Greetings.
I am struggling with a shell script to make my life simpler, with a number of practical ways in which it could be used. I want to take a standard text file, and pull the 'n'th word from each line such as the first word from a text file.
I'm struggling to see how each line can be... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I am writing a shell script to pull a file from a remote server (Let say its a windows based remote server). One of my criteria is to pull a file only if it is not empty.
We have done a similar script to push a file from our end to a remote server and before pushing it we check for the... (2 Replies)
Hello Gurus,
We are facing some performance issue in UNIX. If someone had faced such kind of issue in past please provide your suggestions on this .
Problem Definition:
/Few of load processes of our Finance Application are facing issue in UNIX when they uses a shell script having below... (19 Replies)
Hi Everyone,
I am using a centos 5.2 server as an sflow log collector on my network. Currently I am using inmons free sflowtool to collect the packets sent by my switches. I have a bash script running on an infinate loop to stop and start the log collection at set intervals - currently one... (2 Replies)
I am hoping to get some help with a script to pull certain fields from a log file.
User update (xx6xxx P) rpt (yy6yyy B) 2010/01/20 21:36:01.298
Remote client forward start streamid 85af 2010/01/20 21:36:01.307
rpt2 (ZZ6ZZZ G) rpt1 (YY6YYY B) urcall (CQCQCQ ) mycall (W1AW)
user... (5 Replies)
I have CSV file that contains data in the format as shown below:
ABC, 67, 56, 67, 78, 89, 76, 55
PDR, 85, 83, 83, 72, 82, 89, 83
MPG, 86, 53, 54, 65, 23, 54, 75
..
..
..
..
I want to create a script that will pull out the rows from the above sheet and paste it into another CSV file.... (12 Replies)
I have a collection of text files that comprise a mailing list archive. I grep them to find an email that interests me, then open the file in a text editor to find the surrounding paragraph of text. Is there an easy way to do this from the shell instead? (2 Replies)
Hi folks,
I have a structure as mentioned below in a configuration file.
<Component>
Comp1:
{
item1:data,someUniqueAttribute;
item2:data,someUniqueAttribute,
}
Comp2:
{
item3:data,someUniqueAttribute;
... (1 Reply)
Hello all, newbie here. I've searched the forum and found many "how to split a text file" topics but none that are what I'm looking for.
I have a large text file (~15 MB) in size. It contains a variable number of "paragraphs" (for lack of a better word) that are each of variable length. A... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: lupin..the..3rd
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT LINUX
c_rehash
C_REHASH(1SSL) OpenSSL C_REHASH(1SSL)NAME
c_rehash - Create symbolic links to files named by the hash values
SYNOPSIS
c_rehash [directory] ...
DESCRIPTION
c_rehash scans directories and takes a hash value of each .pem and .crt file in the directory. It then creates symbolic links for each of
the files named by the hash value. This is useful as many programs require directories to be set up like this in order to find the
certificates they require.
If any directories are named on the command line then these directories are processed in turn. If not then and the environment variable
SSL_CERT_DIR is defined then that is consulted. This variable should be a colon (:) separated list of directories, all of which will be
processed. If neither of these conditions are true then /usr/lib/ssl/certs is processed.
For each directory that is to be processed he user must have write permissions on the directory, if they do not then nothing will be
printed for that directory.
Note that this program deletes all the symbolic links that look like ones that it creates before processing a directory. Beware that if you
run the program on a directory that contains symbolic links for other purposes that are named in the same format as those created by this
program they will be lost.
The hashes for certificate files are of the form <hash>.<n> where n is an integer. If the hash value already exists then n will be
incremented, unless the file is a duplicate. Duplicates are detected using the fingerprint of the certificate. A warning will be printed if
a duplicate is detected. The hashes for CRL files are of the form <hash>.r<n> and have the same behavior.
The program will also warn if there are files with extension .pem which are not certificate or CRL files.
The program uses the openssl program to compute the hashes and fingerprints. It expects the executable to be named openssl and be on the
PATH, or in the /usr/lib/ssl/bin directory. If the OPENSSL environment variable is defined then this is used instead as the executable that
provides the hashes and fingerprints. When called as $OPENSSL x509 -hash -fingerprint -noout -in $file it must output the hash of $file on
the first line followed by the fingerprint on the second line, optionally prefixed with some text and an equals sign (=).
OPTIONS
None
ENVIRONMENT
OPENSSL
The name (and path) of an executable to use to generate hashes and fingerprints (see above).
SSL_CERT_DIR
Colon separated list of directories to operate on. Ignored if directories are listed on the command line.
SEE ALSO openssl(1), x509(1)BUGS
No known bugs
1.0.0e 2013-02-18 C_REHASH(1SSL)