I have the following script:
mysort.sh:
#!/bin/ksh
for i in `ls`
sort -bfu $i > sort_$i
wait
mv sort_$i $i
wait
done
exit 0
I get the following error:
mysort.sh: syntax error at line 3 : `sort' unexpected
Does anybody know what I am missing here. ... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I probably miss something fundamental here.
I want to rename a bunch of files in subdirectories (that might contain white spaces) with names that are related.
I thought following could do the job:
find . -name *.sh -exec mv {} $(echo {} | sed -e 's/0/1/g') \;
Now to be able to... (5 Replies)
I am in the process of writing a script to change the grub password in the grub.conf file. I thought I had it figured out, but am running into an a problem I can't put my finger on.
Command I am running when I find that the grub.conf file contains "password --md5".
sed... (1 Reply)
Hi I'm just learning programming and need some help.
I've taken a data file which has a list of numbers eg:
3
5
32
533
13
2
And I've used sort -n and to sort and then piped it to awk to arrange into an array.
#!/bin/sh
sort -n data.txt |
awk '
{
array=$1
} (4 Replies)
I hv a file --am executing a script which is giving me unexpected results
COntents of file:
f1
CMT_AP1_CONT:/opt/sybase/syboc125:150:ASE12_5::Y:UX:
CMT_AP1:/opt/sybase/syboc125:150:ASE12_5::Y:UX
f1.tmp
CMT_AP1_CONT:/opt/sybase/syboc125:150:ASE12_5::Y:UX:... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I'm trying to sort a text file "test":
S12
S_S12
S_S1_12
S15
S_N15
S_N1_15
By "sort test", I get:
S12
S15
S_N1_15
S_N15
S_S1_12
S_S12
It seems weird:
Comparing Line 2 and Line 3, it must be that '-' is bigger than '1'; however, comparing Line 3 and Line 4, it seems that... (3 Replies)
Hi,
Trying to sort grep result based on timestamp of the filename.
I have the following result and want to sort them on timestampgrep -i 'ERROR' *log*2013*
s_m_xxx_xxx_xxx_xxx_xxxx.log.20130906092431:TRANSF_1_1_1> DBG_21216 Finished transformations for Source Qualifier . Total errors ... (5 Replies)
Hi! all here is my code
which is working fine no errors but I want to know how to take result and input to other program
awk 'FNR==1{i++}{LC=NR}
{for(k=1; k<=NF; k++) A=$k}
END{for (i=1;i<=LC;i++)
{
for(j=1;j<=LC;j++)
if(A=='$UID' && A>='$MX'+A &&... (7 Replies)
Hello,
I am new to Unix and would like to seek a help, please.
I have 2 files (file_1 and file_2), I need to perform the following actions.
1 ) Sort the both file by the column 26-36 (which is Invoice number)
what is sort command with the column sort?
2) Compare the file_1.sorted and... (3 Replies)
Hello,
Giving those commands:
cat > myfile
1
2
3
^D
cat myfile | awk '{ s=s+$1 ; print s}'
The output is:
1
3
6
It seems like this command iterates each time on a different row so $1 is the first field of each row.. But what caused it to refer to each row ?.
What I mean... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: uniran
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
fatsort
fatsort(1) General Commands Manual fatsort(1)NAME
FATSort - FAT filesystem sorting utility
SYNOPSIS
fatsort [options] device
DESCRIPTION
FATsort sorts directory structures of FAT filesystems. Many MP3 hardware players don't sort files automatically but play them in the order
they were transmitted to the device. FATSort can help here.
OPTIONS -c This option causes FATSort to ignore the case of filenames (e.g. 'example.mp3' is equal to 'EXAMPLE.MP3').
-f Force sorting even if the device is mounted or if FATSort cannot determine if the device is mounted.
-h Shows some help information.
-i Prints some file system information of the specified device.
-l FATSort will not sort directory structures, but just print the current order.
-o type
This options specifies how FATSort will sort files and directories. type can be 'd' for directories before files (which is the
default), 'f' for files before directories, or 'a' for no differentiation between files and directories.
-n Uses natural order to sort directory structures instead of alphanumeric order. For example, an alphanumeric order would be
file123.mp3
file21.mp3
file3.mp3
and the corresponding natural order would be
file3.mp3
file21.mp3
file123.mp3.
-q FATSort will work quietly without printing additional information messages.
-r Sorts the directories in reverse order (Z-A).
-R Sorts the directories in random order.
-v Shows version information only.
The following options can be specified multiple times:
-d directory
Sort directory only
-D directory
Sort directory and all subdirectories
-x directory
Don't sort directory
-X directory
Don't sort directory and all subdirectories
-I prefix
Ignore filename prefix prefix during sorting. For example, passing option -I "the " tells FATSort to sort 'The Beatles.mp3' like
'Beatles.mp3'.
EXAMPLES
Sort FAT filesystem on an USB stick:
fatsort /dev/sda1
Sort FAT filesystem in a file:
fatsort /home/user/fat16_fs.img
Sort directory /dir1 and all subdirectories except /dir1/dirA:
fatsort /dev/sda1 -D /dir1 -x /dir1/dirA
Ignore prefixes 'a ' and 'the ' during sorting:
fatsort /dev/sda1 -I "a " -I "the "
AUTHOR
Boris Leidner <fatsort(at)formenos.de>
SEE ALSO mount(8)fsck(8)NOTES
FAT12 is not supported yet.
REPORT BUGS
Please report bugs to fatsort(at)formenos.de. Thanks.
FATSort 0.9.15 2011 fatsort(1)