the script will not return immediately, such as when the script performs network activity. Specify -once if you want the script to run only one time. The default is that the script will be re-scheduled after each time it is run. ns_schedule_daily returns an id number for the scheduled procedure that is needed to stop the scheduled procedure with ns_unsched- ule_proc. ns_schedule_proc ns_schedule_proc runs the specified Tcl script or procedure (procname) at an interval specified by interval. The interval is the number of seconds between runs of the script. Specify -thread if you want a thread created to run the procedure. This will allow the scheduler to continue with other scheduled procedures. Specifying -thread is appropriate in situations where the script will not return immediately, such as when the script performs network activity. Specify -once if you want the script to run only one time. The default is that the script will be re-scheduled after each time it is run. ns_schedule_proc returns an id number for the scheduled procedure that is needed to stop the scheduled procedure with ns_unsched- ule_proc. ns_schedule_weekly ns_schedule_weekly runs the specified Tcl script or procedure (procname) once a week on the day specified by day and the time speci- fied by hour and minute. The day can be from 0 to 6, where 0 represents Sunday. The hour can be from 0 to 23, and the minute can be from 0 to 59. Specify -thread if you want a thread created to run the procedure. This will allow the scheduler to continue with other scheduled procedures. Specifying -thread is appropriate in situations where the script will not return immediately, such as when the script performs network activity. Specify -once if you want the script to run only one time. The default is that the script will be re-scheduled after each time it is run. ns_schedule_weekly returns an id number for the scheduled procedure that is needed to stop the scheduled procedure with ns_unsched- ule_proc. ns_unschedule_proc id ns_unschedule_proc stops a scheduled procedure from executing anymore. The scheduled procedure to be stopped is identified by its id, which was returned by the ns_schedule* function that was used to schedule the procedure. EXAMPLES
ns_after ns_cancel ns_pause ns_resume This example illustrates a web interface used to manage jobs. Depending on the action provided a job can be created, cancelled, paused or resumed. set action [ns_queryget action] set job [ns_queryget job] switch $action { create { set job [ns_after 10 [ns_queryget script]] ns_puts "Job created with id: $job" } cancel { if {[ns_cancel $job]} { ns_puts "Job $job cancelled" } else { ns_puts "Job $job not cancelled" } } pause { if {[ns_pause $job]} { ns_puts "Job $job paused" } else { ns_puts "Job $job not paused } } resume { if {[ns_resume $job]} { ns_puts "Job $job resumed" } else { ns_puts "Job $job couldn't be resumed" } } default { ns_puts "Invalid action $action" } } ns_schedule_daily This example defines a script called rolllog that uses ns_accesslog to roll the access log to a file with an extension containing the current date. The ns_schedule_daily function is used to execute the rolllog script on a daily basis. # Script to roll and rcp log file to host "grinder" proc rolllog {} { set suffix [ns_strftime "%y-%m-%d"] set new [ns_accesslog file].$suffix ns_accesslog roll $new exec rcp $new grinder:/logs/[file tail $new] } # Schedule "rolllog" to run at 3:30 am each morning ns_schedule_daily -thread 3 30 rolllog ns_schedule_proc proc dosomething blah { ns_log Notice "proc with arg '$blah'" } ns_schedule_proc 10 dosomething $arg1 SEE ALSO
KEYWORDS
schedule pause resume unschedule cancel after AOLserver 4.0 ns_sched(3aolserver)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:22 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy