Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: statistics using awk
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting statistics using awk Post 302526464 by Diya123 on Tuesday 31st of May 2011 03:01:18 PM
Old 05-31-2011
Thanks.. It worked.. I was giving the header line so it did not work..
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Programming

Server Statistics ?

I'm trying to write a C program to view server statistics such as: - server general information - CPU usage - memory usage - running processes Cany anybody gives me hints on those system calls ?? ps: I'm using Tru64 unix (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Agent007
6 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Analyze Statistics

I have a file which contains records in the format of 2006-08-25 12:06:13|ABC|93 2006-08-25 12:45:55|ABC|203 2006-08-25 01:48:19|DEF|156 2006-08-25 01:49:09|ABC|12798 2006-08-25 02:49:59|GHL|4109 2006-08-25 03:50:50|DEF|234 where the format is "arrive time"|"message type"|"processing... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: mpang_
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

AWK- extracting values from columns, saving them and gettins statistics

Hello, I am obviously quite new to unix and awk. I need to parse certain columns of a file (delimited by spaces), and somehow save the value of this column somewhere, together with the value of the column just after it (by pairs; so something like ). I'm then supposed to count the times that... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: acsg
9 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Awk getting statistics of a grid file,

Hi , I have the following file which is basically a grid (has more than 100000 rows) LLL1 PPP1 LLL1 PPP2 LLL1 PPP3 ............... LLL1 5500 ..... LLL2 PPP1 LLL2 PPP2 LLL2 PPP3 ............... LLL1 5500 ..... L100 PPP1 L100 PPP2 L100 PPP3 ............... 2100 5500... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: alex2005
6 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk based script to print the "mode(statistics term)" for each column in a data file

Hi All, Thanks all for the continued support so far. Today, I need to find the most occurring string/number(also called mode in statistics terminology) for each column in a data file (.csv type). For one column of data(1.txt) like below Sample 1 2 2 3 4 1 1 1 2 I can find the mode... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: ks_reddy
6 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Any way to get process statistics?

Hi, Can someone advise what "generic" command can I use to show statistics of a process or a running script/process? For example, I want to know how many hours/minutes it's taken to run or has been running, how much CPU it used and how much memory it used or uses. I want to be able to... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: newbie_01
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Text statistics

Hello every body if I want to get the following statistics from a text file 1- sorted the n frequent words 2- sorted the n frequent characters 3- sorted the n frequent diagrams (tow letter together like th OR he) 4- sorted frequent n trigrams like (the OR all etc. ) 5- any character... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: khaled79
10 Replies

8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Need optimized awk/perl/shell to give the statistics for the Large delimited file

I have a file size is around 24 G with 14 columns, delimiter with "|" My requirement- can anyone provide me the fastest and best to get the below results Number of records of the file First column and second Column- Unique counts Thanks for your time Karti ------ Post updated at... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: kartikirans
3 Replies
PCAP-SAVEFILE(5)						File Formats Manual						  PCAP-SAVEFILE(5)

NAME
pcap-savefile - libpcap savefile format DESCRIPTION
NOTE: applications and libraries should, if possible, use libpcap to read savefiles, rather than having their own code to read savefiles. If, in the future, a new file format is supported by libpcap, applications and libraries using libpcap to read savefiles will be able to read the new format of savefiles, but applications and libraries using their own code to read savefiles will have to be changed to support the new file format. ``Savefiles'' read and written by libpcap and applications using libpcap start with a per-file header. The format of the per-file header is: +------------------------------+ | Magic number | +--------------+---------------+ |Major version | Minor version | +--------------+---------------+ | Time zone offset | +------------------------------+ | Time stamp accuracy | +------------------------------+ | Snapshot length | +------------------------------+ | Link-layer header type | +------------------------------+ All fields in the per-file header are in the byte order of the host writing the file. The first field in the per-file header is a 4-byte magic number, with the value 0xa1b2c3d4. The magic number, when read by a host with the same byte order as the host that wrote the file, will have the value 0xa1b2c3d4, and, when read by a host with the opposite byte order as the host that wrote the file, will have the value 0xd4c3b2a1. That allows software reading the file to determine whether the byte order of the host that wrote the file is the same as the byte order of the host on which the file is being read, and thus whether the values in the per-file and per-packet headers need to be byte- swapped. Following this are: A 2-byte file format major version number; the current version number is 2. A 2-byte file format minor version number; the current version number is 4. A 4-byte time zone offset; this is always 0. A 4-byte number giving the accuracy of time stamps in the file; this is always 0. A 4-byte number giving the "snapshot length" of the capture; packets longer than the snapshot length are truncated to the snapshot length, so that, if the snapshot length is N, only the first N bytes of a packet longer than N bytes will be saved in the capture. a 4-byte number giving the link-layer header type for packets in the capture; see pcap-linktype(7) for the LINKTYPE_ values that can appear in this field. Following the per-file header are zero or more packets; each packet begins with a per-packet header, which is immediately followed by the raw packet data. The format of the per-packet header is: +---------------------------------------+ | Time stamp, seconds value | +---------------------------------------+ | Time stamp, microseconds value | +---------------------------------------+ | Length of captured packet data | +---------------------------------------+ |Un-truncated length of the packet data | +---------------------------------------+ All fields in the per-packet header are in the byte order of the host writing the file. The per-packet header begins with a time stamp giving the approximate time the packet was captured; the time stamp consists of a 4-byte value, giving the time in seconds since January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 UTC, followed by a 4-byte value, giving the time in microseconds since that second. Following that are a 4-byte value giv- ing the number of bytes of captured data that follow the per-packet header and a 4-byte value giving the number of bytes that would have been present had the packet not been truncated by the snapshot length. The two lengths will be equal if the number of bytes of packet data are less than or equal to the snapshot length. SEE ALSO
pcap(3PCAP), pcap-linktype(7) 21 October 2008 PCAP-SAVEFILE(5)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:09 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy