Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Validating a datafile with the datatypes Post 302687119 by raj_saini20 on Thursday 16th of August 2012 04:06:36 AM
Old 08-16-2012
please provide the sample data with desired output
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

replace one section in a datafile

Hi: First, this is not a homework problem. I just need enough of a hint to get this going... My datafile (dataf.in) is made up of 10 sections. Each section begins with & and with && So it looks like this:------------------------------------- &section1 ...etc... && &section2 ...etc...... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Paprika
4 Replies

2. Solaris

oracle datafile *dbf

Hi ,,,, I have move an oracle db from old server to a new server ( solaris 5.9 is the operating system ) my problem is that to new server the datafile ( *.dbf ) are in a different path ..... example old : /export/home/data/blobs ........... new /oracle/data/blobs....... how i can... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: tt155
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

selective positions from a datafile

Hi dear friends, Im writing a shell script which has to select the strings based on the position. but the problem is there is no field seperator. Normally a datafile contains 2000 records (lines) and each line is of size 500 charecters. I want to select the fields from all the lines which... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: ganapati
10 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Append filename to datafile

I am working on an shell script which checks for all the file starting with abc*.* and if file found then the filelines need to append the file name in begining can some one help with the filename appending... for i in `ls $filename*.csv` do echo $i --- NEED to append file name befor... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Satyagiri
3 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Combine a datafile with Master datafile, emergent!

Hi guys, my supervisor has asked me to solve the problem in 7 days, I've taken 3 days to think about it but couldn't figure out any idea. Please give me some thoughts with the following problem, I have index.database that has only index date: 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 I have... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: onthetopo
6 Replies

6. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

How do we know which processis creating a datafile

Hi, Is there any way we can find out which process is creating a partucular datafile.I know the user and group but i am just curios to know is there any way to find the process. Thanks (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: ukatru
7 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

sorting the datafile in an order given in second datafile

Hi, I have two files: first input file is having 7-8 columns, and second data file is like I want to arrange my datafile1 in the order given in second data file, by comparing the seconddatafile with the second column of first file and print the entire line....also if any... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: CAch
2 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help with datafile parsing and creating spreadsheet

I have a datafile containing data in the following format name1,employee_number1,cell1,home1,fax1 name2,employee_number2,cell2,home2,fax2 name3,employee_number3,cell3,home3,fax3 name4,employee_number4,cell4,home4,fax4 name5,employee_number5,cell5,home5,fax5 ... ... .... I would like... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: inditopgun
6 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Read in numbers from a datafile

Hi, I want to be able to read numbers from many files which have the same general form as follows: C3H8 4.032258004031807E-002 Phi = 1.000000E+00 Tau = 5.749E+00 sL0 = 3.805542E+01 dL0 = 1.514926E-02 Tb = 2.328291E+03 Tu = 3.450E+02 Alpha = ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: lost.identity
3 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to check the datatypes of the columns are same through shell scripting?

Hi, We have a requirement like, to check the datatypes of columns against database. After loading the sample data in to one of the database, need to compare the datatypes of the columns are matching with the provided files. Is there a way that we can achieve through shell scripting. We... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Samah
7 Replies
sample(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						 sample(1)

NAME
sample -- Profile a process during a time interval SYNOPSIS
sample pid | partial-executable-name [duration [samplingInterval]] [-wait] [-mayDie] [-fullPaths] [-e] [-file filename] DESCRIPTION
sample is a command-line tool for gathering data about the running behavior of a process. It suspends the process at specified intervals (by default, every 1 millisecond), records the call stacks of all threads in the process at that time, then resumes the process. The analysis done by sample is called ``sampling'' because it only checks the state of the program at the sampling points. The analysis may miss execu- tion of some functions that are not executing during one of the samples, but sample still provides useful data about commonly executing func- tions. At the end of the sampling duration, sample produces a report showing which functions were executing during the sampling. The data is con- densed into a call tree, showing the functions seen on the stack and how they were called. (This tree is a subset of the actual call tree for the execution, since some functions may not have been executing during any of the sampling events.) The tree is displayed textually, with called functions indented one level to the right of the callee. In the call tree, if a function calls more than one function then a vertical line is printed to visually connect those separate children functions, making it easier to see which functions are at the same level. The characters used to draw those lines, such as + | : ! are arbi- trary and have no specific meaning. ARGUMENTS
The user of sample specifies a target process (either by process id, or by name), the duration of the sampling run (in seconds), and a sam- pling rate (in milliseconds). If the sampling duration is not specified, a default of 10 seconds is used. Longer sampling durations provide better data by collecting more samples, but could also be confusing if the target process performs many different types of operations during that period. The default sampling rate is 1 millisecond. Fast sampling rates provide more samples and a better chance to capture all the functions that are executing. -wait tells sample to wait for the process specified (usually as a partial name or hint) to exist, then start sampling that process. This option allows you to sample from an application's launch. -mayDie tells sample to immediately grab the location of symbols from the application, on the assumption that the application may exit or crash at any point during the sampling. This ensures that sample can give information about the call stacks even if the process no longer exists. -fullPaths tells sample to show the full path to the source code (rather than just the file name) for any symbol in a binary image for which debug information is available. The full path was the path to the source code when the binary image was built. -e tells sample to open the output in TextEdit automatically when sampling completes. -file filename tells sample the full path to where the output should be written. If this flag is not specified, results are written to a file in /tmp called <application name>_<date>_<time>.<XXXX>.sample.txt, where each 'X' is replaced by a random alphanumeric character. If neither the -e nor -file flags are given, the output gets written to stdout as well as saved to the file in /tmp. SEE ALSO
filtercalltree(1), spindump(8) The Xcode developer tools also include Instruments, a graphical application that can give information similar to that provided by sample. The Time Profiler instrument graphically displays dynamic, real-time CPU sampling information. BSD
Mar. 16, 2013 BSD
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:15 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy