I'm having problems since few days ago, and i'm not able to make it works with a simple awk+grep script (or other way to do this).
For example, i have a input file1.txt:
cat inputfile1.txt
218299910417
1172051195
1172070231
1172073514
1183135117
1183135118
1183135119
1281440202
... (3 Replies)
Hello.
I've been banging my head against walls trying to search a comma delimited file, using awk. I'm trying to search a "column" for a specific parameter, if it matches, then I'd like to print the whole line.
I've read in multiple texts:
awk -F, '{ if ($4 == "string") print $0 }'... (2 Replies)
I am trying to match a pattern exactly in a shell script. I have tried two methods
awk '/\<mpath${CURR_MP}\>/{print $1 $2}' multipath
perl -ne '/\bmpath${CURR_MP}\b/ and print' /var/tmp/multipath
Both these methods require that I use the escape character. I am guessing that is why... (8 Replies)
Hi,
I have two files. 1st file has 1 column (huge file containing ~19200000 lines) and 2nd file has 2 columns (small file containing ~6000 lines).
#################################
huge_file.txt
a
a
ab
b
##################################
small_file.txt
a 1.5
b 2.5
ab ... (4 Replies)
I have a file with many lines which contain strings like .. etc.
But with no rule regarding field separators or anything else.
I want to print ONLY THE STRING from each line , not the entire line !!!
For example from the lines :
Flow on service executed with success in . Performances... (5 Replies)
Hello everyone,
Maybe somebody could help me with an awk script.
I have this input (field separator is comma ","):
547894982,M|N|J,U|Q|P,98,101,0,1,1
234900027,M|N|J,U|Q|P,98,101,0,1,1
234900023,M|N|J,U|Q|P,98,54,3,1,1
234900028,M|H|J,S|Q|P,98,101,0,1,1
234900030,M|N|J,U|F|P,98,101,0,1,1... (2 Replies)
Hi,
My input files is like this
axis1 0 1 10
axis2 0 1 5
axis1 1 2 -4
axis2 2 3 -3
axis1 3 4 5
axis2 3 4 -1
axis1 4 5 -6
axis2 4 5 1
Now, these are my following tasks
1. Print a first column for every two rows that has the same value followed by a string.
2. Match on the... (3 Replies)
I have two files and desire to use the strings from $1 of file 1 (file1.txt) as search criteria to find matches in $2 of file 2 (file2.txt). If matches are found I want to output the entire line of file 2 (file2.txt) followed by fields $2-$11 of file 1 (file1.txt). I can find the matches, I cannot... (7 Replies)
In the awk below I am trying to output those lines that Match between file1 and file2, those Missing in file1, and those missing in file2. Using each $1,$2,$4,$5 value as a key to match on, that is if those 4 fields are found in both files the match, but if those 4 fields are not found then missing... (0 Replies)
I cannot seem to get what should be a simple awk one-liner to work correctly and cannot figure out why. I would like to use patterns from a specific field in one file as regex to search for matching strings in the entire line ($0) of another file.
I would like to output the lines of File2 which... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jvoot
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
net::ldap::control::entrychange
Net::LDAP::Control::EntryChange(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Net::LDAP::Control::EntryChange(3)NAME
Net::LDAP::Control::EntryChange - LDAPv3 Entry Change Notification control object
SYNOPSIS
use Net::LDAP;
use Net::LDAP::Control::PersistentSearch;
use Net::LDAP::Constant qw(LDAP_CONTROL_ENTRYCHANGE);
$ldap = Net::LDAP->new( "ldap.mydomain.eg" );
$persist = Net::LDAP::Control::PersistentSearch->new( changeTypes => 15,
changesOnly => 1,
returnECs => 1 );
$srch = $ldap->search( base => "cn=People,dc=mydomain,dc=eg",
filter => "(objectClass=person)",
callback => &process_entry, # call for each entry
control => [ $persist ] );
die "error: ",$srch->code(),": ",$srch->error() if ($srch->code());
sub process_entry {
my $message = shift;
my $entry = shift;
my ($control) = $message->control(LDAP_CONTROL_ENTRYCHANGE);
print $control->changeType()." ".$entry->dn()."
";
}
DESCRIPTION
"Net::LDAP::Control::EntryChange" provides an interface for the creation and manipulation of objects that represent the
"EntryChangeNotification" control as described by draft-smith-psearch-ldap-01.txt.
CONSTRUCTOR ARGUMENTS
In addition to the constructor arguments described in Net::LDAP::Control the following are provided.
changeType
An integer value telling the type of LDAP operation that the entry has undergone. It is one of the following values (which represent
the LDAP operations indicated next to them):
1 = add
2 = delete
4 = modify
8 = modDN
previousDN
When changeType is 8 (for modDN) this parameter tells the entry's DN before the modDN operation. In all other cases this value is not
defined.
changeNumber
This is the change number according to <draft-good-ldap-changelog-03.txt> assigned by a server for the change. If a server supports an
LDAP Change Log it should include this field.
Usually you do not need to create a "Net::LDAP::Control::EntryChange" control yourself because it is provided by the server in response to
an option with the "Net::LDAP::Control::PersistentSearch" control.
METHODS
As with Net::LDAP::Control each constructor argument described above is also available as a method on the object which will return the
current value for the attribute if called without an argument, and set a new value for the attribute if called with an argument.
SEE ALSO
Net::LDAP, Net::LDAP::Control, Net::LDAP::Control::PersistentSearch
AUTHOR
Peter Marschall <peter@adpm.de>, based on Net::LDAP::Control::Page from Graham Barr <gbarr@pobox.com> and the preparatory work of Don
Miller <donm@uidaho.edu>.
Please report any bugs, or post any suggestions, to the perl-ldap mailing list <perl-ldap@perl.org>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2004 Peter Marschall. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.12.1 2010-03-12 Net::LDAP::Control::EntryChange(3)