Hi. I'm trying to write a script that reads a line on a file and runs a different command for a different line output.
For example, if it finds the word "Kuku" on the line it sends mail to Kuku@kuku.com. Otherwise, it sends mail to Lulu@lulu.com.
TIA. (2 Replies)
I use the cat command to concatenate text files, but one of the rows I was expecting doesn't display in the output file. Is there a verbose mode\logging mechanism for the cat command to help me investigate where the lines I was expecting are going??
cat 7760-001_1_*_06_*.txt | grep -v... (1 Reply)
Hi,
how do I read in a file which includes a list of workstations and then run a command for each workstation ?
I am unclear which command to use to read in , or is this not possible ?
Thanks, (3 Replies)
Hi I would appreciate your help with this.
I have a output file from a command. It is broken based on initial of the users. Exmaple of iitials MN & SS. Under each section there is information pertaining to the user however each section can have different number of lines. MY challenge is to ... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I need help with this-
input.txt :
L B white
X Y white
A B brown
M Y black
Read this input file and if 3rd column is "white", then add specific lines to another file insert.txt.
If 3rd column is brown, add different set of lines to insert.txt, and so on.
For example, the given... (6 Replies)
OS : Red Hat Linux 6.4
Shell : Bash
We have a file called status.txt which will have only 1 line. The content will be the string "Processing" for most of the day.
# cat status.txt
Processing
#I want to write a shell script (notify.sh) which will be executing a grep every 10 minutes .
... (7 Replies)
Hi
I have jobs (some 1000) defined in a file and I want to read those jobs and run a a command.
For example:
jobs.txt
abc
efg
I want to read the entire file and run the following command
Delete -JOB "abc"
Deleteing abc...
Delete -JOB "efg"
Delete efg...
Can somebody help me... (4 Replies)
hi,
i'm trying to write a tcsh script that reads in a text file (one column) and the runs a different command for each line of text.
i've found lots of example commands for bash, but not for tcsh.
can anyone give me a hint?
thanks,
jill (8 Replies)
Experts,
I am writing a script and able to write only small piece of code and not able to collect logic to complete this task.
In input file have to look for name like like this (BGL_HSR_901_1AG_A_CR9KTR10) before sh iss neors. Record this (BGL_HSR_901_1AG_A_CR9KTR10) in csv file
Now have to... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: as7951
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
viewperl
VIEWPERL(1) User Commands VIEWPERL(1)NAME
viewperl - quickly view syntax highlighted Perl code
SYNOPSIS
viewperl [OPTION]... FILE...
DESCRIPTION
View a Perl source code file, syntax highlighted.
-c, --code=CODE
view CODE, syntax highlighted
-l, --lines
display line numbers
-L, --no-lines
supress display of line numbers (default)
-m, --module=FILE
consider FILE the name of a module, not a file name
-n, --name
display the name of each file (default)
-N, --no-name
supress display of file names (implied by --no-reset)
-p, --pod
display inline POD documentation (default)
-P, --no-pod
hide POD documentation (line numbers still increment)
-r, --reset
reset formatting and line numbers each file (default)
-R, --no-reset
supress resetting of formatting and line numbers
-s, --shift=WIDTH
set tab width (default is 4)
-t, --tabs
translate tabs into spaces (default)
-T, --no-tabs
supress translating of tabs into spaces
--help display this help and exit
Note that module names should be given as they would appear after a Perl `use' or `require' statement. `Getopt::Long', for example.
Each string given using -c is considered a different file, so line number and formatting resets will apply.
View a Perl source code file, syntax highlighted.
-c, --code=CODE
view CODE, syntax highlighted
-l, --lines
display line numbers
-L, --no-lines
supress display of line numbers (default)
-m, --module=FILE
consider FILE the name of a module, not a file name
-n, --name
display the name of each file (default)
-N, --no-name
supress display of file names (implied by --no-reset)
-p, --pod
display inline POD documentation (default)
-P, --no-pod
hide POD documentation (line numbers still increment)
-r, --reset
reset formatting and line numbers each file (default)
-R, --no-reset
supress resetting of formatting and line numbers
-s, --shift=WIDTH
set tab width (default is 4)
-t, --tabs
translate tabs into spaces (default)
-T, --no-tabs
supress translating of tabs into spaces
--help display this help and exit
Note that module names should be given as they would appear after a Perl `use' or `require' statement. `Getopt::Long', for example.
Each string given using -c is considered a different file, so line number and formatting resets will apply.
viewperl August 2007 VIEWPERL(1)