You probably don't want to use cut, it's fast but inflexible (to the best of my knowledge you cant have a variable delimiter). try the following approach:
ooops, re-read your question, the following puts a tab on the end of the line also
This User Gave Thanks to Skrynesaver For This Post:
Hi All,
How can i use the cut option to only output the number of rows, which is 2 is this case ? Pls note that the number of digit before the delimiter ":" is always varying.
$ grep -n uuu xxx
2:** xxx yyy gg 44 tt uuu 2007
$ (2 Replies)
Is there a way to use a word as a delimiter with cut? Or is there a way to use sed or awk with a word as a delimiter? I don't care which program I use for a delimiter I just want to use a word as a delimiter. (2 Replies)
I need to cut or otherwise get the 4th and 5th position output of
for i in `date +%H` ; do vnstat --dumpdb | grep "h;$i" ; done
example output is:
h;13;1310318701;443;93
I only need ";443;93" from any given run of "for i in `date +%H` ; do vnstat --dumpdb | grep "h;$i" ; done"
Thanks... (3 Replies)
HI,
I have a file like below
"103865","103835","Zming","","Zhu","103965","Sunnyvale","US",
"116228","116227","Morlla","","Kowalski","113228","Paese "(Treviso)""IT"
I want to validate the 7th column which is below.
"Sunnyvale"
"Paese
In the above 7th column Paese is not ended with... (9 Replies)
hi all,
suppose a string:
abc/def/ghi/jkl/mn.txt
and i want to get the file name without the path.
however, different files have different paths, therefore the number of delimiter is uncertain.
thanks so much! (3 Replies)
i have list of names in a text file and I wanted to delete the commas en every line.
for example: inside the text is a list of names in it with commas after each line. I wanted to delete these commas. which command must I execute for this?
unix,
dale,
shawn,
aaron, (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have a No Delimiter variable length text file with following schema -
Column Name Data length
Firstname 5
Lastname 5
age 3
phoneno1 10
phoneno2 10
phoneno3 10
sample data - ... (16 Replies)
Hi All-
We have a file data as below with delimiter as |#|
10|#|20|#|ABC
13|#|23|#|PBC
If I want to cut the 2nd field out of this, below command is not working as multiple pipe is causing an issue , it seems
cut -f2 -d"|#|" <file_name>
can you please help to provide the correct command... (7 Replies)
Hi,
Extremely new to Perl scripting, but need a quick fix without using TEXT::CSV
I need to read in a file, pass any delimiter as an argument, and convert it to bar delimited on the output. In addition, enclose fields within double quotes in case of any embedded delimiters.
Any help would... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: JPB1977
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
bup-join
bup-join(1) General Commands Manual bup-join(1)NAME
bup-join - concatenate files from a bup repository
SYNOPSIS
bup join [-r host:path] [refs or hashes...]
DESCRIPTION
bup join is roughly the opposite operation to bup-split(1). You can use it to retrieve the contents of a file from a local or remote bup
repository.
The supplied list of refs or hashes can be in any format accepted by git(1), including branch names, commit ids, tree ids, or blob ids.
If no refs or hashes are given on the command line, bup join reads them from stdin instead.
OPTIONS -r, --remote=host:path
Retrieves objects from the given remote repository instead of the local one. path may be blank, in which case the default remote
repository is used. The connection to the remote server is made with SSH. If you'd like to specify which port, user or private key
to use for the SSH connection, we recommend you use the ~/.ssh/config file.
EXAMPLE
# split and then rejoin a file using its tree id
TREE=$(tar -cvf - /etc | bup split -t)
bup join $TREE | tar -tf -
# make two backups, then get the second-most-recent.
# mybackup~1 is git(1) notation for the second most
# recent commit on the branch named mybackup.
tar -cvf - /etc | bup split -n mybackup
tar -cvf - /etc | bup split -n mybackup
bup join mybackup~1 | tar -tf -
SEE ALSO bup-split(1), bup-save(1), ssh_config(5)BUP
Part of the bup(1) suite.
AUTHORS
Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@gmail.com>.
Bup unknown-bup-join(1)