hi,
i'm a newbie and this is my first post here. 'hope all of you fellow members are doing fine. so here is my first thread to ask for help on how to use awk language to do this task.
i have a file to process and after a series of other awk commands and shell scripts i managed to convert the... (11 Replies)
i have an output like this :
012008
25760883
022008
12273095
032007
10103
032008
10115642
042007
20952798
but i would like to have it like this
012008,25760883
022008,12273095
032007,10103
032008,10115642
042007,20952798 (4 Replies)
Hi
My input file looks like
field1 field2 field3 field4 field5
field1 field2 field3 field4 field5
field1 field2 field3 field4 field5
::::::::::::
::::::::::::
There may be one space of multiple spaces between fields and no fields contains spaces in them.
If field 1 to 4 are equal for... (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)
Dear UNIX community,
I would like to to count characters from a specific row and have them displayed line-by-line.
I have a file called testAwk2.csv which contain the following data:
rabbit penguin goat
giraffe emu ostrich I would like to count in the middle row individually... (4 Replies)
Hi,
This forum rocks.
I think this might be an easy thing, but since I am new to awk, please help me.
input:
x y z
1
a b c
2
d e f
3
g h i
7
output:
x y z 1
a b c 2
d e f 3 (8 Replies)
Hi everyone,
Here's my awk statement so far: awk '/TOTAL TYPE:/{print x;print};{x=$0}' file1 >file2
'file1' has too much proprietary data in it to include here, so let's go with the output from code above. It looks like this:
123456 JAMES T KIRK D ... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file (stats.txt) with columns like in the example below. Destination IP address, timestamp, TCP packet sequence number and packet length.
destIP time seqNo packetLength
1.2.3.4 0.01 123 500
1.2.3.5 0.03 44 1500
1.3.2.5 0.08 44 1500
1.2.3.4 0.44... (12 Replies)
Hi Folks,
I'm trying tog ain further experience with shell programming and have set my a small goal of writing a little filesystem monitoring script. So far my output is as follows:
PACMYDB03
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Status
/usr/local/mysql/data ... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Axleuk
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
dpmgr
DPMGR(1) Quick Database Manager DPMGR(1)NAME
dpmgr - administration utility for QDBM Depot
SYNOPSIS
dpmgr create [-s] [-bnum num] name
dpmgr put [-kx|-ki] [-vx|-vi|-vf] [-keep|-cat] [-na] name key val
dpmgr out [-kx|-ki] name key
dpmgr get [-nl] [-kx|-ki] [-start num] [-max num] [-ox] [-n] name key
dpmgr list [-nl] [-k|-v] [-ox] name
dpmgr optimize [-bnum num] [-na] name
dpmgr inform [-nl] name
dpmgr remove name
dpmgr repair name
dpmgr exportdb name file
dpmgr importdb name file
dpmgr snaffle [-kx|-ki] [-ox] [-n] name key
dpmgr version
DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the dpmgr commands.
dpmgr is a utility for debugging Depot and its applications. It features editing and checking of a database. It can be used for database
applications with shell scripts. This command is used in the above format. name specifies a database name. key specifies the key of a
record. val specifies the value of a record.
OPTIONS
A summary of options is included below. For a complete description, see the file:///usr/share/doc/qdbm-doc/spex.html#depotcli.
-s make the file sparse.
-bnum num
specify the number of the elements of the bucket array.
-kx treat key as a binary expression of hexadecimal notation.
-ki treat key as an integer expression of decimal notation.
-vx treat val as a binary expression of hexadecimal notation.
-vi treat val as an integer expression of decimal notation.
-vf read the value from a file specified with val.
-keep specify the storing mode for `DP_DKEEP'.
-cat specify the storing mode for `DP_DCAT'.
-na do not set alignment.
-nl open the database without file locking.
-start specify the beginning offset of a value to fetch.
-max specify the max size of a value to fetch.
-ox treat the output as a binary expression of hexadecimal notation.
-n do not output the tailing newline.
-k output keys only.
-v output values only.
SEE ALSO qdbm(3), dptsv(1), dpopen(3).
AUTHOR
QDBM was written by Mikio Hirabayashi <mikio@fallabs.com>.
This manual page was written by Fumitoshi UKAI <ukai@debian.or.jp>, for the Debian project (but may be used by others).
Man Page 2005-05-23 DPMGR(1)