I need to read the last file for a particular day, such as, "Jun 13" because the CSV file is cumulative for the entire day, so I don't want all the previous files, I just want the last file, for that day.
I ran an 'ls -al | grep "June 13" > myLs.txt' (simplified) to list all files from that day.... (2 Replies)
Hi Guys
How u all doing?
I am having tough time to achieve this I have a unix .ksh script which calls
sql script
Right now I harcoded column id's in sql script but I want to read them from a txt file
1084,1143,1074,1080,1091,1090,1101,1069,1104,1087,1089,1081
I want to read this... (4 Replies)
Hello,
I have a set of .txt files I cannot read.
This is a part of what I see.
Is there a way to view these files?
_MO<P.6D@K;WU<B$X-;)SIV/ROO!UL+1P=VTT-?,SLC`MI/6QMS#UYGGT\+)C=#\UIO`TL/0]=#/T)
it's about 3 pages.
Thanks for your help.
Joe (3 Replies)
i'm a beginner in shell and i have a txt file that is updating every second or msec so i need a program to read the last line of this txt file
is this possible to do? (5 Replies)
Hello All,
I just want help in coding a simple shell script since i am a newbie for UNIX and i started learning unix and shell scripting basics recently.
I am having a data like this in .txt file.
Product Name : XYZ
Price : 678.1
Best Buy Price : 600
Product Name : ABC
Price : 465... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I need to read one file which excludes the line starting with #.
example file:
#Working directory
WORK_DIR|/home/mypath
#Remote directory
REMOTE_DIR|/home/remote
I am reading this file with the following code,
while read line;
do
KEY=`echo "$line" | cut -d "|" -f 1`
... (5 Replies)
Hi everyone,
I have two files (A and B) and want to combine them to one by always taking 10 rows from file A and subsequently 6 lines from file B. This process shall be repeated 40 times (file A = 400 lines; file B = 240 lines).
Does anybody have an idea how to do that using perl, awk or sed?... (6 Replies)
Hi all,
I'm new in unix. Need some help here.
I have a file called server.cfg which contains the servers name, if I don't want to run on that server, I'll put a "#" infront it.
username1@hostname.com
username2@hostname.com
#username3@hostname.com
#username4@hostname.com... (17 Replies)
I am new to ksh scripts. I would like to be able to read a file line by line from a certain line number. I have a specific line number saved in a variable, say $lineNumber. How can I start reading the file from the line number saved in $lineNumber? Thanks! (4 Replies)
e.g.
File name: File.txt
cat File.txt
Result:
#INBOUND_QUEUE=FAQ1
INBOUND_QUEUE=FAQ2
I want to get the value for one which is not commented out.
Thanks, (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tanu
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
setfile
SETFILE(1) BSD General Commands Manual SETFILE(1)NAME
/usr/bin/SetFile -- set attributes of files and directories
SYNOPSIS
/usr/bin/SetFile [-P] [-a attributes] [-c creator] [-d date] [-m date] [-t type] file ...
DESCRIPTION
/usr/bin/SetFile is a tool to set the file attributes on files in an HFS+ directory. It attempts to be similar to the setfile command in MPW.
It can apply rules to more than one file with the options applying to all files listed.
Flags:
-P Acts on a symlink file instead on the file the symlink resolves to.
-a attributes Sets the file attributes bits where attributes is a string of case sensitive letters. Each letter corresponds to a file
attribute: an uppercase letter indicates that the attribute bit is set (1), a lowercase letter indicates that it is not (0).
Note: attributes not specified remain unchanged.
A | a Alias file
B | b Has bundle
C | c Custom icon (allowed on folders)
D | d Located on the desktop (allowed on folders)
E | e Extension is hidden (allowed on folders)
I | i Inited - Finder is aware of this file and has given it a location in a window. (allowed on folders)
L | l Locked
M | m Shared (can run multiple times)
N | n File has no INIT resource
S | s System file (name locked)
T | t "Stationery Pad" file
V | v Invisible (allowed on folders)
Z | z Busy (allowed on folders)
-c creator Specifies the file's creator, where creator can be a string of four MacRoman characters, an empty string ('') designating a
null creator, or a binary, decimal, octal, or hexadecimal number in standard notation (e.g. 0x52486368).
-d date Sets the creation date, where date is a string of the form: "mm/dd/[yy]yy [hh:mm:[:ss] [AM | PM]]" Notes: Enclose the string
in quotation marks if it contains spaces. The date must be in the Unix epoch, that is, between 1/1/1970 and 1/18/2038. If the
year is provided as a two-digit year, it is assumed to be in the 21st century and must be from 00 (2000) through 38 (2038).
-m date Sets the modification date where date is a string of the form in -d above. (mm/dd/[yy]yy [hh:mm:[:ss] [AM | PM]])
-t type Sets the file type, where type can be a string of four MacRoman characters, an empty string ('') designating a null type, or a
binary, decimal, octal, or hexadecimal number in standard notation (e.g. 0x55455955).
RETURN VALUES
0 attributes set
1 syntax error
2 any other error
SEE ALSO GetFileInfo(1)EXAMPLES
This command line sets the modification date of "myFile":
SetFile -m "8/4/2001 16:13" myFile
Mac OS X January 4, 2009 Mac OS X