01-02-2013
I'm looking for the string "scott" inside the files srvr*.log that got created on Nov 15.
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I want to search for a word from the root directory using grep command.
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Hello Everybody,
I have files; yyyymmdd.log which the data look like this;
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.
.
.
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Question 1:
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hello people,
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grep \/$ (8 Replies)
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is there anyway i can ask grep to only get the first line?
as in the top command line
line 1 <-- just grep this line
line 2
line 3
---------- Post updated at 04:24 PM ---------- Previous update was at 04:19 PM ----------
nvm.. found out that i can do it with
|head (12 Replies)
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My grep returns a row of data like this:
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
mustache
MUSTACHE(1) Mustache Manual MUSTACHE(1)
NAME
mustache -- Mustache processor
SYNOPSIS
mustache <YAML> <FILE>
mustache --compile <FILE>
mustache --tokens <FILE>
DESCRIPTION
Mustache is a logic-less templating system for HTML, config files, anything.
The mustache command processes a Mustache template preceded by YAML frontmatter from standard input and prints one or more documents to
standard output.
YAML frontmatter beings with --- on a single line, followed by YAML, ending with another --- on a single line, e.g.
---
names: [ {name: chris}, {name: mark}, {name: scott} ]
---
If you are unfamiliar with YAML, it is a superset of JSON. Valid JSON should work fine.
After the frontmatter should come any valid Mustache template. See mustache(5) for an overview of Mustache templates.
For example:
{{#names}}
Hi {{name}}!
{{/names}}
Now let's combine them.
$ cat data.yml
---
names: [ {name: chris}, {name: mark}, {name: scott} ]
---
$ cat template.mustache
{{#names}}
Hi {{name}}!
{{/names}}
$ cat data.yml template.mustache | mustache
Hi chris!
Hi mark!
Hi scott!
If you provide multiple YAML documents (as delimited by ---), your template will be rendered multiple times. Like a mail merge.
For example:
$ cat data.yml
---
name: chris
---
name: mark
---
name: scott
---
$ cat template.mustache
Hi {{name}}!
$ cat data.yml template.mustache | mustache
Hi chris!
Hi mark!
Hi scott!
OPTIONS
By default mustache will try to render a Mustache template using the YAML frontmatter you provide. It can do a few other things, however.
-c, --compile
Print the compiled Ruby version of a given template. This is the code that is actually used when rendering a template into a string.
Useful for debugging but only if you are familiar with Mustache's internals.
-t, --tokens
Print the tokenized form of a given Mustache template. This can be used to understand how Mustache parses a template. The tokens are
handed to a generator which compiles them into a Ruby string. Syntax errors and confused tags, therefor, can probably be identified
by examining the tokens produced.
INSTALLATION
If you have RubyGems installed:
gem install mustache
EXAMPLES
$ mustache data.yml template.mustache
$ cat data.yml | mustache - template.mustache
$ mustache -c template.mustache
$ cat <<data | ruby mustache - template.mustache
---
name: Bob
age: 30
---
data
COPYRIGHT
Mustache is Copyright (C) 2009 Chris Wanstrath
Original CTemplate by Google
SEE ALSO
mustache(5), mustache(7), gem(1), http://mustache.github.com/
DEFUNKT
May 2010 MUSTACHE(1)