How would I find out how many times ip1 field shows up a particular file? Then how would I find out how many time ip1 and port 2 shows up?
Please mind the file may contain 100k lines.
Note that neither your script above nor the script below will find out how many times "port 2" shows up; both script will find out how many times "port2" shows up.
Since you allow both ip1 and port2 to appear anywhere in a line whether or not a field has other characters before or after "ip1" and "port2" in the field and no matter which field contains them, I don't see any way to use sort or uniq to do what you want. This following awk script should be much more efficient than running wc twice and grep three times:
I have a file:
Fred
Fred
Fred
Jim
Fred
Jim
Jim
If sort is executed on the listed file, shouldn't the output be?:
Fred
Fred
Fred
Fred
Jim
Jim
Jim (3 Replies)
Input File is :
-------------
25060008,0040,03,
25136437,0030,03,
25069457,0040,02,
80303438,0014,03,1st
80321837,0009,03,1st
80321977,0009,03,1st
80341345,0007,03,1st
84176527,0047,03,1st
84176527,0047,03,
20000735,0018,03,1st
25060008,0040,03,
I am using the following in the script... (5 Replies)
Hello,
I have a large data file:
1234 8888 bbb
2745 8888 bbb
9489 8888 bbb
1234 8888 aaa
4838 8888 aaa
3977 8888 aaa
I need to remove duplicate lines (where the first column is the duplicate). I have been using:
sort file.txt | uniq -w4 > newfile.txt
However, it seems to keep the... (11 Replies)
Hello,
I have a log file with the following input:
X , ID , Date, Time, Y
01,01368,2010-12-02,09:07:00,Pass
01,01368,2010-12-02,10:54:00,Pass
01,01368,2010-12-02,13:07:04,Pass
01,01368,2010-12-02,18:54:01,Pass
01,01368,2010-12-03,09:02:00,Pass
01,01368,2010-12-03,13:53:00,Pass... (12 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a text file with the format shown below. Some of the records are duplicated with the only exception being date (Field 15). I want to compare all duplicate records using subscriber number (field 7) and keep only those records with greater date.
... (1 Reply)
I have a flatfile A.txt
2012/12/04 14:06:07 |trees|Boards 2, 3|denver|mekong|mekong12
2012/12/04 17:07:22 |trees|Boards 2, 3|denver|mekong|mekong12
2012/12/04 17:13:27 |trees|Boards 2, 3|denver|mekong|mekong12
2012/12/04 14:07:39 |rain|Boards 1|tampa|merced|merced11
How do i sort and get... (3 Replies)
Hi !
I am trying to remove doubbled entrys in a textfile only between delimiters.
Like that example but i dont know how to do that with sort or similar.
input:
{
aaa
aaa
}
{
aaa
aaa
}
output:
{
aaa
}
{ (8 Replies)
Hello all,
Need to pick your brains,
I have a 10Gb file where each row is a name, I am expecting about 50 names in total. So there are a lot of repetitions in clusters.
So I want to do a
sort -u file
Will it be considerably faster or slower to use a uniq before piping it to sort... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
Below the actual file which i like to sort and Uniq -u
/opt/oracle/work/Antony/Shell_Script> cat emp.1st
2233|a.k. shukula |g.m. |sales |12/12/52 |6000
1006|chanchal singhvi |director |sales |03/09/38 |6700... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Antony Ankrose
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
mount_smbfs
MOUNT_SMBFS(8) BSD System Manager's Manual MOUNT_SMBFS(8)NAME
mount_smbfs -- mount a shared resource from an SMB file server
SYNOPSIS
mount_smbfs [-E cs1:cs2] [-I host] [-L locale] [-M crights:srights] [-N] [-O cowner:cgroup/sowner:sgroup] [-R retrycount] [-T timeout]
[-U username] [-W workgroup] [-c case] [-d mode] [-f mode] [-g gid] [-n opt] [-u uid] //user@server[:port1[:port2]]/share node
DESCRIPTION
The mount_smbfs command mounts a share from a remote server using SMB/CIFS protocol.
The options are as follows:
-E cs1:cs2
Specifies local (cs1) and server's (cs2) character sets.
-I host
Do not use NetBIOS name resolver and connect directly to host, which can be either a valid DNS name or an IP address.
-L locale
Use locale for lower/upper case conversion routines. Set the locale for case conversion. By default, mount_smbfs tries to use an
environment variable LC_* to determine it.
-M crights:srights
Assign access rights to the newly created connection.
-N Do not ask for a password. At run time, mount_smbfs reads the ~/.nsmbrc file for additional configuration parameters and a password.
If no password is found, mount_smbfs prompts for it.
-O cowner:cgroup/sowner:sgroup
Assign owner/group attributes to the newly created connection.
-R retrycount
How many retries should be done before the SMB requester decides to drop the connection. Default is 4.
-T timeout
Timeout in seconds for each request. Default is 15.
-U username
Username to authenticate with.
-W workgroup
This option specifies the workgroup to be used in the authentication request.
-c case
Set a case option which affects name representation. case can be one of the following:
Value Meaning
l All existing file names are converted to lower case. Newly created file gets a lower case.
u All existing file names are converted to upper case. Newly created file gets an upper case.
-f mode, -d mode
Specify permissions that should be assigned to files and directories. The values must be specified as octal numbers. Default value
for the file mode is taken from mount point, default value for the directory mode adds execute permission where the file mode gives
read permission.
Note that these permissions can differ from the rights granted by SMB server.
-u uid, -g gid
User ID and group ID assigned to files. The default are owner and group IDs from the directory where the volume is mounted.
//user@server[:port1[:port2]]/share
The mount_smbfs command will use server as the NetBIOS name of remote computer, user as the remote user name and share as the
resource name on a remote server. Optional port1 and port2 arguments can be used to override default values of port numbers used by
communication protocols. For SMB over NetBIOS default value for port1 are 139, and port2 are 137.
node Path to mount point.
FILES
~/.nsmbrc Keeps static parameters for connections and other information. See /usr/share/examples/smbfs/dot.nsmbrc for details.
EXAMPLES
The following example illustrates how to connect to SMB server SAMBA as user GUEST, and mount shares PUBLIC and TMP:
mount_smbfs -I samba.mydomain.com //guest@samba/public /smb/public
mount_smbfs -I 192.168.20.3 -E koi8-r:cp866 //guest@samba/tmp /smb/tmp
It is also possible to use fstab(5) for smbfs mounts (the example below doesn't prompt for a password):
//guest@samba/public /smb/public smbfs rw,noauto,-N 0 0
AUTHORS
Boris Popov <bp@butya.kz>, <bp@FreeBSD.org>
BUGS
Please report bugs to the author.
BSD September 17, 2011 BSD