how can i use awk or sed to do a conditional statement, so that
HH:MM
if MM not great than 30 , then MM=00
else MM=30
ie:
10:34 will display 10:30
10:29 will display 10:00
a=$(echo 10:34 | awk ......)
Thanks in advance (10 Replies)
can somebody help, what quote i should use in below statement or what wrong of it ?
the 1st (*) is a char, the 2nd and 3rd (*) is a wildcard
if ] && ] && ]
................^ .............^
then
echo "ok"
fi
thanks in advance. (2 Replies)
Hi all,
The following code is to find if a list of numbers from one file are within the range in another file.
awk -F, '\
BEGIN {
while ((getline < "file2") > 0)
file2=$3
}
{for (col1 in file2)
if ($0>=30 && $1<=45)
print $0} ' FILE1
But where I have the number 30 and 45, I... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I'm getting a "bad number" error from the following conditional if statement. I understand the results of the grep command are not being treated a an integer but am unsure of the correct syntax. Any help would be appreciated.
if
Thanks (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have a script like this:
sample.sh
mapping=$1
if
then
echo "program passed"
fi
I'm running the above script as ./sample.sh pass
The script is not getting executed and says "integer expression expected"
Could anyone kindly help me? (2 Replies)
Please see the script segment below
for i in $files
do
echo $i
if ; then
case "$1" in
"IE0263"|"IE0264"|"IE0267"|"IE0268")
short_filename=`ls -l $i | cut -c108-136 | sort`
;;
"IE0272"|"IE0273")
short_filename=`ls -l $i | cut... (4 Replies)
I need to implement something like this.
1) search for a file(say *.doc) from a path (say /home/user/temp)
2) if file found & if file size > 0 : yes --> file valid
else : print file not valid.
I am trying to implement something like this, but seems i am terribly wrong somewhere.. ... (1 Reply)
I'm trying to make a small script to see if you say a specific word, in bash.
Here is my code so far :
if ]; then
echo "You typed Something Device Something"
fi
exit 0
It does not echo what it should, even if i type something along the lines of "random Device stuff"
Please help,... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I have a file containing the values that would be use as the basis for printing the lines of another set of files using awk. What I want to do is something like the one below:
stdev.txt
0.21
0.42
0.32
0.25
0.15
file1.txt file2.txt file3.txt ..filen.txt
0.45 0.23 ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ida1215
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
slack.conf
slack.conf(5) File Formats Manual slack.conf(5)NAME
slack.conf - configuration file for slack
DESCRIPTION
The file /etc/slack.conf contains configuration information for slack(8) and its backends. It should contain one keyword-value pair per
line, separated by an '=' sign. Keywords must consist solely of capital letters and underscores. Values may take any appropriate format,
but must not begin with a space. Comments start with '#', and all text from the '#' to the end of a line is ignored. Trailing whitespace
on lines is ignored. Empty lines or lines consisting of only whitespace and comments are ignored.
Valid keywords are:
SOURCE The master source for slack roles. It can be in one of four forms:
o /path/to/dir
Use a local directory.
o somehost:/path/to/dir
Use given directory on a remote host via rsync over SSH.
o rsync://somehost/module
Use module on a remote rsyncd server (directly over the network).
o somehost::module
Use the rsync daemon protocol over SSH to the given host. See "USING RSYNC-DAEMON FEATURES VIA A REMOTE-SHELL CONNECTION" in
rsync(1)
All forms of SOURCE are passed directly to rsync, so you can do things like add "user@" before the host on any remote forms. For
more about what rsync can do, see its manual page, of course.
For the last form, however, we do a little magic. rsync treats the last two forms equivalently, so we overload the last form by
automatically passing "-e ssh" to rsync when we see it. This hack lets us tell slack to use this nice feature of rsync just using
the SOURCE config option.
ROOT The root filesystem into which to install slack roles. Usually '/'.
ROLE_LIST
The location of the role list, which lists the roles to be installed by default on each host.
This can be a path relative to the source, or can be an entirely separate location if it starts with a slash or a hostname (option-
ally preceeded by user@).
CACHE A local cache directory, used as a local mirror of the SOURCE.
STAGE A local staging directory, used as an intermediate stage when installing files.
BACKUP_DIR
A directory in which to keep dated backups for rollbacks.
EXAMPLE
A typical file might look like this:
# slack.conf configuration file
SOURCE=slack-master:/slack # source is on a remote
# host named "slack-master"
ROLE_LIST=slack-master:/roles.conf
ROOT=/
CACHE=/var/cache/slack
STAGE=/var/lib/slack/stage
BACKUP_DIR=/var/lib/slack/backups
FILES
/etc/slack.conf
SEE ALSO slack(8), rsync(1)File formats 2005-05-23 slack.conf(5)