Hi,
I need to find the number of occurrence of string in a file,
for ex:
>cat filename
abc
abc
def
ghi
ghi
ghi
ghi
abc
abc
>output would be
abc 4
def 1 (10 Replies)
Hi All,
is there a way to extract the line number of an occurrence using grep?
I know that with the -n option it prints out the line number as well.
I would like to assign the line number to a variable.
Thanks,
Sarah (5 Replies)
Hi all,
is there a simple way to obtain the line number of the i-th occurrence of a pattern?
I have
OCCURRENCE=`grep -io "${STRING_NAME}" ${1}-${8}${EXT}.out_bis| wc -l`
which tells me how many occurency I have. I would like to go through them and determine the line number and assign... (6 Replies)
Alo
I have a file with a lot of addresses where I want to list unique addresses and the number of theirs occurrence.
I have this input file:
0011bd09 ea 01 0b 04 ea 01 0b 38-bd 11 00 98 15 cb 01 00 .......8........
0011bd09 ea 11 00 98 15 cb 01 00-00 00 00 d8 3d 8d 01 94 ... (5 Replies)
Ok,
So I have a huge file that has over 12000 lines in it.
in this file, there are 589 occurrences of the string "use five-minute-interval" spread in various areas in the file.
How can i replace the the last 250 of the occurrences of "use five-minute-interval" with "use... (10 Replies)
Hi
I have the following file
ENST001 ENST002 4 4 4 88 9 9
ENST004 3 3 3 99 8 8
ENST009 ENST010 ENST006 8 8 8 77 8 8
Basically I want to count how many times ENST* is repeated in each line so the expected results is
2
1
3
Any suggestion please ? (4 Replies)
if there's a file containing:
money king money queen money cat money also money king
all those strings are on one line in the file.
how can i find out how many times "money king" shows up in the line?
egrep -c "money king" wont work. (7 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file which contained a set of numbers like
Col1 col2 col3 col4
1 sa 13 0
2 sb 14 0
3 sc 15 9
4 sd 16 -9
5 sd 20 -2
6 sd 20 4
Here in last column I need to count the zeros, positive values and negative values,
please help me to do that. (2 Replies)
My file contains like this on 10 th line
NM1*IL*1*
awk '/NM1/{print NR}' *.dat
output is 10
awk '/NM1*IL*1*/{print NR}' *.dat
output is Nothing
but im expecting 10 on second code as well . (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Rajesh_us
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
service
SERVICE(8) BSD System Manager's Manual SERVICE(8)NAME
service -- control (start/stop/etc.) or list system services
SYNOPSIS
service -e
service -R
service [-v] -l | -r
service [-v] <rc.d script> start|stop|etc.
DESCRIPTION
The service command is an easy interface to the rc.d system. Its primary purpose is to start and stop services provided by the rc.d scripts.
When used for this purpose it will set the same restricted environment that is in use at boot time (see below). It can also be used to list
the scripts using various criteria.
The options are as follows:
-e List services that are enabled. The list of scripts to check is compiled using rcorder(8) the same way that it is done in rc(8), then
that list of scripts is checked for an "rcvar" assignment. If present the script is checked to see if it is enabled.
-R Restart all enabled local services.
-l List all files in /etc/rc.d and the local startup directories. As described in rc.conf(5) this is usually /usr/local/etc/rc.d. All
files will be listed whether they are an actual rc.d script or not.
-r Generate the rcorder(8) as in -e above, but list all of the files, not just what is enabled.
-v Be slightly more verbose
ENVIRONMENT
When used to run rc.d scripts the service command sets HOME to / and PATH to /sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin which is how they are set in
/etc/rc at boot time.
EXIT STATUS
The service utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
EXAMPLES
The following are examples of typical usage of the service command:
service named status
service -rv
The following programmable completion entry can be use in bash(1) for the names of the rc.d scripts:
_service () {
local cur
cur=${COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD]}
COMPREPLY=( $( compgen -W '$( service -l )' -- $cur ) )
return 0
}
complete -F _service service
SEE ALSO bash(1) (ports/shells/bash), rc.conf(5), rc(8), rcorder(8)HISTORY
The service utility first appeared in FreeBSD 7.3.
AUTHORS
This manual page was written by Douglas Barton <dougb@FreeBSD.org>.
BSD December 11, 2012 BSD