I was wondering if there was an easy solution, using tcsh, to print out lines that appear twice with a given pattern in a file?
So if I am looking for lines with "test" in a given file that contains:
blah
test blah1
blah //don't print this out as it doesn't have "test" pattern
test blah2
test blah2 //this line appears twice so print this out
test blah4
If I am searching with lines that have "test" in them, I want the script to output:
test blah2
So far I am using grep to find all lines that have the pattern and outputted to a temp file. Then I am using a grep -c on the temp file to see how many of these matched pattern lines exist. If more than 2, it will print the line out. I am close to having this work but I feel like this would take a lot of time and, instead, there is a much simpler and elegant solution.
I feel like I can achieve a solution using awk. I was looking through your forums and found this awk command that counts the occurrences of a pattern.
Can I extend this further such that it prints out the line with more than two matches? Appreciate any help!
I am doing KSH script to remove duplicate lines in a file. Let say the file has format below.
FileA
1253-6856
3101-4011
1827-1356
1822-1157
1822-1157
1000-1410
1000-1410
1822-1231
1822-1231
3101-4011
1822-1157
1822-1231
and I want to simply it with no duplicate line as file... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file with duplicate lines in it. I want to keep only the duplicate lines and delete the non duplicates. Can some one please help me?
Regards
Narayana Gupta (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to remove duplicate lines from a file. For example the contents of example.txt is:
this is a test
2342
this is a test
34343
this is a test
43434
and i want to remove the "this is a test" lines only and end up with the numbers in the file, that is, end up with:
2342... (4 Replies)
I have a log file "logreport" that contains several lines as seen below:
04:20:00 /usr/lib/snmp/snmpdx: Agent snmpd appeared dead but responded to ping
06:38:08 /usr/lib/snmp/snmpdx: Agent snmpd appeared dead but responded to ping
07:11:05 /usr/lib/snmp/snmpdx: Agent snmpd appeared dead but... (18 Replies)
Hi,
does somebody know how can I step on the lines in a file?
I would like to read a file line by line. And after every line I'd like to do other commands.
Lets help me! ;) (4 Replies)
Hi All,
I am trying to remove the duplicate entries in a file and print them just once. For example, if my input file has:
00:44,37,67,56,15,12
00:44,34,67,56,15,12
00:44,58,67,56,15,12
00:44,35,67,56,15,12
00:59,37,67,56,15,12
00:59,34,67,56,15,12
00:59,35,67,56,15,12... (7 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a very huge file (4GB) which has duplicate lines. I want to delete duplicate lines leaving unique lines. Sort, uniq, awk '!x++' are not working as its running out of buffer space.
I dont know if this works : I want to read each line of the File in a For Loop, and want to... (16 Replies)
Hi,
I copied the contents of a binary file into a .text file using hd (hexdump) command. The data in binary file is such that I get in many places like following
00000250 00 00 00 00 3f 2d 91 68 3f 69 fb e7 00 00 00 00 |....?-.h?i......|
00000260 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00... (2 Replies)
hello all
in my bash script I have a file and I only want to keep the lines that appear twice in the file.Is there a way to do this?
thanks in advance! (4 Replies)
I have a file with following data
A
B
C
I would like to print like this n times(For eg:5 times)
A
B
C
A
B
C
A
B
C
A
B
C
A (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: nsuresh316
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
zfgrep
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