10-18-2011
edited
Last edited by Calbrenar; 10-19-2011 at 11:45 AM..
Reason: made new thread since different problem
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello,
I thought it was possible to use several time a #! entry on a script but it doesn't seems to work. My need is to have a part of a ksh script without substitution so it would look like
#!/bin/ksh
--
first part
---
#!/bin/ksh -f
--
part without substitution
--
#!/bin/ksh
--... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: solea
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2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi folks
Please let me know if anyone knows how to handle this.
My KSH script -> testscript.ksh
cmd=$1
ENV="devl"
echo $cmd
This is how I call the script
./testscript.ksh 'ps -ef | grep br$ENV'
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3. Solaris
Hi,
Following code is working in bash but not in ksh.
Can someone please send me an alternative?
#!/bin/ksh
fname="EOA.dmp"
echo $fname
logname=${fname/.dmp/.log}
echo $logname
I am getting below error in ksh
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4. Shell Programming and Scripting
What I'm trying to do is perform a copy, well a ditto actually, on the results of a find command, but some inline string substitution needs to happen.
So if I run this code find ./ -name "*.tif" I get back these results.
.//1234567.tif
.//abcdefg.tif
Now the action from exec or xargs I... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: myndcraft
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5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi
I have a variable BIT1 which holds some value. Is there a way to retrieve the value of this variable indirectly via another variable, lets say SUBSET_BIT_NUM=1, so the call will look something like this:
sundev1 $ echo ${BIT${SUBSET_BIT_NUM}}
ksh: ${BIT${SUBSET_BIT_NUM}}: bad substitution
... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: aoussenko
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6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Gurus,
I am working with a korn shell script. I should replace in a very great file the character ";" with a space.
Example:
2750;~
2734;~
2778;~
2751;~
2751;~
2752;~
what the fastest method is? Sed? Awk?
Speed is dead main point, Seen the dimensions of the files
Thanks (6 Replies)
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7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Dear Friends,
Please let me know how to use the date command inside the substitution flag replacement string.
echo "01 Jan 2003:11:00:06 +0100" | sed 's/\(.*\)/`date -d \1 "+%Y%m%d%H%M%S"`/'
I want to supply \1 string to Here mention below as part of replacement string,
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8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello people.
Part of my script:
SUBSETID=`echo $PMFILE |sed 's/pmresult_//' | sed 's/_*//'`
MAPFILE=`find /huawei/cell /huawei/nodeb /huawei/rnc -name 'mapping_$SUBSETID.txt' |grep -v backup`
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Discussion started by: drbiloukos
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9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello all. This is my first post/question on this site.
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10. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I am a bit confused ,why would a sed command work fine outside of ksh script but not inside.
e.g
I want to replace all the characters which end with a value and have space at end of it.
so my command for it is :
sed -i "s/$SEPARATOR /$SEPARATOR/g" file_name
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Discussion started by: vital_parsley
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REDIFF(1) Man pages REDIFF(1)
NAME
rediff, editdiff - fix offsets and counts of a hand-edited diff
SYNOPSIS
rediff ORIGINAL EDITED
rediff EDITED
rediff {[--help] | [--version]}
editdiff FILE
editdiff {[--help] | [--version]}
DESCRIPTION
You can use rediff to correct a hand-edited unified diff. Take a copy of the diff you want to edit, and edit it without changing any
offsets or counts (the lines that begin "@@"). Then run rediff, telling it the name of the original diff file and the name of the one you
have edited, and it will output the edited diff file but with corrected offsets and counts.
A small script, editdiff, is provided for editing a diff file in-place.
The types of changes that are currently handled are:
o Modifying the text of any file content line (of course).
o Adding new line insertions or deletions.
o Adding, changing or removing context lines. Lines at the context horizon are dealt with by adjusting the offset and/or count.
o Adding a single hunk (@@-prefixed section).
o Removing multiple hunk (@@-prefixed sections).
Alternatively, if only one argument is provided, it is taken to be the edited file and the counts and offsets are adjusted as appropriate.
Some assumptions are made when used in this mode. See recountdiff(1) for more information.
OPTIONS
--help
Display a short usage message.
--version
Display the version number of rediff.
SEE ALSO
interdiff(1), recountdiff(1)
AUTHOR
Tim Waugh <twaugh@redhat.com>
Package maintainer
patchutils 13 May 2002 REDIFF(1)