11-19-2012
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi
I have one file which is having data like
10201 10202 10205 10206 10207 10208 10209 10210 10211 10213 10215
10801 10802
11406 11415 11422 11426
11513 11514 11515 11516 11517 11518 11519 11520 11521 11522 11523 11524 11525 11530
11604 11608 11611
11717 11718 11719 11722 11725... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: reldb
3 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
i have a file like this:
awk.lst
smith : sales : 1200 : 2
jones:it:25000 : 2
roger : it : 1500 : 2
ravi | acct | 15000
i have 3 doubts
1)
when i say
awk -F ":" '$2 ~ /'it'/ {print $0}' awk.lst
i am not able to get jones in the ouput , is it because of space issue?
2)how to... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: soujanya_srk
2 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have a file sample.txt with the following contents:
the following gives output as
awk 'NF{s=$0; print s}' sample.txt
but,
awk 'NF{s=$0}{print s}' sample.txtgives output as
why this difference, can someone explain me? (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: royalibrahim
6 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
Using this trivial code, I am trying to insert/paste the single column data of a file into the second column (field 2) of a multi-column text file.
awk 'FNR==NR {a=$0; next} {$1=$1 OFS a}1' single-column-file multi-column-file
Lets consider the single-column-file as 'f2' and multi-column... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: royalibrahim
1 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
I want to rearrange some of my columns in my dat file; how do i do this using a script
Suppose, I have an input file like this:
BASENAME STREETTYPE PREFIX SUFFIX HOUSENUMBER BUILDUP ORDER8 ORDER2 ORDER1 ISOCOUNTRYCODE POSTALCODE
SILVER LAKE RD NW 1135 NEW BRIGHTON RAMSEY MINNESOTA USA 55112... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ramky79
4 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi experts,
I've used several solutions from this forum to delete nonsense and rearrange data in the project file I'm working on. I'm hoping you guys can give me some tips on further rearranging the data (I've seen a few solutions by searching, but one specific item has me stumped, which is only... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: coryvp
5 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
DE_CODE|1{AXXANY}1APP_NAME|2{TELCO}2LOC|NY
DE_CODE|1{AXXATX}1APP_NAME|2{TELCO}2LOC|TX
DE_CODE|1{AXXABT}1APP_NAME|2{TELCO}2LOC|BT
DE_CODE|1{AXXANJ}1APP_NAME|2{TELCO}2LOC|NJ
i have out put file like below i have to convert it in the format as below.
DE_CODE = AXXANY
APP_NAME= TELCO
LOC = NY... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mail2sant
4 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
Please help! I figured I would take this one to the experts. I'm working with a field that contains contents such as:
LastName FirstName
For example:
Smith John
I'm trying to take this field and split it so that it is two separate fields (first name and last name). I then need to print... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: IX3R0XI
5 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have a file with the below content
a = test1
b = test2
a = test3
b= test4
c = test6
b = test5
d = test7
d = test9
Need the output to be as follows
a = test1,test3
b = test2, test5
c = test6
d = test7, test9 (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: iron_michael86
4 Replies
10. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi Guys
I normally do thins with a Windows program but I am trying to rearrange a filename based on delimiters in Ubuntu.
Example
v017 __ Detective Academy Q #133 Murder in the Village Of Suspension Bridges &&& Part 9.cbz
=
Detective Academy Q v017 #133 Murder in the Village Of Suspension... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: itschrisonline
9 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
progress
PROGRESS(1) BSD General Commands Manual PROGRESS(1)
NAME
progress -- feed input to a command, displaying a progress bar
SYNOPSIS
progress [-ez] [-b buffersize] [-f file] [-l length] [-p prefix] cmd [args ...]
DESCRIPTION
The progress utility opens a pipe to cmd and feeds an input stream into it, while displaying a progress bar to standard output. If no file-
name is specified, progress reads from standard input. Where feasible, progress fstat(2)s the input to determine the length, so a time esti-
mate can be calculated.
If no length is specified or determined, progress simply displays a count of the data and the data rate.
The options are as follows:
-b buffersize
Read in buffers of the specified size (default 64k). An optional suffix (per strsuftoll(3)) may be given.
-e Display progress to standard error instead of standard output.
-f file Read from the specified file instead of standard input.
-l length Use the specified length for the time estimate, rather than attempting to fstat(2) the input. An optional suffix (per
strsuftoll(3)) may be given.
-p prefix Print the given ``prefix'' text before (left of) the progress bar.
-z Filter the input through gunzip(1). If -f is specified, calculate the length using gzip -l.
EXIT STATUS
progress exits 0 on success.
EXAMPLES
The command
progress -zf file.tar.gz tar xf -
will extract the file.tar.gz displaying the progress bar as time passes:
0% | | 0 0.00 KiB/s --:-- ETA
40% |******** | 273 KiB 271.95 KiB/s 00:01 ETA
81% |*********************** | 553 KiB 274.61 KiB/s 00:00 ETA
100% |*******************************| 680 KiB 264.59 KiB/s 00:00 ETA
If it is preferred to monitor the progress of the decompression process (unlikely), then
progress -f file.tar.gz tar zxf -
could be used.
The command
dd if=/dev/rwd0d ibs=64k |
progress -l 120g dd of=/dev/rwd1d obs=64k
will copy the 120 GiB disk wd0 (/dev/rwd0d) to wd1 (/dev/rwd1d), displaying a progress bar during the operation.
SEE ALSO
ftp(1), strsuftoll(3)
HISTORY
progress first appeared in NetBSD 1.6.1. The dynamic progress bar display code is part of ftp(1).
AUTHORS
progress was written by John Hawkinson <jhawk@NetBSD.org>. ftp(1)'s dynamic progress bar was written by Luke Mewburn.
BUGS
Since the progress bar is displayed asynchronously, it may be difficult to read some error messages, both those produced by the pipeline, as
well as those produced by progress itself.
BSD
June 6, 2007 BSD