I'm hoping someone can help me on this. I have a data file that greatly simplified might look like this:
sec;src;dst;proto
421;10.10.10.1;10.10.10.2;tcp
426;10.10.10.3;10.10.10.4;udp
442;10.10.10.5;10.10.10.6;tcp
sec;src;fac;dst;proto
521;10.10.10.1;ab;10.10.10.2;tcp... (3 Replies)
hi, i have an awk script and I managed to figure out how to search the max value but Im having difficulty in searching for the min field value.
BEGIN {FS=","; max=0}
NF == 7 {if (max < $6) max = $6;}
END { print man, min}
where $6 is the column of a field separated by a comma (3 Replies)
Hello everybody,
I'm trying to count the number of consecutive lines in a text file which have two distinctive column field values. These lines may appear in several line blocks within the file, but I only want a single block to be counted.
This was my first approach to tackle the problem (I'm... (6 Replies)
Hi,
Here is my sample input
X 2 AAA
Y 3 BBB
Y 2 CCC
Z 4 DDD
In field 1, if the value of one line is same as that of next line, I want to concatenate the corresponding value of the second line in the third field with the value of the third field of first line. And I dont need the third... (2 Replies)
Hi Experts,
I am new to shell scripting. Need some help in doing one task given by the customer.
The sample record in a file is as follows:
3538,,,,,,ID,ID1,,,,,,,,,,,
It needs to be the following:
3538,,353800,353800,,,ID,ID1,,,,,COLX,,,,,COLY,
And i want to modify this record in... (3 Replies)
Hello there,
I have a file with few fields separated by ":". I wrote a below awk to manipulate this file:
awk 'BEGIN { FS=OFS=":" }\
NR != 1 && $2 !~ /^98/ && $8 !~ /^6/{print $0}' $in_file > $out_file
What I wanted was that if $8 field contains any of the values - 6100, 6110, 6200 -... (2 Replies)
Hi all !
I almost did it but got a small problem.
input:
cars red
cars blue
cars green
truck black
Wanted:
cars red-blue-green
truck black
Attempt:
gawk 'BEGIN{FS="\t"}{a = a (a?"-":"")$2; $2=a; print $1 FS $2}' input
But I also got the intermediate records... (2 Replies)
Input:
A|1
B|2
C|3
D|4
Output:
A+B|3
A+C|4
A+D|5
B+C|5
B+D|6
C+D|7
A+B+C|6
A+B+D|7
A+C+D|8
B+C+D|9
A+B+C+D|10
I only managed to get the output for pairs of $1 values (i.e. combination of length 2): (4 Replies)
Hi Friends,
Below is my input file with "|" (pipe) as filed delimiter:
My Input File:
HDR|F1|F2||||F6|F7
I want to inser values in the record for field 4 and field 5.
Expected output
HDR|F1|F2||F4|F5|F6|F7
I am able to append the string to the end of the record, but not in between the... (3 Replies)
My program run without error. The problem I am having.
The program isn't outputting field values with the column headers to file.txt.
Each of the column headers in file.txt has no data.
MEMSIZE SECOND SASFoundation Filename
The output results in file.txt should show:
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: dellanicholson
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
hxcopy
HXCOPY(1) HTML-XML-utils HXCOPY(1)NAME
hxcopy - copy an HTML file and update its relative links
SYNOPSIS
hxcopy [ -i old-URL ] [ -o new-URL ] [ file-or-URL [ file-or-URL ] ]
DESCRIPTION
The hxcopy command copies its first argument to its second argument, while updating relative links. The input is assumed to be HTML or
XHTML and may be slightly reformatted in the process.
If the second argument is omitted, hxcopy writes to standard output. In this case the option -o is required. If the first argument is also
omitted, hxcopy reads from standard input. In this case the option -i is required.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-i old-URL
For the purposes of updating relative links, act as if old-URL is the location from which the input is copied. If this option is
omitted, the actual location of the first argument is used for calculating relative links.
-o new-URL
For the purposed of updating relative links, act as if new-URL is the location to which the input is copied. If this option is
omitted, the actual location of the second argument is used for calculating relative links.
ENVIRONMENT
To use a proxy to retrieve remote files, set the environment variables http_proxy and ftp_proxy. E.g., http_proxy="http://localhost:8080/"
BUGS
Unlike the last argument of cp(1), the last argument of hxcopy must be a file, not a directory.
The second argument must be a local file. Writing to a URL is not yet implemented. To work around this, replace hxcopy file.html
http://example.org/file.html by hxcopy -o http://example.org/file.html file.html tmp.html and then upload tmp.html to the given URL with
some other command, such as curl(1). The first argument, however, may be a URL. hxcopy will download the given file. (Currently only HTTP
is supported.)
EXAMPLE
Assume the HTML file foo.html contains a relative link to "../bar.html". Here are some examples of commands:
hxcopy foo.html bar/foo.html
The file foo.html is copied to ../bar/foo.html and the relative link to "../bar.html" becomes "../../bar.html".
hxcopy foo.html ../foo.html
The file foo.html is copied to ../foo.html and the relative link to "../bar.html" is rewritten as "bar.html".
hxcopy -i http://my.org/dir1/foo.html -o http://my.org/foo.html file1.html file2.html
The file file1.html is copied to file2.html and the relative link to "../bar.html" is rewritten as "bar.html". A command like this
may be useful to update files that are later uploaded to a server.
SEE ALSO cp(1), curl(1), hxwls(1)6.x 9 Dec 2008 HXCOPY(1)