I saw a couple of posts here referencing how to handle more than one input field separator in awk. I figured I would share how I (just!) figured out how to turn this line in a logfile:
90000000000000000000010001 name... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I needs to split *.txt files from single directory depends on the some mutltiple input values. i have wrote the code like below
for file in *.txt
do
grep -i -h "value1|value2" $file > $file;
done.
My requirment is more input values needs to be given in grep; let us say 50... (3 Replies)
Hello gurus,
I am new to "awk" and trying to break a large file having 4 million records into several output files each having half million but at the same time I want to keep the similar key records in the same output file, not to exist accross the files.
e.g. my data is like:
Row_Num,... (6 Replies)
Hi all.
I have the following command that is successfully searching for any one of the strings on all lines of a file and replacing it with the instructed value.
cat inputFile | awk '{gsub(/aaa|bbb|ccc|ddd/,"1234")}1' > outputFile
This does in fact replace any occurrence of aaa, bbb,... (2 Replies)
Hi Experts,
I am new to shell scripting. Need some help in doing one task given by the customer.
The sample record in a file is as follows:
3538,,,,,,ID,ID1,,,,,,,,,,,
It needs to be the following:
3538,,353800,353800,,,ID,ID1,,,,,COLX,,,,,COLY,
And i want to modify this record in... (3 Replies)
I need to make one record to multiple records based on occurence column in the record and change the date.For example below first record has 5 ,so need to create 5 records from one and change the date to 5 months.Occurence can be any number.
I am unable to come with a script.Can some one help
... (5 Replies)
I have a file containing multiple values, some of them are pipe separated which are to be read as separate values and some of them are single value all are these need to store in variables.
I need to read this file which is an input to my script
Config.txt
file name, first path, second... (7 Replies)
Hi Friends,
Below is my input file with "|" (pipe) as filed delimiter:
My Input File:
HDR|F1|F2||||F6|F7
I want to inser values in the record for field 4 and field 5.
Expected output
HDR|F1|F2||F4|F5|F6|F7
I am able to append the string to the end of the record, but not in between the... (3 Replies)
My program run without error. The problem I am having.
The program isn't outputting field values with the column headers to file.txt.
Each of the column headers in file.txt has no data.
MEMSIZE SECOND SASFoundation Filename
The output results in file.txt should show:
... (1 Reply)
Hello I have a file of following format
HDR 1234 abc qwerty
abc def ghi jkl
HDR 4567 xyz qwerty
abc def ghi jkl
HDR 890 mno qwerty
abc def ghi jkl
HDR 1234 abc qwerty
abc def ghi jkl
HDR 1234 abc qwerty
abc def ghi jkl
-Need to split this into multiple files based on tag... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: wincrazy
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
rlam
RLAM(1) General Commands Manual RLAM(1)NAME
rlam - laminate records from multiple files
SYNOPSIS
rlam [ -tS ][ -u ][ -iaN | -ifN | -idN | -iiN | -iwN | -ibN ] input1 input2 ..
DESCRIPTION
Rlam simply joins records (or lines) from multiple inputs, separating them with the given string (TAB by default). Different separators
may be given for different files by specifying additional -t options in between each file name. Note that there is no space between this
option and its argument. If none of the input files uses an ASCII separator, then no end-of-line character will be printed, either.
An input is either a stream or a command. Commands are given in quotes, and begin with an exclamantion point ('!'). If the inputs do not
have the same number of lines, then shorter files will stop contributing to the output as they run out.
The -ia option may be used to specify ASCII input (the default), or the -if option may be used to indicated binary IEEE 32-bit floats on
input. Similarly, the -id and -ii options may be used to indicate binary 64-bit doubles or integer words, respectively. The -iw option
specifies 2-byte short words, and the -ib option specifies bytes. If a number is immediately follows any of these options, then it indi-
cates that multiple such values are expected for each record. For example, -if3 indicates three floats per input record for the next named
input. In the case of the -ia option, no number indicates one line per input record, and numbers greater than zero indicate that many
characters exactly per record. For binary input formts, no number implies one value per record. For anything other than EOL-separated
input, the default tab separator is reset to the empty string.
A hyphen ('-') by itself can be used to indicate the standard input, and may appear multiple times. The -u option forces output after each
record (i.e., one run through inputs).
EXAMPLE
To join files output1 and output2, separated by a comma:
rlam -t, output1 output2
To join a file with line numbers (starting at 0) and its reverse:
cnt `wc -l < lam.c` | rlam - -t: lam.c -t '!tail -r lam.c'
To join four data files, each having three doubles per record:
rlam -id3 file1.dbl file2.dbl file3.dbl file4.dbl > combined.dbl
AUTHOR
Greg Ward
SEE ALSO cnt(1), histo(1), neaten(1), rcalc(1), tabfunc(1), total(1)RADIANCE 7/8/97 RLAM(1)