300,000 records is not that large unless they are really, really huge records. And 'really goofed up results' is not the same as 'the data is so huge that the utilities do not give satisfactory results' -- if the data were really too large, it would have said 'out of memory' or some such.
T[N] is how many times its been printed. I've been using it to tell whether I should put NONE in a file. Now I also use it to check if a pattern has been printed enough times to stop printing it any more.
Hi
I have 3 patterns for example to be searched.
These three patterns are available in file1.
The patterns to be searched are in file2.
I want to search the pattern of file1 to file2.
Can any one help with example?
Regards
Dhana (1 Reply)
Hi,
From the pattern mentioned below remove lines based on pattern range.
Conditions
1 Look For all lines starting with ALTER TABLE and Ending with ; and contains the word MOVE.I wanto to remove these lines from the file sample below.
Note : The above pattern list could be found in... (1 Reply)
Good day, great gurus,
I'm new to Perl, and programming in general. I'm trying to retrieve a column of data from my text file which spans a non-specific number of lines. So I did a regexp that will pick out the columns. However,my pattern would vary. I tried using a foreach loop unsuccessfully.... (2 Replies)
Hi Gurus,
I have a file say for ex. file1 which has 3500 lines in it which are different account numbers and another file (file2) which has 230000 lines in it. I want to read all the lines in file1 and delete all those lines from file2 which has that same pattern as in file1. I am not quite... (4 Replies)
Hi All, I need to grep few files which has words like the below in the file name , which i want to put it in a file and and grep for the files which contain these names and move it to a new directory ,
full file name -C20091210.1000-20091210.1100_SMGBSC3:1000... (2 Replies)
Hi, I want to list all file that match user input ( specified shell wildcard) but when I compile it dont list me
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
print "Enter Advance Search Function: ";
chomp ($func = <STDIN>);
my @files = glob("$func");
foreach my $file (@files)
{
print "$file\n";... (1 Reply)
How do I use grep to select words that start with I or O, end in box, and contain at least one letter in between them?
the text file mailinfo.txt contains
Inbox
the Inbox
Is a match box
Doesn't match
INBOX
Outbox
Outbox1
InbOX
Ibox
I box
If the command works correctly it... (4 Replies)
When I use the following grep command with options -F and -f, its just displaying the text related to only the last pattern.
Command: $ grep -f pattern_file.txt input_file.txt
Output: doc-C2-16354
Even the following command yields the same output:
Command: $ grep -Ff pattern_file.txt... (6 Replies)
I am able to grep multiple patterns which stored in a files. However, how could we replace the whole line with either the pattern or new string?
For example:
pattern_file: *Info in the () is not part of the pattern file. They are the intended name to replace the whole line after the pattern... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: wxboo
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENSOLARIS
xfs_logprint
xfs_logprint(8) System Manager's Manual xfs_logprint(8)NAME
xfs_logprint - print the log of an XFS filesystem
SYNOPSIS
xfs_logprint [ options ] device
DESCRIPTION
xfs_logprint prints the log of an XFS filesystem (see xfs(5)). The device argument is the pathname of the partition or logical volume con-
taining the filesystem. The device can be a regular file if the -f option is used. The contents of the filesystem remain undisturbed.
There are two major modes of operation in xfs_logprint.
One mode is better for filesystem operation debugging. It is called the transactional view and is enabled through the -t option. The
transactional view prints only the portion of the log that pertains to recovery. In other words, it prints out complete transactions
between the tail and the head. This view tries to display each transaction without regard to how they are split across log records.
The second mode starts printing out information from the beginning of the log. Some error blocks might print out in the beginning because
the last log record usually overlaps the oldest log record. A message is printed when the physical end of the log is reached and when the
logical end of the log is reached. A log record view is displayed one record at a time. Transactions that span log records may not be
decoded fully.
OPTIONS -b Extract and print buffer information. Only used in transactional view.
-c Attempt to continue when an error is detected.
-C filename
Copy the log from the filesystem to the file filename. The log itself is not printed.
-d Dump the log from front to end, printing where each log record is located on disk.
-D Do not decode anything; just print data.
-e Exit when an error is found in the log. Normally, xfs_logprint tries to continue and unwind from bad logs. However, sometimes it
just dies in bad ways. Using this option prevents core dumps.
-f Specifies that the filesystem image to be processed is stored in a regular file at device (see the mkfs.xfs(8)-d file option).
This might happen if an image copy of a filesystem has been made into an ordinary file with xfs_copy(8).
-l logdev
External log device. Only for those filesystems which use an external log.
-i Extract and print inode information. Only used in transactional view.
-q Extract and print quota information. Only used in transactional view.
-n Do not try and interpret log data; just interpret log header information.
-o Also print buffer data in hex. Normally, buffer data is just decoded, so better information can be printed.
-s start-block
Override any notion of where to start printing.
-t Print out the transactional view.
SEE ALSO mkfs.xfs(8), mount(8).
xfs_logprint(8)