Hi
I amtrying to read the lines from a file, these lines are absolute paths in the system. I want to check if these paths exists, if they doesn't I want to create that path and put a file in that location/path.
I had no trouble filtering these paths out using awk, grep, uniq etc but when it... (8 Replies)
I am an Awk newbie and cannot wrap my brain around my problem:
Given multi-line records of varying lengths separated by a blank line I need to skip the first two lines
of every record and extract every-other line in each record unless the first line of the record has the word "(CONT)" in the... (10 Replies)
Hi,
I am doing file processing line by line. while reading each line at a specified location I am searching for a particular character and then write that line to another file.
Problem is while writing to another file it was supressing the spaces, which I don't want to do.
Any help is... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I am a beginner in shell scripting. I have written the following script, which is supposed to process the while loop for each line in the sid_home.txt file. But I'm getting the 'end of file' unexpected for the last line. The file sid_home.txt gets generated as expected, but the script... (6 Replies)
Hi Sorry to multipost. I am opening the new thread because the earlier threads head was misleading to my current doubt.
and i am stuck.
list=`cat /u/Test/programs`;
psg "ServTest" | awk -v listawk=$list '{
cmd_name=($5 ~ /^/)? $9:$8
for(pgmname in listawk)
... (6 Replies)
Dear Masters,
Need your help to process the below file named "breakline". At some places the rows are broken into two lines and each rows starts with a tab space.
>cat breakline
_Index 187 18.4K 92 137 100 190 1.0 3.3
_Index-Field 365 26.7K 74 76 75 365 1.0 2.5
_KeyEvent 0 0.0B 0 0 0 0... (8 Replies)
Hi ,
I have a file like
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2011-08-09T10:18:14Z
2011-08-09T10:18:14Z
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How to refresh a graphical display through... (3 Replies)
Hey, not too good at this, so I only managed a clumsy and SLOW solution to my problem that needs a drastic speed up. Any ideas how I write the following in awk only?
Code is supposed to do...
For every line read column values $6, $7, $8 and do a calculation with the same column values of every... (6 Replies)
Hi All,
Iam trying to get a file processed and some lines have spaces...the below is not working
Want to remove empty line
Want to remove lines that start with #
Avoid line with substring WHOA
When trying to get the substring from the var also Iam having trouble
file is like VAR=VALUE,... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: baanprog
13 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
mrtg-logfile
MRTG-LOGFILE(1) mrtg MRTG-LOGFILE(1)NAME
mrtg-logfile - description of the mrtg-2 logfile format
SYNOPSIS
This document provides a description of the contents of the mrtg-2 logfile.
OVERVIEW
The logfile consists of two main sections.
The first Line
It stores the traffic counters from the most recent run of mrtg.
The rest of the File
Stores past traffic rate averates and maxima at increassing intervals.
The first number on each line is a unix time stamp. It represents the number of seconds since 1970.
DETAILS
The first Line
The first line has 3 numbers which are:
A (1st column)
A timestamp of when MRTG last ran for this interface. The timestamp is the number of non-skip seconds passed since the standard UNIX
"epoch" of midnight on 1st of January 1970 GMT.
B (2nd column)
The "incoming bytes counter" value.
C (3rd column)
The "outgoing bytes counter" value.
The rest of the File
The second and remaining lines of the file contains 5 numbers which are:
A (1st column)
The Unix timestamp for the point in time the data on this line is relevant. Note that the interval between timestamps increases as you
progress through the file. At first it is 5 minutes and at the end it is one day between two lines.
This timestamp may be converted in OpenOffice Calc or MS Excel by using the following formula
=(x+y)/86400+DATE(1970;1;1)
(instead of ";" it may be that you have to use "," this depends on the context and your locale settings)
you can also ask perl to help by typing
perl -e 'print scalar localtime(x),"
"'
x is the unix timestamp and y is the offset in seconds from UTC. (Perl knows y).
B (2nd column)
The average incoming transfer rate in bytes per second. This is valid for the time between the A value of the current line and the A
value of the previous line.
C (3rd column)
The average outgoing transfer rate in bytes per second since the previous measurement.
D (4th column)
The maximum incoming transfer rate in bytes per second for the current interval. This is calculated from all the updates which have
occured in the current interval. If the current interval is 1 hour, and updates have occured every 5 minutes, it will be the biggest 5
minute transfer rate seen during the hour.
E (5th column)
The maximum outgoing transfer rate in bytes per second for the current interval.
AUTHOR
Butch Kemper <kemper@bihs.net> and Tobias Oetiker <tobi@oetiker.ch>
2.17.4 2012-01-12 MRTG-LOGFILE(1)