Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting How to pass current year and month in FOR LOOP in UNIX shell scripting? Post 302745623 by balajesuri on Monday 17th of December 2012 04:34:21 PM
Old 12-17-2012
Quote:
Originally Posted by shoan
Can you please any one help me how to capture the month variable in UNIX in this format ("YYYYMM") and pass it dynamically in the FOR LOOP.
Capture from where?
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

how to get the last month and year in UNIX

how to get the last month and year in UNIx (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Vijay06
2 Replies

2. AIX

Convert unix timestamp to year month day format ?

Hello, How do I convert unix timestamp value to 'normal' date format - to get year month and day values ? Looks like it's easy to do using GNU date (linux systems). But how do I do tthis on AIX ? I don't want to write C program, any ways to do that using unix shells ? thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vilius
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

print previous month (current month minus 1) with Solaris date and ksh

Hi folks month=`date +%m`gives current month Howto print previous month (current month minus 1) with Solaris date and ksh (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: slashdotweenie
7 Replies

4. Programming

Interval year to month

Hi, I'm working on a Informix4gl module. I'm just trying to find out any built-in function to fetch only the year/month from an INTERVAL YEAR TO MONTH data value. Please let me know, if there are any functions to do this. If not, let me know for any alternative solutions to attain this. ... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: dvah
5 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

want to get last year and month from the file

Hi I have files like abc_cd_20110302_123423 abc_cd_ef_20110301_123423 abc_cd_ef_20110403_123423 abc_ef_20110401_123423 I want to extract the the year and month associated with each file. I tried logfileyearmonth=`echo $logfile | awk -F_'{print $NF}'` Any other way can I... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: dgmm
6 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Unix man command to find out month of the year?

how can i display month of the year i was born with using man command? thanks (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: janetroop95
2 Replies

7. HP-UX

Unable to pass a space inside a variable shell scripting

Can anyone help me in solving this ? p=`date` e=`echo $p | awk '{print $2,$3}'` # echo $p Wed Aug 4 12:00:08 IST 2013 but when I am echoing the value of e it is giving me with one space. As shown below: # echo $e Aug 4 I need this value to be exact as found in... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Kits
6 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

If else condition inside for loop of awk command in UNIX shell scripting

Hi , Please excuse me for opening a new thread i am unable to find out the syntax error in my if else condition inside for loop in awk command , my actual aim is to print formatted html td tag when if condition (True) having string as "failed", could anyone please advise what is the right... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: karthikram
2 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to get the for loop output from a remote server in UNIX shell scripting?

Hi, I am using ksh , when i try to use for loop i am getting the expected output. $for variable in $(ps -fu user | grep -i something/ | grep -i something | grep -v grep | awk '{print $2}');do > grep $variable /tmp/some_path/*/* > done when tried the below to remote server, getting... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: karthikram
4 Replies
IO::CaptureOutput(3)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				      IO::CaptureOutput(3)

