You could do something like this (using non-standard shell syntax):
Given the directory structure and the files above, the following code:
Produces:
This is only for illustration! Most probably the eval ... parts could be avoided ...
I don't believe you really need a separate structures/arrays. If you tell us what you actually need to do,
we could give a more appropriate solution.
Hi Guys,
I am trying to do a file parse which is something like
config file:
machines= sha1 sha2 sha3 sha4
The bash script should be supporting upto 64 such machines
what I want is to place the machines in an array and then use the array to ssh to each machine.
The script I worte
... (11 Replies)
Hi,
How do I parse/split lines (strings) read from a file and display the individual tokens in a shell script? Given that the length of individual lines is not constant and number of tokens in each line is also not constant.
The input file could be as below:
... (3 Replies)
Hi all
I have a little brainscratcher here.
I want to draw a pie chart from data in a text file.
The drawing of the graph works fine, if I insert the data manually into a 2d array.
Now I want to pull the data from a text file (which was created using a uniq -c command) see sample below.... (2 Replies)
anybody know a nice way to parse long input parameters such as --path /dir1/dir2/ (see below). Now I have more than 10 input parameters and it's confusing having parameters like -q something, I would prefer longer ones
case $OPTKEY in
--path) M_PATH=$OPTARG ;;
-s) ... (3 Replies)
Hello,
Can somebody please give me a snippet for the below requirement.
I want to assign the values separeted by a comma to be assigned to a dynamic array.
If I give an input (read statement) like abc1,abc2,abc3,abc4,abc5, all these strings abc* should be assigned to an array like below... (2 Replies)
I would create a bash script than parse like this:
test.sh -p (protocol) -i (address) -d (directory)
I need retrive the value after -p for example...
understand???
I hope...
thanks (6 Replies)
I need to create a bash array from the command line parameters. I only know how to do it when I know the number of parameters. But what do I do when I dont know the number of parameters? (1 Reply)
I have two files that I am going to use diff to find the differences but need to parse them before I do that. I have include the format of each file1 and file2 with the desired output of each (the first 5 fields in each file). The first file has a "chr" before the # that needs to be removed. I... (1 Reply)
In the awk below I am trying to parse the Sample Name below the section. The values that are extracted are read into array s(each value in a row seperated by a space) which will be used later in a bash script. The awk does execute but no values are printed. I am also not sure how to print in a row... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: cmccabe
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
lzcmp
XZDIFF(1) XZ Utils XZDIFF(1)NAME
xzcmp, xzdiff, lzcmp, lzdiff - compare compressed files
SYNOPSIS
xzcmp [cmp_options] file1 [file2]
xzdiff [diff_options] file1 [file2]
lzcmp [cmp_options] file1 [file2]
lzdiff [diff_options] file1 [file2]
DESCRIPTION
xzcmp and xdiff invoke cmp(1) or diff(1) on files compressed with xz(1), lzma(1), gzip(1), or bzip2(1). All options specified are passed
directly to cmp or diff. If only one file is specified, then the files compared are file1 (which must have a suffix of a supported com-
pression format) and file1 from which the compression format suffix has been stripped. If two files are specified, then they are uncom-
pressed if necessary and fed to cmp(1) or diff(1). The exit status from cmp or diff is preserved.
The names lzcmp and lzdiff are provided for backward compatibility with LZMA Utils.
SEE ALSO cmp(1), diff(1), xz(1), gzip(1), bzip2(1), zdiff(1)BUGS
Messages from the cmp(1) or diff(1) programs refer to temporary filenames instead of those specified.
Tukaani 2009-07-05 XZDIFF(1)