Hi,
I am using the following command to extract any log files that are older than 3 days using the following command.
find DIR/LOGDIR -type f -mtime +3 |grep LOG > log_list.out
The results are
DIR/LOGDIR/1.LOG
DIR/LOGDIR/2.LOG
DIR/LOGDIR/3.LOG
DIR/LOGDIR/4.LOG
How do inculde (basename... (4 Replies)
Hi guys if i do
a=`basename -e -s /home/j/john/*`
du -k -h $a | sort -nr | head -10
why when i run the script does it work but also say usage basename string
any ideas thanks (9 Replies)
hi if we have to use basename how can we do this in awk?
did the below but is not working..
psg -t "?"| awk '{
command=($5 ~ /^/)? $9:$8
# cmd_name=`basename $command` (gives error)
system("basename $command >>... (10 Replies)
I am having a hard time extracting the file name from the above code. Instead of printing /folder/file.1$.5$, I would like it to print the file name file.1$.5$.
I have tried using basename but it looks like NAWK or AWK does not recognise basename. Each time I type it in, it prints out the word... (4 Replies)
Hi,
can anyone let me know how to interpret the below third line in the following code.
Gone through the man pages of "basename", but no go.
for f in *.foo;
do
base=`basename $f .foo`
mv $f $base.bar
done
Thanks. (2 Replies)
Hi
I have been able generate a file ($ELOG) that can have multiple lines within it. The first column represents the full path source file and the other is the full path target ... the file names are the same but the target directory paths are slightly different.
<source_dir1>/file1 ... (4 Replies)
what is the meaning of "script_name=$(basename $0)", can someone please explain? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: abhi200389
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
zegrep
ZGREP(1) BSD General Commands Manual ZGREP(1)NAME
zgrep, zegrep, zfgrep -- print lines matching a pattern in gzip-compressed files
SYNOPSIS
zgrep [grep-flags] [--] pattern [files ...]
zegrep [grep-flags] [--] pattern [file ...]
zfgrep [grep-flags] [--] pattern [file ...]
DESCRIPTION
zgrep runs grep(1) on files or stdin, if no files argument is given, after decompressing them with zcat(1).
The grep-flags and pattern arguments are passed on to grep(1). If an -e flag is found in the grep-flags, zgrep will not look for a pattern
argument.
zegrep calls egrep(1), while zfgrep calls fgrep(1).
EXIT STATUS
In case of missing arguments or missing pattern, 1 will be returned, otherwise 0.
SEE ALSO egrep(1), fgrep(1), grep(1), gzip(1), zcat(1)AUTHORS
Thomas Klausner <wiz@NetBSD.org>
BSD December 28, 2003 BSD