I'm trying to parse hundreds of log files in a directory. One log file looks similar to below:
I would like to search for strings with sed and put the results into a csv. I can search for the right patterns, but I'm having trouble printing it correctly.
suppose if u have a file like that
Hen ABCCSGSGSGJJJJK 15
Cock ABCCSGGGSGIJJJL 15
* * * * * * : * * * . * * * :
Hen CFCDFCSDFCDERTF 30
Cock CHCDFCSDHCDEGFI 30
* . * * * * * * * : * * :* : : .
The output shud be
where there is : and .
It shud... (4 Replies)
I am looking for a script to do the following. I have a large log file that contains hundreds of warnings, a lot of which can be ignored. The tool doesn't allow me to suppress it, so I like to parse it out from the log file and isolate just the new messages/warnings, based on an exception file.
... (12 Replies)
Hi there, am trying to parse an Apache 'server' config file. A snippet of the config file is shown below:
.....
ProxyPassReverse /foo http://foo.example.com/bar
.....
.....
RewriteRule ^/(.*) http://www.example.com/$1
RewriteRule /redirect https://www.example1.com/$1
........ (7 Replies)
Hi all:
I'm working on a HPUX 11.23 system and I am needing to parse a tomcat-jakarta log file for memory use. Getting the desired data is easy, assuming the log file does not grow. This file grows constantly and I want to check it q 5 min. The next check will pick up from where it left off 5... (4 Replies)
./abc.sh started at Sun Oct 24 06:42:04 PDT 2010
Message:
=======
Summary Report of NAME count
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Below is the output of the SQL query :-
NAME COUNT... (2 Replies)
Hi everyone,
another question while using sed.
my sed statement should parse every line in a file and store all "i" variable item a a new file.
any wrong arguments here?
Thanks a million.
task_name => name,
object_type => 'TABLE',
attr1 => 'TestR3',
attr2 => '$i',
for i... (4 Replies)
Hello All,
Below is the excerpt from my Informatica log file which has 4 blocks of lines (starting with WRITER_1_*_1). Like these my log file will have multiple blocks of same pattern.
WRITER_1_*_1> WRT_8161
TARGET BASED COMMIT POINT Thu May 08 09:33:21 2014... (13 Replies)
I have a log file that's created daily by this command:
sar -u 300 288 >> /var/log/usage/$(date "+%Y-%m-%d")_$(hostname)_cpu.log
It that contains data like this:
Linux 3.16.0-4-amd64 (myhostname) 08/15/2015 _x86_64_ (1 CPU)
11:34:17 PM CPU %user %nice ... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: unplugme71
12 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
path::class::file::stat
Path::Class::File::Stat(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Path::Class::File::Stat(3pm)NAME
Path::Class::File::Stat - cache and compare stat() calls on a Path::Class::File object
SYNOPSIS
use Path::Class::File::Stat;
my $file = Path::Class::File::Stat->new('path','to','file');
# $file has all the magic of Path::Class::File
# sometime later
if ($file->changed)
{
# do something provocative
}
DESCRIPTION
Path::Class::File::Stat is a simple extension of Path::Class::File. Path::Class::File::Stat is useful in long-running programs (as under
mod_perl) where you might have a file handle opened and want to check if the underlying file has changed.
METHODS
Path::Class::File::Stat extends Path::Class::File objects in the following ways.
use_md5
Calling this method will attempt to load Digest::MD5 and use that instead of stat() for creating file signatures. This is similar to how
File::Modified works.
changed
Returns the previously cached File::stat object if the file's device number and inode number have changed, or if the modification time or
size has changed.
Returns 0 (false) otherwise.
While File::Modified uses a MD5 signature of the stat() of a file to determine if the file has changed, changed() uses a simpler (and
probably more naive) algorithm. If you need a more sophisticated way of determining if a file has changed, use the restat() method and
compare the cached File::stat object it returns with the current File::stat object.
Example of your own changed() logic:
my $oldstat = $file->restat;
my $newstat = $file->stat;
# compare $oldstat and $newstat any way you like
Or just use File::Modified instead.
restat
Re-cache the File::stat object in the Path::Class::File::Stat object. Returns the previously cached File::stat object.
The changed() method calls this method internally if changed() is going to return true.
SEE ALSO
Path::Class, Path::Class::File, File::Signature, File::Modified
AUTHOR
Peter Karman, <karman@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2006 by Peter Karman
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.14.2 2012-01-28 Path::Class::File::Stat(3pm)