Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Take minute per minute from a log awk Post 302626909 by Corona688 on Friday 20th of April 2012 01:27:44 AM
Old 04-20-2012
So the next time awk is run, it should start processing from where it left off before? Or do you want the logfile cleared every time awk is run? or what?
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Programming

linux 7.1 goes off every other minute

i have loaded linux 7.1 on my PC along with win98 the problem is that every other minute th system goes off please help me (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vidya_harnal
1 Replies

2. Programming

how can i run a process for a whole minute?

here's the problem, i have two processes that i need to run and both process should be run at a total of 1 minute each. how do i do that? and one more here's what the processes do: the 1st process show the '+" sign infinitely while the 2nd process displays the "-" infinitely. how could i count the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kelogs1347
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

scripting running every minute

Hi Experts, below similar thread i posted earlier. Although i wish to know ur suggestion newly. I want to run a script every 1 minute. I tried with Crontab. But the problem is cron send every 1 mins invertal- mail to the user mailbox. meanwhile, some expert telling me it is not wise to... (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: thepurple
15 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

How do i get only last 5 minute worth of data

I have a text file called 'tomcat_temp_out'. I want to get only last 5 minute worth of data from this file and redirect those data into another fule. Could you please help to work on this? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: shivanete
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Crontab for every minute or every hour

How to set crontab for every minute or every hour (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kaushik02018
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Process file every minute

Hey guy's, How can I schedule this script using AWK, what I require is it runs every minute as new data will be added to the file? And I need to capture these data and save it to the output file. I tried using sleep 1 to allow the file to be processed but is not working. awk ' ... (35 Replies)
Discussion started by: James_Owen
35 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Count of matched pattern occurences by minute and date in a log file

Anyone knows how to use AWK to achieve the following Sun Feb 12 00:41:01-00:41:59 Success:2 Fail:2 Sun Feb 12 00:42:01-00:42:59 Success:1 Fail:2 Sun Feb 12 01:20:01-01:20:59 Success:1 Fail:2 Mon Feb 13 22:41:01-22:41:59 Success:1 Fail:1 log file: Success Success Fail Fail ... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: timmywong
9 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Check log file size every 10 minute. Alert if log not update

How to check log size every 10min. by script (can use crontab) if log size not change with alert "Log not update" Base run on SunOS 5.8 Generic_Virtual sun4u sparc SUNW,SPARC-Enterprise logFiles="log1.log log2.log" logLocation="/usr/home/test/log/" Out put. Tue Jan 31... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ooilinlove
3 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

[solved] Awk/shell question to parse hour minute from text

Hi, I have a quick question on parsing the hour/minute and value from a text file and remove the seconds portion. For example in the below text file: 20:26:01 95.83 20:27:01 96.06 20:28:01 95.99 20:29:01 7.11 20:30:01 5.16 20:31:01 8.27 20:32:02 9.79 20:33:01 11.27 20:34:01 7.83... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: satishrao
2 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Minute(4) issue in teradata

I have values below for which diff field is giving error like "invalid time interval" in teradata Might be it is not doing calculation anymore after exceeding minute(4) value END_TS 2/2/2018 08:50:49.000000 START_TS 1/5/2018 17:30:02.000000 SLA_TIME 23:59:59.000000 select... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: himanshupant
0 Replies
PARSE_TIME(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 					     PARSE_TIME(3)

NAME
parse_time, print_time_table, unparse_time, unparse_time_approx, -- parse and unparse time intervals LIBRARY
The roken library (libroken, -lroken) SYNOPSIS
#include <parse_time.h> int parse_time(const char *timespec, const char *def_unit); void print_time_table(FILE *f); size_t unparse_time(int seconds, char *buf, size_t len); size_t unparse_time_approx(int seconds, char *buf, size_t len); DESCRIPTION
The parse_time() function converts a the period of time specified in into a number of seconds. The timespec can be any number of <number unit> pairs separated by comma and whitespace. The number can be negative. Number without explicit units are taken as being def_unit. The unparse_time() and unparse_time_approx() does the opposite of parse_time(), that is they take a number of seconds and express that as human readable string. unparse_time produces an exact time, while unparse_time_approx restricts the result to only include one units. print_time_table() prints a descriptive list of available units on the passed file descriptor. The possible units include: second, s minute, m hour, h day week seven days month 30 days year 365 days Units names can be arbitrarily abbreviated (as long as they are unique). RETURN VALUES
parse_time() returns the number of seconds that represents the expression in timespec or -1 on error. unparse_time() and unparse_time_approx() return the number of characters written to buf. if the return value is greater than or equal to the len argument, the string was too short and some of the printed characters were discarded. EXAMPLES
#include <stdio.h> #include <parse_time.h> int main(int argc, char **argv) { int i; int result; char buf[128]; print_time_table(stdout); for (i = 1; i < argc; i++) { result = parse_time(argv[i], "second"); if(result == -1) { fprintf(stderr, "%s: parse error ", argv[i]); continue; } printf("-- "); printf("parse_time = %d ", result); unparse_time(result, buf, sizeof(buf)); printf("unparse_time = %s ", buf); unparse_time_approx(result, buf, sizeof(buf)); printf("unparse_time_approx = %s ", buf); } return 0; } $ ./a.out "1 minute 30 seconds" "90 s" "1 y -1 s" 1 year = 365 days 1 month = 30 days 1 week = 7 days 1 day = 24 hours 1 hour = 60 minutes 1 minute = 60 seconds 1 second -- parse_time = 90 unparse_time = 1 minute 30 seconds unparse_time_approx = 1 minute -- parse_time = 90 unparse_time = 1 minute 30 seconds unparse_time_approx = 1 minute -- parse_time = 31535999 unparse_time = 12 months 4 days 23 hours 59 minutes 59 seconds unparse_time_approx = 12 months BUGS
Since parse_time() returns -1 on error there is no way to parse "minus one second". Currently "s" at the end of units is ignored. This is a hack for English plural forms. If these functions are ever localised, this scheme will have to change. HEIMDAL
October 31, 2004 HEIMDAL
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:39 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy