Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting awk: Print fields between two delimiters on separate lines and send to variables Post 302686523 by tay9000 on Tuesday 14th of August 2012 07:46:41 PM
Old 08-14-2012
Quote:
Originally Posted by Corona688
Mind incorporating some of the fixes I gave you...? They do make it make less mess...
Oh I do plan to take another look at what you've supplied and clean up my script. It's just that I was working on it myself before you posted a response. Geeze, I wasn't trying to get you to write my entire script! Although you pretty much have... and I'm thankful for that. Smilie

I'll post up what I've got when I finish.
Quote:
Also: You don't need to open a file 500 times to write 500 lines to it.
Oh I didn't really realize it was opening up the file 500 times. My train of thought was that I wanted to write each line to the end of the file so I use >> because I guess I thought > might just overwrite the file with the one line it was putting in each time it wrote the line. =P I like the page you linked. I'll read through and try not to do useless things!
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

trying to print selected fields of selected lines by AWK

I am trying to print 1st, 2nd, 13th and 14th fields of a file of line numbers from 29 to 10029. I dont know how to put this in one code. Currently I am removing the selected lines by awk 'NR==29,NR==10029' File1 > File2 and then doing awk '{print $1, $2, $13, $14}' File2 > File3 Can... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ananyob
3 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

extract nth line of all files and print in output file on separate lines.

Hello UNIX experts, I have 124 text files in a directory. I want to extract the 45678th line of all the files sequentialy by file names. The extracted lines should be printed in the output file on seperate lines. e.g. The input Files are one.txt, two.txt, three.txt, four.txt The cat of four... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: yogeshkumkar
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Compare Tab Separated Field with AWK to all and print lines of unique fields.

Hi. I have a tab separated file that has a couple nearly identical lines. When doing: sort file | uniq > file.new It passes through the nearly identical lines because, well, they still are unique. a) I want to look only at field x for uniqueness and if the content in field x is the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rocket_dog
1 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk print header as text from separate file with getline

I would like to print the output beginning with a header from a seperate file like this: awk 'BEGIN{FS="_";print ((getline < "header.txt")>0)} { if (! ($0 ~ /EL/ ) print }" input.txtWhat am i doing wrong? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: sdf
4 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Print only lines where fields concatenated match strings

Hello everyone, Maybe somebody could help me with an awk script. I have this input (field separator is comma ","): 547894982,M|N|J,U|Q|P,98,101,0,1,1 234900027,M|N|J,U|Q|P,98,101,0,1,1 234900023,M|N|J,U|Q|P,98,54,3,1,1 234900028,M|H|J,S|Q|P,98,101,0,1,1 234900030,M|N|J,U|F|P,98,101,0,1,1... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Ophiuchus
2 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to print 1st field and last 2 fields together and the rest of the fields after it using awk?

Hi experts, I need to print the first field first then last two fields should come next and then i need to print rest of the fields. Input : a1,abc,jsd,fhf,fkk,b1,b2 a2,acb,dfg,ghj,b3,c4 a3,djf,wdjg,fkg,dff,ggk,d4,d5 Expected output: a1,b1,b2,abc,jsd,fhf,fkk... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: 100bees
6 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk sort based on difference of fields and print all fields

Hi I have a file as below <field1> <field2> <field3> ... <field_num1> <field_num2> Trying to sort based on difference of <field_num1> and <field_num2> in desceding order and print all fields. I tried this and it doesn't sort on the difference field .. Appreciate your help. cat... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: newstart
9 Replies

8. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

How to count lines of CSV file where 2 fields match variables?

I'm trying to use awk to count the occurrences of two matching fields of a CSV file. For instance, for data that looks like this... Joe,Blue,Yes,No,High Mike,Blue,Yes,Yes,Low Joe,Red,No,No,Low Joe,Red,Yes,Yes,Low I've been trying to use code like this... countvar=`awk ' $2~/$color/... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: nmoore2843
4 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk to print line is values between two fields in separate file

I am trying to use awk to find all the $3 values in file2 that are between $2 and $3 in file1. If a value in $3 of file2 is between the file1 fields then it is printed along with the $6 value in file1. Both file1 and file2 are tab-delimited as well as the desired output. If there is nothing to... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
4 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk to print lines based on text in field and value in two additional fields

In the awk below I am trying to print the entire line, along with the header row, if $2 is SNV or MNV or INDEL. If that condition is met or is true, and $3 is less than or equal to 0.05, then in $7 the sub pattern :GMAF= is found and the value after the = sign is checked. If that value is less than... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
0 Replies
RRDCGI(1)							      rrdtool								 RRDCGI(1)

NAME
rrdcgi - Create web pages containing RRD graphs based on templates SYNOPSIS
"#!/path/to/"rrdcgi [--filter] DESCRIPTION
rrdcgi is a sort of very limited script interpreter. Its purpose is to run as a cgi-program and parse a web page template containing special <RRD:: tags. rrdcgi will interpret and act according to these tags. In the end it will printout a web page including the necessary CGI headers. rrdcgi parses the contents of the template in 3 steps. In each step it looks only for a subset of tags. This allows nesting of tags. The argument parser uses the same semantics as you are used from your C-shell. --filter Assume that rrdcgi is run as a filter and not as a cgi. Keywords RRD::CV name Inserts the CGI variable of the given name. RRD::CV::QUOTE name Inserts the CGI variable of the given name but quotes it, ready for use as an argument in another RRD:: tag. So even when there are spaces in the value of the CGI variable it will still be considered to be one argument. RRD::CV::PATH name Inserts the CGI variable of the given name, quotes it and makes sure it starts neither with a '/' nor contains '..'. This is to make sure that no problematic pathnames can be introduced through the CGI interface. RRD::GETENV variable Get the value of an environment variable. <RRD::GETENV REMOTE_USER> might give you the name of the remote user given you are using some sort of access control on the directory. RRD::GOODFOR seconds Specify the number of seconds this page should remain valid. This will prompt the rrdcgi to output a Last-Modified, an Expire and if the number of seconds is negative a Refresh header. RRD::INCLUDE filename Include the contents of the specified file into the page returned from the cgi. RRD::SETENV variable value If you want to present your graphs in another time zone than your own, you could use <RRD::SETENV TZ UTC> to make sure everything is presented in Universal Time. Note that the values permitted to TZ depend on your OS. RRD::SETVAR variable value Analog to SETENV but for local variables. RRD::GETVAR variable Analog to GETENV but for local variables. RRD::TIME::LAST rrd-file strftime-format This gets replaced by the last modification time of the selected RRD. The time is strftime-formatted with the string specified in the second argument. RRD::TIME::NOW strftime-format This gets replaced by the current time of day. The time is strftime-formatted with the string specified in the argument. Note that if you return : (colons) from your strftime format you may have to escape them using if the time is to be used as an argument to a GRAPH command. RRD::TIME::STRFTIME START|END start-spec end-spec strftime-format This gets replaced by a strftime-formatted time using the format strftime-format on either start-spec or end-spec depending on whether START or END is specified. Both start-spec and end-spec must be supplied as either could be relative to the other. This is intended to allow pretty titles on graphs with times that are easier for non RRDtool folks to figure out than "-2weeks". Note that again, if you return : (colon) from your strftime format, you may have to escape them using if the time is to be used as an argument to a GRAPH command. RRD::GRAPH rrdgraph arguments This tag creates the RRD graph defined by its argument and then is replaced by an appropriate <IMG ... > tag referring to the graph. The --lazy option in RRD graph can be used to make sure that graphs are only regenerated when they are out of date. The arguments to the RRD::GRAPH tag work as described in the rrdgraph manual page. Use the --lazy option in your RRD::GRAPH tags, to reduce the load on your server. This option makes sure that graphs are only regenerated when the old ones are out of date. If you do not specify your own --imginfo format, the following will be used: <IMG SRC="%s" WIDTH="%lu" HEIGHT="%lu"> Note that %s stands for the filename part of the graph generated, all directories given in the PNG file argument will get dropped. RRD::PRINT number If the preceding RRD::GRAPH tag contained and PRINT arguments, then you can access their output with this tag. The number argument refers to the number of the PRINT argument. This first PRINT has number 0. RRD::INTERNAL <var> This tag gets replaced by an internal var. Currently these vars are known: VERSION, COMPILETIME. These vars represent the compiled-in values. EXAMPLE 1 The example below creates a web pages with a single RRD graph. #!/usr/local/bin/rrdcgi <HTML> <HEAD><TITLE>RRDCGI Demo</TITLE></HEAD> <BODY> <H1>RRDCGI Example Page</H1> <P> <RRD::GRAPH demo.png --lazy --title="Temperatures" DEF:cel=demo.rrd:exhaust:AVERAGE LINE2:cel#00a000:"D. Celsius"> </P> </BODY> </HTML> EXAMPLE 2 This script is slightly more elaborate, it allows you to run it from a form which sets RRD_NAME. RRD_NAME is then used to select which RRD you want to use as source for your graph. #!/usr/local/bin/rrdcgi <HTML> <HEAD><TITLE>RRDCGI Demo</TITLE></HEAD> <BODY> <H1>RRDCGI Example Page for <RRD::CV RRD_NAME></H1> <H2>Selection</H2> <FORM><INPUT NAME=RRD_NAME TYPE=RADIO VALUE=roomA> Room A, <INPUT NAME=RRD_NAME TYPE=RADIO VALUE=roomB> Room B. <INPUT TYPE=SUBMIT></FORM> <H2>Graph</H2> <P> <RRD::GRAPH <RRD::CV::PATH RRD_NAME>.png --lazy --title "Temperatures for "<RRD::CV::QUOTE RRD_NAME> DEF:cel=<RRD::CV::PATH RRD_NAME>.rrd:exhaust:AVERAGE LINE2:cel#00a000:"D. Celsius"> </P> </BODY> </HTML> EXAMPLE 3 This example shows how to handle the case where the RRD, graphs and cgi-bins are separate directories #!/.../bin/rrdcgi <HTML> <HEAD><TITLE>RRDCGI Demo</TITLE></HEAD> <BODY> <H1>RRDCGI test Page</H1> <RRD::GRAPH /.../web/pngs/testhvt.png --imginfo '<IMG SRC=/.../pngs/%s WIDTH=%lu HEIGHT=%lu >' --lazy --start -1d --end now DEF:http_src=/.../rrds/test.rrd:http_src:AVERAGE AREA:http_src#00ff00:http_src > </BODY> </HTML> Note 1: Replace /.../ with the relevant directories Note 2: The SRC=/.../pngs should be paths from the view of the webserver/browser AUTHOR
Tobias Oetiker <tobi@oetiker.ch> 1.4.3 2008-12-22 RRDCGI(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:55 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy