I am struggling with the for loop. I have a file name heros.txt and I would like to go through a list in file where.txt and see if I can find the name from where inside heros.
One of the problems that I am having is I dont understand how to setup the for loop to find the list to search.
Then after that be able to print out the name and reason for why they did not show up.
I have been playing with grep but it is taking the names separated by space. I will search for Parker, then Peter not just Parker, Peter.
hi,
how would i go about making a loop which gets each line from a single text file, set it to a variable and then print it to screen?
thanks
eg:
#!/bin/sh
FILE="somefile.txt"
text_line=""
what kind of loop would use here? (18 Replies)
Hi all
Sorry for the basic question, but i am writing a shell script to get around a slightly flaky binary that ships with one of our servers. This particular utility randomly generates the correct information and could work first time or may work on the 12th or 100th attempt etc !.... (4 Replies)
I'm improving the way an existing script handles arrays, but the results aren't what I had in mind:
e="Too many consecutive errors... System is probably unstable!"
e="Cancelable Timer Wait Failed!"
for errcd in ${e}
do
echo ${errcd}
done
The for loop interprets the spaces... (2 Replies)
hey guys what im trying to do is do a simple script that will ask for a password and on the 5th time it says access denied if the right password is still not entered this is what i have so far can anyone help me im not good with scripting
thanks in advance
#!/bin/bash
secretname=secret... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I'm trying to put together a small script that will read a txt file that contains a list of two columns. Each column is the name of a folder..
e.g.
AIX Server1
AIX Server2
AIX Server3
$ for i in `cat /opt/apacheprod/scripts/input/copy_list.txt`
do
PLATFORMVAR=`awk ' { print $1 } '... (7 Replies)
I have two files. In file one, there are many columns, but only two of interest to me. Column 1 contains a list of individuals, defined by an ID number. Column 10 contains the diagnosis that each individual has (I am a physician). All together, there are 3000 lines in this file, one line per... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have a requirement where I have to check for 10 files in Unix location. If all of the files present in that directory then i have execute another process.
can you help me resolving this issue.
sample
location
/home/usr
abc.txt
cde.txt
aaaa.txt
lll.txt
ooo.txt
if all the... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have code like below
disk_list=$(ls /root/file1)
for disk in $disk_list
do
pvcreate $i
done
I know what pvcreate command does, but I do not understand what this $i do here. can someone please explain. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: stew
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
io::async::loop::epoll
IO::Async::Loop::Epoll(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation IO::Async::Loop::Epoll(3pm)NAME
IO::Async::Loop::Epoll - use "IO::Async" with "epoll" on Linux
SYNOPSIS
use IO::Async::Loop::Epoll;
use IO::Async::Stream;
use IO::Async::Signal;
my $loop = IO::Async::Loop::Epoll->new();
$loop->add( IO::Async::Stream->new(
read_handle => *STDIN,
on_read => sub {
my ( $self, $buffref ) = @_;
while( $$buffref =~ s/^(.*)
?
// ) {
print "You said: $1
";
}
},
) );
$loop->add( IO::Async::Signal->new(
name => 'INT',
on_receipt => sub {
print "SIGINT, will now quit
";
$loop->loop_stop;
},
) );
$loop->loop_forever();
DESCRIPTION
This subclass of IO::Async::Loop uses IO::Epoll to perform read-ready and write-ready tests so that the O(1) high-performance multiplexing
of Linux's epoll_pwait(2) syscall can be used.
The "epoll" Linux subsystem uses a registration system similar to the higher level IO::Poll object wrapper, meaning that better performance
can be achieved in programs using a large number of filehandles. Each epoll_pwait(2) syscall only has an overhead proportional to the
number of ready filehandles, rather than the total number being watched. For more detail, see the epoll(7) manpage.
This class uses the epoll_pwait(2) system call, which atomically switches the process's signal mask, performs a wait exactly as
epoll_wait(2) would, then switches it back. This allows a process to block the signals it cares about, but switch in an empty signal mask
during the poll, allowing it to handle file IO and signals concurrently.
CONSTRUCTOR
$loop = IO::Async::Loop::Epoll->new()
This function returns a new instance of a "IO::Async::Loop::Epoll" object.
METHODS
As this is a subclass of IO::Async::Loop, all of its methods are inherited. Expect where noted below, all of the class's methods behave
identically to "IO::Async::Loop".
$count = $loop->loop_once( $timeout )
This method calls the "poll()" method on the stored "IO::Epoll" object, passing in the value of $timeout, and processes the results of that
call. It returns the total number of "IO::Async::Notifier" callbacks invoked, or "undef" if the underlying "epoll_pwait()" method returned
an error. If the "epoll_pwait()" was interrupted by a signal, then 0 is returned instead.
SEE ALSO
o IO::Epoll - Scalable IO Multiplexing for Linux 2.5.44 and higher
o IO::Async::Loop::Poll - use IO::Async with poll(2)AUTHOR
Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>
perl v5.14.2 2012-04-10 IO::Async::Loop::Epoll(3pm)