07-30-2011
Truly and Madly !
Much appreciated !
5 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. News, Links, Events and Announcements
We have Labour day, Secretary Day Etc. But there is another day upcoming, which is System Administrator Day. (System Administrator Appreciation Day Friday - July 26th, 2002)
http://www.sysadminday.com/
" Nice to hear that all our hardworks are getting noticed "
:cool: (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: killerserv
2 Replies
2. What is on Your Mind?
Hello all,
Happy turkey day! I have no questions at this time. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mskcc
1 Replies
3. Red Hat
Document Freedom Day (DFD) is a global grassroots effort* to promote and build awareness of the importance of free document formats in particular and open standards in general.* If you have ever received a document from a friend that your software could not open, then you know the frustration of... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Linux Bot
0 Replies
4. News, Links, Events and Announcements
Hi All,
I just joined this forum, and I think its great!
I wanted to let you know in honor of Systems Administrator Appreciation Day (which is next Friday, as you probably know), I'm organizing a meetup in New York City to celebrate.
I've made a page with more information here: ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: MPSimmons
0 Replies
5. What is on Your Mind?
Just saw Alita Battle Angel with my Valentine and we really liked it. Hope many will go see it so they will make a sequel.
https://www.unix.com/members/1-albums221-picture1089.jpg (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
exigrep
EXIGREP(8) System Manager's Manual EXIGREP(8)
NAME
EXIGREP - Search Exim's main log
SYNOPSIS
exigrep [-l] pattern [log file] ...
DESCRIPTION
The exigrep utility is a Perl script that searches one or more main log files for entries that match a given pattern. When it finds a
match, it extracts all the log entries for the relevant message, not just those that match the pattern. Thus, exigrep can extract complete
log entries for a given message, or all mail for a given user, or for a given host, for example.
The -l flag means 'literal', that is, treat all characters in the pattern as standing for themselves. Otherwise the pattern must be a Perl
regular expression. The pattern match is case-insensitive. If no file names are given on the command line, the standard input is read.
If the location of a zcat command is known from the definition of ZCAT_COMMAND in Local/Makefile, exigrep automatically passes any file
whose name ends in COMPRESS_SUFFIX through zcat as it searches it.
BUGS
This manual page needs a major re-work. If somebody knows better groff than us and has more experience in writing manual pages, any patches
would be greatly appreciated.
SEE ALSO
exim(8), perlre(1), /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/
AUTHOR
This manual page was stitched together from spec.txt by Andreas Metzler <ametzler at downhill.at.eu.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system
(but may be used by others).
March 26, 2003 EXIGREP(8)