Hi,
I have file with all the lines as following format
I want to replace (all the lines) value of 'name' by value of 'nameInNameSpace' converted to lowercase with '/' substituted by '.'
For example, in this case, this line would become
Greatly appreciate any suggestion.
Many Thanks.
Last edited by jim mcnamara; 12-28-2011 at 02:28 PM..
Reason: please use code tags to format your examples
I need to remove the '&' from a file.
In each line of the file, the fields are separated by ^K.
I only want to remove '&' if it exists in field number 9. (example of field 9: abc&xyz)
I need to do an in place/in line edit.
So far I have accomplished the following:
awk -F '^K' '{print... (6 Replies)
Col1 Col2 Col3 Col4
12 Completed 08 0830
12 In Progress 09 0829
11 For F U 07 0828
Considering the file above, how could i replace the third column the most efficient way? The actual file size is almost 1G. I am... (10 Replies)
I have the follwoing file:
This looks to be : seperated.
For the first field i want only the file name without ".txt" and also i want to remove "+" sign if the second field starts with "+" sign.
Input file:
Output file:
Appreciate your help (9 Replies)
What is an efficient way to remove all lines from the input file which contain a file name?
inputfile:
=======================
# comment
# comment
# comment
5 8 10 /tmp
5 8 10 /var/run
5 8 10 /etc/vfstab
5 8 9 /var/tmp
5 8 10 /var/adm/messages... (7 Replies)
I'm having a couple of issues. I'm trying to edit a nagios config and remove a host definition if a certain "host_name" is found. My thought is I would find host definition block containing the host_name I'm looking for and output the line numbers for the first and last lines. Using set, I will... (9 Replies)
please help me to edit the second field using awk or sed
i have input file below
aa1001 000001
bb1002 000002
cc1003 000003
so i want the output file like below
aa1001 01
bb1002 02
cc1003 03 (38 Replies)
Hi Experts,
I am new to shell scripting. Need some help in doing one task given by the customer.
The sample record in a file is as follows:
3538,,,,,,ID,ID1,,,,,,,,,,,
It needs to be the following:
3538,,353800,353800,,,ID,ID1,,,,,COLX,,,,,COLY,
And i want to modify this record in... (3 Replies)
I've ended up with a small collection of libraries I like to use with awk, but this means I can't do awk -f librarycode.awk '{ program code }' filename because awk will assume that anything after -f is a filename, not code. Is there any way I can do both? (6 Replies)
Hello,
Just surfed on the web for probable answers but could not get them working.
I wish to replace the string containing spaces by another phrase but below answers did not work.
My string is:
PAIN & GAIN
I wish to convert it to:
P&G
I just need it working with sed with function -i
... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: baris35
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT BSD
unifdef
UNIFDEF(1) General Commands Manual UNIFDEF(1)NAME
unifdef - remove ifdef'ed lines
SYNOPSIS
unifdef [ -t -l -c -Dsym -Usym -idsym -iusym ] ... [ file ]
DESCRIPTION
Unifdef is useful for removing ifdef'ed lines from a file while otherwise leaving the file alone. Unifdef is like a stripped-down C pre-
processor: it is smart enough to deal with the nested ifdefs, comments, single and double quotes of C syntax so that it can do its job, but
it doesn't do any including or interpretation of macros. Neither does it strip out comments, though it recognizes and ignores them. You
specify which symbols you want defined -Dsym or undefined -Usym and the lines inside those ifdefs will be copied to the output or removed
as appropriate. The ifdef, ifndef, else, and endif lines associated with sym will also be removed. Ifdefs involving symbols you don't
specify are untouched and copied out along with their associated ifdef, else, and endif lines. If an ifdef X occurs nested inside another
ifdef X, then the inside ifdef is treated as if it were an unrecognized symbol. If the same symbol appears in more than one argument, only
the first occurrence is significant.
The -l option causes unifdef to replace removed lines with blank lines instead of deleting them.
If you use ifdefs to delimit non-C lines, such as comments or code which is under construction, then you must tell unifdef which symbols
are used for that purpose so that it won't try to parse for quotes and comments in those ifdef'ed lines. You specify that you want the
lines inside certain ifdefs to be ignored but copied out with -idsym and -iusym similar to -Dsym and -Usym above.
If you want to use unifdef for plain text (not C code), use the -t option. This makes unifdef refrain from attempting to recognize com-
ments and single and double quotes.
Unifdef copies its output to stdout and will take its input from stdin if no file argument is given. If the -c argument is specified, then
the operation of unifdef is complemented, i.e. the lines that would have been removed or blanked are retained and vice versa.
SEE ALSO diff(1)DIAGNOSTICS
Premature EOF, inappropriate else or endif.
Exit status is 0 if output is exact copy of input, 1 if not, 2 if trouble.
BUGS
Does not know how to deal with cpp consructs such as
#if defined(X) || defined(Y)
AUTHOR
Dave Yost
4.3 Berkeley Distribution April 29, 1985 UNIFDEF(1)