I have a script that is reading an existing report, pulling out the customer code, then tacking on the customer name from another file and replacing the existing customer code with the new field. This was written for me by someone else. I'm not real familiar with sed.
The data is getting into... (3 Replies)
Greetings,
I am doing something that I don't know if it is possible...
I have a file with a line looks like this:
<%s \n%s / %s \n%s \n>
and I am trying to replace this line with
<%s \n%s \n%s / %s \n%s \n>
in Shell script with sed command...
StringToReplace='%s \n%s / %s \n%s \n'... (2 Replies)
I need to do the following:
text in the format of: ADDRESS=abcd123:1111
- abcd123:1111 is different on every system.
replace with: ADDRESS=localhost:2222
sed 's/ADDRESS=<What do I use here?>/ADDRESS=localhost:2222/g'
Everything I've tried ends up with:
... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am beginner to Shell Scripting.
I have a String like this "testabcdef", i need the first character as it is and the remaining character should be replaced by the the '*' character. e.g(t***********)
PLZ Suggest me. (5 Replies)
I would like to replace /n with ',' and after replace remove last semicolon then put a open brace in starting and closing brace in end of line. See below example:
input:
1234
3455
24334
234
output:
('1234,'3455',24334','234')
Thanks (3 Replies)
Hi,
First find the special character, from the special character take next two bytes convert the bytes to decimal and replace with next present byte of decimal value times.
E.g.
Input: 302619ú1A?
Output: 302619(3 spaces for ú1A)??????????????????????????
Thanks,
Dines (27 Replies)
Hi,
I have a string wherein i need to replace special characters with backslash and that character.
Ex:
If my string is a=qwerty123@!,
then the new string should be a_new=qwerty123\@\!\,
Thanks (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a text file that contains
I1SP2 *=*=Y=M=D001D
My requirement is to replace all occurrence of =* to =Z
expected o/p is I1SP2 *=Z=Y=M=D001D
I have tried with
sed 's/=*/=Z/g' file
sed 's!\=*!\=Z/g' file
sed 's!\=*!\=Z!g' file
sed 's!\=\*!\=Z!g' file
but its not... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: gotamp
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
git-replace
GIT-REPLACE(1) Git Manual GIT-REPLACE(1)NAME
git-replace - Create, list, delete refs to replace objects
SYNOPSIS
git replace [-f] <object> <replacement>
git replace -d <object>...
git replace -l [<pattern>]
DESCRIPTION
Adds a replace reference in .git/refs/replace/
The name of the replace reference is the SHA1 of the object that is replaced. The content of the replace reference is the SHA1 of the
replacement object.
Unless -f is given, the replace reference must not yet exist in .git/refs/replace/ directory.
Replacement references will be used by default by all git commands except those doing reachability traversal (prune, pack transfer and
fsck).
It is possible to disable use of replacement references for any command using the --no-replace-objects option just after git.
For example if commit foo has been replaced by commit bar:
$ git --no-replace-objects cat-file commit foo
shows information about commit foo, while:
$ git cat-file commit foo
shows information about commit bar.
The GIT_NO_REPLACE_OBJECTS environment variable can be set to achieve the same effect as the --no-replace-objects option.
OPTIONS -f
If an existing replace ref for the same object exists, it will be overwritten (instead of failing).
-d
Delete existing replace refs for the given objects.
-l <pattern>
List replace refs for objects that match the given pattern (or all if no pattern is given). Typing "git replace" without arguments,
also lists all replace refs.
BUGS
Comparing blobs or trees that have been replaced with those that replace them will not work properly. And using git reset --hard to go back
to a replaced commit will move the branch to the replacement commit instead of the replaced commit.
There may be other problems when using git rev-list related to pending objects. And of course things may break if an object of one type is
replaced by an object of another type (for example a blob replaced by a commit).
SEE ALSO git-tag(1)git-branch(1)git(1)GIT
Part of the git(1) suite
Git 1.7.10.4 11/24/2012 GIT-REPLACE(1)