NAME
IO::CaptureOutput - capture STDOUT and STDERR from Perl code, subprocesses or XS VERSION
This documentation describes version 1.1102. SYNOPSIS
use IO::CaptureOutput qw(capture qxx qxy); # STDOUT and STDERR separately capture { noisy_sub(@args) } $stdout, $stderr; # STDOUT and STDERR together capture { noisy_sub(@args) } $combined, $combined; # STDOUT and STDERR from external command ($stdout, $stderr, $success) = qxx( @cmd ); # STDOUT and STDERR together from external command ($combined, $success) = qxy( @cmd ); DESCRIPTION
This module provides routines for capturing STDOUT and STDERR from perl subroutines, forked system calls (e.g. "system()", "fork()") and from XS or C modules. FUNCTIONS
The following functions will be exported on demand. capture() capture &subroutine, $stdout, $stderr; Captures everything printed to "STDOUT" and "STDERR" for the duration of &subroutine. $stdout and $stderr are optional scalars that will contain "STDOUT" and "STDERR" respectively. "capture()" uses a code prototype so the first argument can be specified directly within brackets if desired. # shorthand with prototype capture { print __PACKAGE__ } $stdout, $stderr; Returns the return value(s) of &subroutine. The sub is called in the same context as "capture()" was called e.g.: @rv = capture { wantarray } ; # returns true $rv = capture { wantarray } ; # returns defined, but not true capture { wantarray }; # void, returns undef "capture()" is able to capture output from subprocesses and C code, which traditional "tie()" methods of output capture are unable to do. Note: "capture()" will only capture output that has been written or flushed to the filehandle. If the two scalar references refer to the same scalar, then "STDERR" will be merged to "STDOUT" before capturing and the scalar will hold the combined output of both. capture &subroutine, $combined, $combined; Normally, "capture()" uses anonymous, temporary files for capturing output. If desired, specific file names may be provided instead as additional options. capture &subroutine, $stdout, $stderr, $out_file, $err_file; Files provided will be clobbered, overwriting any previous data, but will persist after the call to "capture()" for inspection or other manipulation. By default, when no references are provided to hold STDOUT or STDERR, output is captured and silently discarded. # Capture STDOUT, discard STDERR capture &subroutine, $stdout; # Discard STDOUT, capture STDERR capture &subroutine, undef, $stderr; However, even when using "undef", output can be captured to specific files. # Capture STDOUT to a specific file, discard STDERR capture &subroutine, $stdout, undef, $outfile; # Discard STDOUT, capture STDERR to a specific file capture &subroutine, undef, $stderr, undef, $err_file; # Discard both, capture merged output to a specific file capture &subroutine, undef, undef, $mergedfile; It is a fatal error to merge STDOUT and STDERR and request separate, specific files for capture. # ERROR: capture &subroutine, $stdout, $stdout, $out_file, $err_file; capture &subroutine, undef, undef, $out_file, $err_file; If either STDOUT or STDERR should be passed through to the terminal instead of captured, provide a reference to undef -- "undef" -- instead of a capture variable. # Capture STDOUT, display STDERR capture &subroutine, $stdout, undef; # Display STDOUT, capture STDERR capture &subroutine, undef, $stderr; capture_exec() ($stdout, $stderr, $success, $exit_code) = capture_exec(@args); Captures and returns the output from "system(@args)". In scalar context, "capture_exec()" will return what was printed to "STDOUT". In list context, it returns what was printed to "STDOUT" and "STDERR" as well as a success flag and the exit value. $stdout = capture_exec('perl', '-e', 'print "hello world"'); ($stdout, $stderr, $success, $exit_code) = capture_exec('perl', '-e', 'warn "Test"'); "capture_exec" passes its arguments to "system()" and on MSWin32 will protect arguments with shell quotes if necessary. This makes it a handy and slightly more portable alternative to backticks, piped "open()" and "IPC::Open3". The $success flag returned will be true if the command ran successfully and false if it did not (if the command could not be run or if it ran and returned a non-zero exit value). On failure, the raw exit value of the "system()" call is available both in the $exit_code returned and in the $? variable. ($stdout, $stderr, $success, $exit_code) = capture_exec('perl', '-e', 'warn "Test" and exit 1'); if ( ! $success ) { print "The exit code was " . ($exit_code >> 8) . " "; } See perlvar for more information on interpreting a child process exit code. capture_exec_combined() ($combined, $success, $exit_code) = capture_exec_combined( 'perl', '-e', 'print "hello "', 'warn "Test " ); This is just like "capture_exec()", except that it merges "STDERR" with "STDOUT" before capturing output. Note: there is no guarantee that text printed to "STDOUT" and "STDERR" in the subprocess will be appear in order. The actual order will depend on how IO buffering is handled in the subprocess. qxx() This is an alias for "capture_exec()". qxy() This is an alias for "capture_exec_combined()". SEE ALSO
o IPC::Open3 o IO::Capture o IO::Utils o IPC::System::Simple AUTHORS
o Simon Flack <simonflk _AT_ cpan.org> (original author) o David Golden <dagolden _AT_ cpan.org> (co-maintainer since version 1.04) COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Portions copyright 2004, 2005 Simon Flack. Portions copyright 2007, 2008 David Golden. All rights reserved. You may distribute under the terms of either the GNU General Public License or the Artistic License, as specified in the Perl README file. perl v5.16.3 2010-02-15 IO::CaptureOutput(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:03 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy