I have a control file which tells me which are the fields in the files I need to compare and based on the values I need to print the exact value if key =Y and output is Y , or if output is Y/N then I need to print only Y if it matches or N if it does not match and if output =N , then skip the feild... (7 Replies)
Hi friends,
I have multiple files. For now, let's say I have two of the following style
cat 1.txt
cat 2.txt
output.txt
Please note that my files are not sorted and in the output file I need another extra column that says the file from which it is coming. I have more than 100... (19 Replies)
hi
i have an input file that contains some thing like this
aaa acc aa abc1 1232 aaa abc2....
poo awq aa abc1 aaa aaa abc2
bbb bcc bb abc1 3214 bbb abc3....
bab bbc bz abc1 3214 bbb abc3....
vvv ssa as abc1 o09 aaa abc4....
azx aaq aa abc1 900 aqq abc19....
aaa aa aaaa abc1 899 aa... (8 Replies)
hi
i have a set of similar files. i want to delete lines until certain pattern appears in those files. for a single file the following command can be used but i want to do it for all the files at a time since the number is in thousands.
awk '/PATTERN/{i++}i' file (6 Replies)
Good morning all,
I have a problem that is one step beyond a standard awk compare.
I would like to compare three files which have several thousand records against a fourth file. All of them have a value in each row that is identical, and one value in each of those rows which may be duplicated... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have multiple files that each contain one column of strings:
File1:
123abc
456def
789ghi
File2:
123abc
456def
891jkl
File3:
234mno
123abc
456def
In total I have 25 of these type of file. (5 Replies)
I want to keep last 2 days data from a file and want to delete others data from the file. Please help me.
Sample Input
# cat messages-2
Apr 15 11:25:03 test1 kernel: imklog 4.6.2, log source = /proc/kmsg started.
Apr 15 11:25:03 test1 rsyslogd: (re)start
Apr 16 19:42:03 test1 kernel:... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: makauser
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
split
SPLIT(1) BSD General Commands Manual SPLIT(1)NAME
split -- split a file into pieces
SYNOPSIS
split [-a suffix_length] [-b byte_count[k|m] | -l line_count -n chunk_count] [file [name]]
DESCRIPTION
The split utility reads the given file and breaks it up into files of 1000 lines each. If file is a single dash or absent, split reads from
the standard input. file itself is not altered.
The options are as follows:
-a Use suffix_length letters to form the suffix of the file name.
-b Create smaller files byte_count bytes in length. If 'k' is appended to the number, the file is split into byte_count kilobyte
pieces. If 'm' is appended to the number, the file is split into byte_count megabyte pieces.
-l Create smaller files line_count lines in length.
-n Split file into chunk_count smaller files.
If additional arguments are specified, the first is used as the name of the input file which is to be split. If a second additional argument
is specified, it is used as a prefix for the names of the files into which the file is split. In this case, each file into which the file is
split is named by the prefix followed by a lexically ordered suffix using suffix_length characters in the range ``a-z''. If -a is not speci-
fied, two letters are used as the suffix.
If the name argument is not specified, 'x' is used.
STANDARDS
The split utility conforms to IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (``POSIX.1'').
HISTORY
A split command appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX.
The -a option was introduced in NetBSD 2.0. Before that, if name was not specified, split would vary the first letter of the filename to
increase the number of possible output files. The -a option makes this unnecessary.
BSD May 28, 2007 BSD