Hi,
I want to select columns from multiple files and combine them in one file. The files are simulation-data-files with 23 columns each and about 50 rows. I now use:
cut -f 11 Sweep?wing-30?scale=0.?0?fan2?.txt | pr -3 | awk '{printf("\n%s\t%s\t%s",$1,$2,$3)}' > ../Data_Processed/output.txtI... (1 Reply)
Hi there,
I was wondering if someone can help me with this.
I am trying the combine multiple columns from multiple files into one file.
Example file 1:
c0t0d0 c0t2d0 # hostname vgname
c0t0d1 c0t2d1 # hostname vgname
c0t0d2 c0t2d2 # hostname vgname
c0t1d0 c0t3d0 # hostname vgname1... (5 Replies)
hello,
I will would be grateful if anyone can help me reply to my post
extract multiple cloumns from multiple files; skip rows and include filenames; awk
Please see this thread.
Thanks
manishabh (0 Replies)
Hello,
I have a number of tab delimited data files consists of two columns. Like that:
File1
800.000000 0.002744
799.000000 0.002517
798.000000 0.002836
797.000000 0.002553
FIle2
800.000000 0.000261
799.000000 0.000001
798.000000 0.000551
797.000000 0.000275
File3... (19 Replies)
Hi guys,
could you please help me with this?
I have multiple files with this structure:
file1
xxx1 1.0
xxx2 3.5
xxx3 2.4
xxx4 3.0
…
xxx1890 5.7
file2
xxx1 8.0
xxx3 7.5
xxx4 5.5
…. (4 Replies)
Hello Gurus,
I have a multiple pipe separated files which have records going over multiple Lines. End of line separator is \n and records going over multiple lines have <CR> as separator. below is example from one file.
1|ABC DEF|100|10
2|PQ
RS
T|200|20
3| UVWXYZ|300|30
4| GHIJKL|400|40... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: dJHa
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
lsns
LSNS(8) System Administration LSNS(8)NAME
lsns - list namespaces
SYNOPSIS
lsns [options] [namespace]
DESCRIPTION
lsns lists information about all the currently accessible namespaces or about the given namespace. The namespace identifier is an inode
number.
The default output is subject to change. So whenever possible, you should avoid using default outputs in your scripts. Always explicitly
define expected columns by using the --output option together with a columns list in environments where a stable output is required.
Note that lsns reads information directly from the /proc filesystem and for non-root users it may return incomplete information. The cur-
rent /proc filesystem may be unshared and affected by a PID namespace (see unshare --mount-proc for more details). lsns is not able to see
persistent namespaces without processes where the namespace instance is held by a bind mount to /proc/pid/ns/type.
OPTIONS -J, --json
Use JSON output format.
-l, --list
Use list output format.
-n, --noheadings
Do not print a header line.
-o, --output list
Specify which output columns to print. Use --help to get a list of all supported columns.
The default list of columns may be extended if list is specified in the format +list (e.g. lsns -o +PATH).
-p, --task pid
Display only the namespaces held by the process with this pid.
-r, --raw
Use the raw output format.
-t, --type type
Display the specified type of namespaces only. The supported types are mnt, net, ipc, user, pid, uts and cgroup. This option may
be given more than once.
-u, --notruncate
Do not truncate text in columns.
-V, --version
Display version information and exit.
-h, --help
Display help text and exit.
AUTHORS
Karel Zak <kzak@redhat.com>
SEE ALSO nsenter(1), unshare(1), clone(2), namespaces(7)AVAILABILITY
The lsns command is part of the util-linux package and is available from https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/.
util-linux December 2015 LSNS(8)